April 12, 2002
Post office fights congestion
New boxes, database
part of strategy to streamline service
MIRIAM
HILL
Relief is on the way for
patrons of the Iqaluit post office.
Canada Post is working
to unclog the congestion both inside and in front of the building shared with
the Bank of Montreal on the citys main drag.
Doug Wright, a Canada Post
trainer brought to the Iqaluit post office in November to try and solve some
of the staffing and line up issues, says clients have been receiving yellow
cards inside their mailboxes since the beginning of March.
"All Im doing
is compiling a database for future use if something should arise such as delivery
to houses or whatever," Wright says. He expects the information gathering
will be completed by the end of April.
When people receive the
yellow card in their metal box, they are instructed to go to the counter where
a clerk will fill out a form including information such as the persons
house or lot number, and the names of others receiving mail in the box.
People will receive up
to two notices to come to the counter and if they still havent provided
the necessary information, they will receive an expiry notice and lose the rights
to the mailbox. They will then have to collect their mail at the counter where
they will be asked for the information anyway.
"It has been hectic
and I know customers have been upset about the line ups, especially when they
find out this card is to fill out another card they filled out three years ago.
But we need a database and if something is going to happen in the future and
we dont have a database nothing is going to happen."
People receiving mail through
general delivery are being asked to provide similar information, which will
also be entered into a database. Wright says he estimates about 300 people are
getting their mail via general delivery, requiring individuals to go to the
counter and ask the clerk to search through a massive amount of mail looking
for items addressed to them.
John Caines, the national
media-relations officer for Canada Post, says 700 new post boxes will be added
to the Iqaluit branch in June.
Each year the post office
asks people with post boxes to renew their rentals, but since there is no charge
to rent a box in Iqaluit, people dont bother filling out the forms, Wright
explains, resulting in their being purged from the database.
"If we can get everyone
to come in and sign a card for general delivery so I can put them in the database,
if and when we get new boxes, Im hoping it will wipe out general delivery,"
he says. "That will virtually wipe out the line ups and thats what
I want to see."
The initiative is also
a means of weeding out those box-holders who can have mail delivered to them
at home. Wright says tenants of the eight-storey apartment complex known as
the Brown Building, for example, have about 100 post boxes in the lobby.
"They are using boxes
down here that are taking boxes away from people here," he says. "That
will change."
A contractor sorts the
mail at the post office and delivers it to the complex.
"The traffic congestion
in front of our building is one of our prime objectives to eliminate,"
he says. This means making sure people get their mail where they should. If
Brown Building tenants want a post box downtown they will have to pay for it,
he adds.
Congestion inside the building
is caused not only by people waiting for general delivery services, but also
by people waiting to pick up parcels. Wright says there are pilot projects under
way in large cities across Canada where parcels are delivered in the evenings.
"Because of the circumstances
up here and the shortage of boxes, all that stuff, were requesting we
do that here," Wright says. "Everyone in Iqaluit works all day, theres
nobody home, so if we can convince the powers that be that it would be useful
up here then we might see it."
Caines says there are a
number of options being looked at to help Iqaluit and its booming population,
including a franchise location, which could have counter service and more post
boxes. However, nothing has been decided.
Before anything can happen,
aside from adding more post boxes, the city must finish its street naming project
and assign numbers to all buildings.
"We have to wait until
the city does its part first," he says.
The city is holding a community
consultation about street names on April 22.
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