Canada Post

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Canada Post logo
Canada Post logo

Canada Post Corporation (French: Société canadienne des postes) is a Canadian postal service operated as an independent crown corporation. The successor to the Post Office Department of the Government of Canada, Canada Post was created on October 16, 1981 by the Canada Post Corporation Act[1] to set a new direction for the postal service, creating more reliable service and ensuring the postal service's financial security and independence.

Contents

[edit] Current operations

Canada Post trucks in Edmonton
Canada Post trucks in Edmonton
Relay box. Used by letter carriers to refill their bags along their route.
Relay box. Used by letter carriers to refill their bags along their route.

In 2004 Canada Post handled 10.9 billion mail items. It employed 70,000 people in its traditional mail operations and an additional 12,500 at the 94% owned Purolator Courier parcel delivery subsidiary.

Canada Post delivers to 13 million addresses daily, Monday to Friday, using a combination of traditional "to the door" door delivery, by 15,000 letter carriers, supplemented by approximately 6,000 vehicle routes in rural and suburban areas, and truck delivery of parcels in urban areas. A more recent electronic delivery method for routine bills and statements was introduced in 1999, named e-Post.[2] In terms of area serviced, Canada Post delivers to a larger area than the postal service of any other nation, including Russia (where service in Siberia is limited largely to communities along the railroad).

There are 280,000 retail points of deposit for mail, a combination of CPC staffed locations and franchises which are operated by a private retailer in conjunction with a host retail business.

Overall revenues for CPC in 2004 were $6.7 billion (US$5.6B), of which the traditional mail business made up 81%, Purolator 17% and electronic and consulting activities generated 2%. Income after taxes was $147 million (US$121 million). The corporation has generated a profit annually since 1994. A portion of the profit does go to the federal government.

Canada Post (French: Postes Canada) is the Federal Identity Program name. The legal name is Canada Post Corporation in English and Société canadienne des postes in French.

[edit] Canada Post Group of Companies

  • Progistix - A third party supply chain management service.
  • Canada Post International LTD (CPSML) - International consulting arm of Canada Post. Formed as Canada Post Systems Management Limited (CPSML) in 1990 to market the company's systems and technology in the global marketplace. As of the end of 2000, there were 80 successful projects in 38 countries.[3]
  • Purolator Courier - An overnight courier company offering service within the Canada and Worldwide

[edit] History

Mail delivery first started in Canada in 1693 when Pedro da Silva was paid to deliver mail between Quebec City and Montreal. Official postal services began in 1775, under the control of the British Government up to 1851. The first postage stamp (designed by Sir Sandford Fleming) went into circulation in Canada that same year. It wasn't until 1867 when the newly formed Dominion of Canada created the Post Office Department as a federal government department (The Act for the Regulation of the Postal Service). It took effect April 1, 1868, providing uniform postal service throughout the newly established country. The Canadian post office was designed around the British service as created by Sir Rowland Hill, who introduced the concept of charging mail by weight and not destination along with creating the concept of the postage stamp.

Canada Post started early with airmail, with the first airmail flight taking place on June 24, 1918 carrying mail from Montreal to Toronto. Regular airmail service began in 1928.

The 1970s was a tough decade for Canada Post, with major strikes combined with annual deficits that had hit $600 million by 1981. This state of affairs made politicians want to rethink their strategy for the federal department. It resulted in two years of public debate and input into the future of mail delivery in Canada. The government sought to give the post office more autonomy, in order to make it more commercially viable and to compete against the new threat of private courier services such as UPS. On October 16, 1981, the Federal Parliament passed the "Canada Post Corporation Act"[4], which transformed Canada Post into a Crown corporation to create the Canada Post Corporation (CPC). The legislation also includes a measure that legally guarantees basic postal service to all Canadians. It stipulates that all Canadians have the right to expect mail delivery, regardless of where they live.

[edit] Historical sites

[edit] British Columbia

[edit] Ontario

  • First Toronto Post Office - still in operation today (with a museum component).
  • Air Canada Centre - the exterior of the building is the former Canada Post Delivery Building (the outside facade shows mail delivery in Canada).

[edit] Yukon Territory

[edit] Timeline

  • 1693 - First paid mail delivery within Canada
  • 1775 - British Government begins offering mail service in Canada
  • 1851 - Canadian Government takes control of mail delivery
  • 1867 - Canada Post is created as a federal department
  • 1878 - Canada Post joins Universal Postal Union
  • 1971 - Initial implementation of the postal code
  • 1981 - Canada Post Corporation Act is passed by Parliament
  • 1981 - Canada Post is turned into a Crown Corporation
  • 1993 - Canada Post purchases a majority stake in Purolator Courier
  • 2006 - Introduction of the Permanent Stamp, a stamp that is always worth the basic domestic mailing rate.

