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Posted 05/21/2009
THE OFFICE of Inspector General of the Postal Service has confirmed key findings of a Daily News series about alleged mismanagement and mail problems at Philadelphia-area mail facilities.
 
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Mail volume is down, a $5B deficit is projected
Posted 12/29/2008
Top officials of the U.S. Postal Service and the American Postal Workers Union are monitoring the serious mail problems in Philadelphia.
A South Jersey printer says 3,365 envelopes he mailed to Medicaid subscribers last month were destroyed and returned three weeks later n hampers along with a withered orange, a bottle of joint ointment, a videotape wall-rack, books, trash and unrelated mail.
In some ways, the $300 million, 930,000-square-foot U.S. Postal Service's processing center in Southwest Philadelphia was always Jim Gallagher's baby.
Last night, U.S. Rep. Bob Brady said he was convinced that his pal Jim Gallagher was cleaning up the Southwest Philadelphia mail-processing center after a nearly three-hour "walk-and-talk" tour the two took yesterday afternoon.
So where is the Christmas mail? Where are the packages? Where are the letters? Where are the Christmas cards? On what is normally one of the biggest mail days of the year, the mail wasn't moving during yesterday's day shift at the U.S. Postal Service's processing plant on Lindbergh Boulevard near Island Avenue in Southwest Philadelphia.
Yesterday, U.S. Rep. Robert Brady rescinded his request for the Government Accounting Office to investigate the Postal Service processing plant in Southwest Philadelphia. The Postal Service's new regional director, Jim Gallagher, assured Brady that mail problems at the plant would be resolved, said Brady spokeswoman Karen Warrington.
The mail is starting to move again, say postal workers and customers. No longer are hundreds of overflowing bins of unprocessed mail blocking passageways inside the U.S. Postal Service's processing plant on Lindbergh Boulevard near Island Avenue, postal workers told the Daily News yesterday.
THE ANNOUNCEMENT in late August that the U.S. Postal Service planned to transfer 162 mail clerks made no sense to veteran postal worker Nick Casselli.
Jesse Hill, a Vietnam vet with post-traumatic-stress disorder, waited more than five weeks for his mail-order prescriptions to arrive at his Levittown home.
U.S. Rep Bob Brady has called for an investigation of the Southwest Philadelphia Postal Service's processing plant by the U.S. Government Accountability Office.
Nine days ago, Megan Brennan, the Postal Service's regional vice president, wanted to see for herself the hundreds of overflowing mail bins, rerouted mail trailers and allegedly falsified mail-volume reports at the Southwest Philadelphia mail-processing plant.
Postal inspectors, who are investigating delayed and missing mail and allegedly phony daily mail counts, have discovered "a lot" of late, unprocessed mail at the Southwest Philly processing plant, a postal-union president said yesterday.
The newly appointed regional postal manager has two goals: to serve customers better and improve working conditions at the U.S. Postal Service's troubled processing plant in Southwest Philadelphia.
The U.S. Postal Service apparently is taking complaints of postal workers and customers seriously, after five days of Daily News stories about lost and missing mail and chaos at the processing plant in Southwest Philadelphia.
The U.S. Postal Service has shaken up its Philadelphia-area management after a week of stories in the Daily News about late and missing mail deliveries.
Conditions at some local post offices mirror the problems at the U.S. Postal Service's processing plant in Southwest Philadelphia, according to letter carriers and a supervisor.
The Postal Service's weeks-late and missing-mail problems are causing havoc with the medical diagnosis of some patients - and businesses' livelihoods.
Delayed and missing mail is a major headache and a drain in the pocket for many Center City banks, law firms and other businesses - even the Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce.
Retired public school teachers Joseph and Barbara Downey say they waited weeks to receive mailed prescriptions - long after their critical medications ran out.
Late deliveries. Lost mail, and in some cases, even destroyed.

Those are the allegations by several employees and a manager at the Postal Service's regional distribution plant.
MAIL CALL
A Daily News series has chronicled alleged mismanagement of the U.S. Postal Service's Southwest Philly processing plant, including stories that exposed major delivery delays and instances of allegedly undercounted or discarded mail.

If you have experienced problems with mail delivery, call the USPS at 215-863-5049 and/or reporter Kitty Caparella at 215-854-5880.
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