By Michele Simpson
Friday 24th March 2000 |
Text too small? |
NZ Post is trialing a centralised servicing system in Northland whereby all mail, even if it is going down the road, is sent first to Auckland to be sorted through a new optical character recognition machine.
But the public has been enraged by delays which stretched to several weeks even though in some cases the mail was being sent only 500m down the road.
Kaitaia's Northland Age has reported how the mail delays were causing problems for Kaitaia Hospital informing patients of appointments.
In another example an invitation to a Christmas function, posted in November, took until February 29 to travel from Kaitaia to Whangarei.
NZ Post said there were some hiccups in the initial stages of the trial, but they had been sorted out. The problems resulted from badly addressed mail, NZ Post said.
The new technology machinery means mail can be sorted by a machine instead of by hand. When the trial finishes, NZ Post plans to evaluate its success.
Meanwhile, it said the international problems holding up mail to the US would be eased by re-routing mail to other American cities. US Postal Services has admitted major delays with international mail coming to the US via Los Angeles. Backlogs and congestion have seen a build up of mail, proving a nightmare for internet companies and businesses relying on NZ Post to get mail to the US.
"Alternative delivery arrangements have begun through other cities to avoid delays of two weeks or more," NZ Post planning manager David Espie said. He hoped the changes would mean a return of mail delivery in the US from New Zealand of between four and 10 working days.
No comments yet
TWR - Capital Return - ATO Class Ruling Obtained
THL - FY25 Trading Update
April 17th Morning Report
EBOS announces opening of Retail Offer
MCY - FY2025 EBITDAF guidance revised to $760m
April 16th Morning Report
AIA - March 2025 Monthly traffic update
Ryman Healthcare FY25 full year results and webcast detail
CHI - Q1 2025 Operational Update
CNU - Q3 FY25 Connections Update