[edit] Services offered by Canada Post

Canada Post truck, Edmonton
Canada Post truck, Edmonton
Canada Post Priority Tag
Canada Post Priority Tag

Letter services

  • Lettermail
  • Incentive Lettermail
  • Xpresspost
  • Priority courier
  • Addressed Admail
  • Unaddressed Admail
  • Catalogue Mail
  • Publications Mail
  • Purolator Courier (to non-Canadian destinations)

Parcel services

  • Regular Parcel
  • Expedited parcel
  • Xpresspost
  • Priority Courier
  • Light Packet (to non-Canadian destinations)
  • Small packets (to non-Canadian destinations)
  • Purolator Courier (to non-Canadian destinations)

Electronic services

  • Epost - electronic bill payments
  • PosteCS - secure electronic document transmission
  • Borderfree - streamlines online purchases products from the the United States by providing the final price at time of purchase including the cost of customs fees and U.S. currency conversion

Other services

  • Postal Money Orders

[edit] Addressing envelopes

PO Box, Edmonton
PO Box, Edmonton

Any letter sent within Canada has the destination address on the centre of its envelope, with a stamp, postal indicia, meter label, or frank mark put on the top-right corner of the envelope to acknowledge payment of postage. A return address, although it is not required, can be put on the top-left corner of the envelope in smaller type than the destination address.

The price of postage for a standard-size domestic letter, as of January 15, 2007 is 52¢, which, according to Canada Post, is among the lowest basic postage rates in the developed world. This is because the basic postage rate is capped at 66.67% of the rate of inflation. All other services are not capped and have generally increased above the rate of inflation. Effective November 16, 2006, Canada Post began to offer a Permanent Stamp for basic domestic postal items. This new stamp will retain its value without requiring that postage be added to old domestic postage stamps whenever the corporation increases the basic postage rate.

Official addressing protocol is for the address to be typed in block letters, using a fixed-pitch typeface (such as Courier). The first line(s) of the address are for the personal name and internal address of the recipient. The second-to-last line is the post office box, general delivery indicator, or street address, using the shortened name of the street type and no punctuation. The last line consists of the city name, a single space, the two-letter province abbreviation, two full spaces, and then the postal code.

Examples:

  • (not to be confused with a real John Jones, London Mail Processing Plant #1 shift, from St. Thomas)
JOHN JONES
MARKETING DEPT
10-123 1/2 MAIN ST W
MONTRÉAL QC  H3Z 2Y7
 
JOHN JONES
1425 JAMES ST
PO BOX 4001 STN A
VICTORIA BC  V8X 3X4
JOHN JONES
2765 7TH CONCESSION
SITE 6 COMP 10
RR 8 STN MAIN
MILLARVILLE AB  T0L 1K0
JOHN JONES
GD STN MAIN
WALKERTON ON  N0G 2V0

[edit] Noted stamps

[edit] Digital Postage Meter

On July 1, 2007 Canada Post will require that all postage meters be digital and have a Postage Security Device. The Digital Postage Meter prints a 2D barcode in the meter impression, strengthening security.

[edit] Facts and figures

  • The Canada Post vehicle fleet consists of over 6000 cars and delivery trucks.
  • Canada Post is the 5th largest employer in Canada
  • 20,000 letter carriers travel more than 165,000 km each workday.
  • In 1957, Canadian scientist Dr. Maurice Levy invented the automatic postal sorter, which could handle 200,000 letters per hour (which was more than all the mail delivered in Ottawa). It was first installed at the Langevin Building in Ottawa.

[edit] Choosing Canada’s Stamps

Although Canada Post is responsible for stamp design and production, the corporation does not actually choose the subjects or the final designs that appear on stamps. [1] That task falls under the jurisprudence of the Stamp Advisory Committee. Their objective is to recommend a balanced stamp program that will have broad-based appeal, regionally and culturally, reflecting Canadian history, heritage, and tradition. [2]

Before Canada Post calls a meeting of the committee, it also welcomes suggestions for stamp subjects from Canadian citizens. Ideas for subjects that have recently appeared on a stamp are declined. The committee works two years in advance and can approve approximately 20 subjects for each year. [3]

Once a stamp subject is selected, Canada Post’s Stamp Products group conducts research. Designs are commissioned from two firms, both chosen for their expertise. The designs are presented anonymously to the committee. [4] The committee’s process and selection policy have changed little in the thirty years since it was introduced.

[edit] Major postal plant locations

[edit] Organizational issues

[edit] Labour troubles

Canada Post has a history of troubled labour relations with its trade unions, particularly the Canadian Union of Postal Workers and the Letter Carriers Union of Canada (which merged with CUPW in 1989) culminating in periodic strike action which has brought mail service in Canada to a halt. There have been at least 19 strikes, lockouts and walkouts between 1965 and 2005 including several wildcat strikes. A number of these strikes have seen the corporation employ strikebreakers and most, since the 1970s, have resulted in back-to-work legislation being passed by the Canadian parliament.

Canada Post was also the setting for one of the most controversial labour rulings of recent years. After several prosecutions for theft at Mississauga's Gateway Postal Plant, the union won a ruling from a labour board that the workers involved could not be dismissed as the length of the investigation exceeded the ten-day limit in the collective agreement under which any allegation of misconduct had to be brought to the attention of the worker. Although the ruling was reversed on appeal, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled that although the decision may have been incorrect, it was not so totally without merit that the labour board's decision should be overturned. The court noted the language was in the collective agreement to keep supervisors from holding infractions over the head of a worker indefinitely.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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[edit] Personnel Representation