https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/250 ... -services/
Plans are on the table for Royal Mail to cut its second class delivery service, following a review by Ofcom of its Universal Service Obligation (USO).
From the end of this month the service, which was privatised in 2013, will be owned by the Czech billionaire Daniel Křetínský.
Royal Mail has failed to meet its annual first and second class delivery targets since 2019, and was fined £10.5m by regulator Ofcom last year for breaching its universal service obligation.
When the service was privatised it was delivering 92% of First Class post within one day, but that had fallen to 74% by 2024.
Under the plans second class service would be cut to two or three days per week, and legal delivery targets would be relaxed to make it easier for Royal Mail to achieve them.
The GCA launched a petition earlier this year calling for parliamentary scrutiny of the proposals, which was signed by more than 16,000 people.
Now the organisation has released its formal response to the plans, in which it raises concerns the regulator may be in breach of its legal duties to businesses and consumers.
The GCA argues that the reduction in second class service would be in breach of the 2011 Postal Services Act, which requires an affordable postal service to be available six days per week.
The response further raises concerns that Ofcom has failed to adequately assess the wider economic impact of proposed changes; maintain an affordable postal service six days a week as mandated by legislation; ascertain whether Royal Mail’s costs have been adequately assessed before recommending changes to the USO; and is failing to protect more than one million consumers consumers in 37 locations across the country who are already part of a pilot to implement reduced delivery schedules without any consumer notification that stamp buyers may be getting a worse service than the one they paid for.
In Scotland, the reduced service pilots are taking place in areas of Ayr, Glasgow, Girvan, and Cumbernauld.
In addition, the cost of a first class stamp has risen by 170% in the last decade, with the latest hike to £1.70 the sixth in three years.
It concludes that if Ofcom continues to back the changes outlined to the USO, it risks triggering a sharper-than-necessary decline in letter volumes, increasing the likelihood that the taxpayer could be called upon to bail out Royal Mail in future.
Amanda Fergusson, chief executive of the GCA said: “Greeting cards are the beating heart of personal post in the UK and not only is this deeply valued tradition under threat, changes to the USO threaten to impact all of us who rely on Royal Mail to receive important communications, from cards to hospital appointments.
“Our detailed review of Ofcom’s proposals has demonstrated we now need proper answers from Ofcom and Royal Mail about their proposals.
“Our members are clear. A reduced service - already being piloted for thousands without proper parliamentary scrutiny - will have a serious impact on their businesses.
“And consumers too are deeply concerned – the public response to our petition shows that decisions about the postal service they treasure are too important to be left to Ofcom and Royal Mail alone.
“It’s time for MPs to get involved in proposals that as they stand, will make the postal service less national, affordable and reliable.”
Royal Mail said: "Our proposal was developed after speaking to thousands of people across the country and is designed to preserve what matters most for our customers - maintaining a one-price-goes-anywhere service to 32 million UK addresses and First Class deliveries six days a week.
“As Ofcom’s analysis shows, it is no longer financially sustainable to maintain a network built for 20 billion letters when we are now only delivering 6.7 billion. Reform is crucial to support a modern, sustainable, and reliable postal service for our customers, our company and our people.”
Ofcom have been contacted for comment.
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Publishers of greeting cards have warned regulators risk breaching their legal duties if proposed changes to second class post delivery changes.
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POSTMAN
- SITE ADMINISTRATOR
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Publishers of greeting cards have warned regulators risk breaching their legal duties if proposed changes to second class post delivery changes.
I Wrote-During Covid-Which is still relevant now
It's good to get these types of threads, the ridiculous my manager said bollox, so we can reassure ourselves that while the world is falling apart, Royal Mail managers are still being the low-life C***S they have always been.
My BFF Clash
The daily grind of having to argue your case with an intellectual pigmy of a line manager is physically and emotionally draining.
It's good to get these types of threads, the ridiculous my manager said bollox, so we can reassure ourselves that while the world is falling apart, Royal Mail managers are still being the low-life C***S they have always been.
