Now is the time to draw inspiration from wherever we can, and stand with workers while they fight the employer-led race to the bottom.

  • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    24 hours ago

    Not everything is a good idea to spend money on, though, even the government’s money. Door-to-door letter delivery seems pretty antiquated to me.

    • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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      17 hours ago

      We still have a population where some members do not have cell phones or can’t operate a computer well enough to deal with e-life. Letters are still around for some time for billing, statements, property notices, legal services, etc

      • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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        5 hours ago

        Yeah, I know. You can get them from a communal box too. I do.

        Accessibility has been mentioned, but as far as I know a special program for people who are totally housebound has been proposed for that.

        • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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          6 hours ago

          So if your bill is produced say on the 1st of the month AFTER delivery was collected, now it sits till the post picks it up a week later, then transit across a province or country for several days where logistics have to work out for continuous flow, but then sits at next place for a weekly delivery, you can understand that a letter could take 2 weeks maybe 3, to reach you, and the payment due dates are sometimes short so you miss payment date, especially if you have to mail payment back. Legal documents also have response times for filings.

          There are other examples but I think this illustrates why

          • chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world
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            6 hours ago

            Wrong. Businesses who send out large volumes of mail don’t wait for Canada Post to pick it up. They courier the mail to and from a CP sorting facility. I know this because I work in a mail room at a company. Even with weekly delivery for home addresses, businesses would still be sending and receiving mail on a daily basis.

            Your bill would be produced and sent to a Canada Post sorting facility on the same day.

            Furthermore, businesses are aware of mail transit delays. When they print the due dates on the bills they take this into account. Furthermore, businesses tend to have grace periods beyond the actual due date of the bill for this very reason.

            Lastly, I will point out that the company I work for is still printing and inserting bills into envelopes even though the post offices are closed. This mail is packed in crates stacked floor to ceiling in the hallway and will be sent to Canada Post when the strike is over. If the strike goes on for a long time, many customers will receive their bills long after the due date. Customers are still expected to pay their bills on time although extra allowances are granted on a case by case basis. Many customers do use electronic transfers or pre-authorized debits from their bank accounts and so they don’t have any extra reason to miss a payment.

            • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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              5 hours ago

              Right so you courier it to CP, and it may sit if you missed the outgoing weekly date.

              Dates that you say are to allow for mail, but that is on a daily delivery schedule, you add several weeks delay, and businesses are now floating more coat longere. Maybe 45 days instead of 21 etc.

              I agree mail sucks in a digital age, but people aren’t there yet.