My BFF Clash
The daily grind of having to argue your case with an intellectual pigmy of a line manager is physically and emotionally draining.
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BenacreNick
- Posts: 1111
- Joined: 18 Jul 2022, 13:27
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Re: Publishers of greeting cards have warned regulators risk breaching their legal duties if proposed changes to second class post delivery changes.
Good luck Amanda, keep knocking on the door and don't give up.
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Londonsburning
- Posts: 1018
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Re: Publishers of greeting cards have warned regulators risk breaching their legal duties if proposed changes to second class post delivery changes.
An industry, entirely reliant on us, who are a miniscule part of our profits are fighting against this by threatening the regulator that RM should provide the service they pay for. The CWU probably make more money than the GCA, with zero overheads and their sole job being to fight for the very people who pay their wages/expenses *are doing nothing.
Make it make sense.
Make it make sense.
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Mr Rush
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Re: Publishers of greeting cards have warned regulators risk breaching their legal duties if proposed changes to second class post delivery changes.
One might conclude that is the unstated aim. Denmarkisation.
How would operations fair under Half Daily Delivery if the bulk of stamped mail shifted over to first class after implementation? Tracked grew to 95% of all packets because successive Christmases saw non-tracked linger in the office for days on end. It went from a reasonable request to clear a half-dozen of them to an impossible task in a decade. First class is already being prioritised on duties and loops not going out so it would be reasonable to assume this would play out similarly when the public catches on that 1st class letters are the only ones meeting their targets.
The machine stops.
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Londonsburning
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Re: Publishers of greeting cards have warned regulators risk breaching their legal duties if proposed changes to second class post delivery changes.
Thank you Mr Rush for stating the obvious. Demanding the impossible for the shittest wage payable.
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POSTMAN
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Plans to downgrade 2nd class post could see Royal Mail becoming the next victim of a taxpayer bail out
https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/mar ... l-out.html
Plans to water down second class post will decimate the service and could result in Royal Mail becoming the next victim of a taxpayer bail out, businesses have warned.
Watchdog Ofcom’s proposals to cut second-class deliveries to every other working day come as Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky is about to take over Royal Mail’s owner International Distribution Services this month.
But the Greetings Card Association (GCA), which represents more than 500 companies, has said the changes could leave Royal Mail in a financially precarious position.
The regulator ‘risks increasing the likelihood that the taxpayer could be called upon to bail out Royal Mail in future,’ the group said.
But the GCA says this paves the way for Royal Mail to charge more for first class deliveries as they would still be six days a week.
Cards are the most frequent form of post, with one in four Britons only using the postal service to send them.
Plans to water down second class post will decimate the service and could result in Royal Mail becoming the next victim of a taxpayer bail out, businesses have warned.
Watchdog Ofcom’s proposals to cut second-class deliveries to every other working day come as Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky is about to take over Royal Mail’s owner International Distribution Services this month.
But the Greetings Card Association (GCA), which represents more than 500 companies, has said the changes could leave Royal Mail in a financially precarious position.
The regulator ‘risks increasing the likelihood that the taxpayer could be called upon to bail out Royal Mail in future,’ the group said.
But the GCA says this paves the way for Royal Mail to charge more for first class deliveries as they would still be six days a week.
Cards are the most frequent form of post, with one in four Britons only using the postal service to send them.
I Wrote-During Covid-Which is still relevant now
It's good to get these types of threads, the ridiculous my manager said bollox, so we can reassure ourselves that while the world is falling apart, Royal Mail managers are still being the low-life C***S they have always been.
My BFF Clash
The daily grind of having to argue your case with an intellectual pigmy of a line manager is physically and emotionally draining.
It's good to get these types of threads, the ridiculous my manager said bollox, so we can reassure ourselves that while the world is falling apart, Royal Mail managers are still being the low-life C***S they have always been.
My BFF Clash
The daily grind of having to argue your case with an intellectual pigmy of a line manager is physically and emotionally draining.