Resilience: Let the Post Offices Lead The Way!

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How Canada Post can deliver community power to the new green economy

Could we turn 6,300 post offices into community hubs?

You likely haven't set foot in a post office in a while. Well, the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) and the peeps behind the Leap Manifesto have been jamming on how to turn more than 6,300 Canada Post locations across the country into community hubs for the next economy. Here are a few ideas they've been kicking around at deliveringcommunitypower.ca.

Our greenest, most accessible bank

Imagine a bank owned by the people. Until 1968, Canada Post offered banking services in Canada. Postal services in the UK, France, Italy, Switzerland and Japan still do. Why not use post offices to help bring everyday financial services to all Canadians, including remote low-income indigenous communities that don't have local bank branches? Not to mention the more than two million Canadians every year who pay crippling interest rates to payday loan companies. Post offices could also offer affordable green-power grants and cost-saving retrofit loans. We'd be richer than we think.

Farm-to-table food delivery - and eldercare

Japan has done amazing things with its postal service, expanding its network to deliver food and check in on older citizens and those with limited mobility. France's and Australia's postal fleets connect farmers and local businesses to customers by delivering fresh and frozen food. CUPW wants to start doing the same by bringing farm-fresh local food right to your door, all while offering home visits to Canada's aging population.

Leading the electric charge

With the largest public vehicle fleet in the country, it makes sense for Canada Post to lead the way to a new green economy by transitioning to an electric fleet, the way Norway did. While we're at it, federal infrastructure dollars could add electric charging stations to every post office and depot, building much-needed infrastructure for e-vehicles and encouraging the public to get in on the e-car action.

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importer's picture

We offered banking services through the PO until 1962. There is no reason not to do it again - it's the corporations that have put a stop to it.

I believe the rural post offices should be expanded to be a hub for wi-fi and computer services to the community. A lot of libraries in larger towns offer those services, but they are still widely unavailable in small towns. Instead, they want to close them down. There are a lot of small businesses that rely on internet service, it would only make business easier for those in rural areas.

We have to relieve the Post Office of the onerous health and retirement burden that was put on them by the Republicans back in 2006? They have to pay billions of dollars a year to fund health and retirement benefits for employees that haven't been born yet. The truth is the money isn't even being held for these benefits, it's being spent. They don't expect to have a PO of employees 75 years from now. That's just nuts. It was done to cripple the post office and make it look like they are losing money so that Fedex and UPS and skim the cream off the top in the way of package delivery. I for one am sick of the BS narrative that has been hammered for years - it's just not true.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

the way to privatize every agency and institution in our governments is to cut their funds and make them try to do their job with less and less. This makes them look incompetent and easy pickings for the vultures...

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Not sure if you idea goes this far, but I propose the PO lay fiber to all the homes in rural areas such was mine, where there apparently aren't a large enough profit to be made for private companies to bother.
Many of us are stuck with getting DSL through land lines, some at least 40 years old, such as where I live.
I'm paying for 7 mbps, but it has never tested over 4 mbps, on a good day.
Charter has cable here, but without internet service, and satellite is just to damn expensive for me.
It could be modeled on FDR's Rural Electric Administration (REA), which brought lighting to just about everywhere that capitalist's would not go back in the 1930's/40's.
Local Post Offices would be ideal for administering this agency, as they already have staffing in practically all communities now.

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Lookout's picture

We had the TVA. Got power to our valley in 1950. In town 3 miles away they had hydroelectric in 1928.

I feel the same today. In town across the state line 3 miles away they have fiber. I'm on $60/mo 3 meg service that I'm lucky will have 1 meg capacity. They over sold the market and can't deliver the service.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

idea...! Bravo! And each new idea like this represents jobs.

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They truly appreciate knowing that customers understand how they've been handicapped intentionally in the push to privatize everything, understand what they've been reduced to working with, and against.

Bernie Sanders has been a staunch ally of post offices, particularly rural branches, and recognizes the valuable role they play in community life. As noted in this essay, they're well positioned to do much more but, in the States, at least, would have to fight the influence of for-profit industry segments to expand any services.

Thanks for this post, Martha. You mentioned things I hadn't a clue are being provided by post offices elsewhere or feasibly could.

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"It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." --Jiddu Krishnamurti

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

Isn't it amazing what the rest of the world has accomplished? The thing WE must do is, like Sanders, make it known that these ideas are not "unicorns" but are actually real things that everyone EXCEPT North Americans are enjoying... we MUST start asking why we can't have nice things too!

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reminded us of some of the things--important things--that other countries provide and we don't. And what we once had, even as recently as 40 years ago, and now don't.

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"It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." --Jiddu Krishnamurti

detroitmechworks's picture

Full disclosure though: I grew up on Canadian TV, (Nickelodeon) Ate Canadian Food, (Kraft Dinner and No Name Brand) and was very polite as a child...

But we really need to embrace the idea of the common good once again. Libraries and Post offices are the few things truly owned by the people anymore, and that's why they are so often targeted for cuts, IMHO.

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

but at least people are trying BIG things to fix them...and by golly they just might get it done...

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Gerrit's picture

I heard crickets back from my local NDP branch about the Leap Manifesto.

Here's the Green Party platform on the PO: http://www.greenparty.ca/en/platform/strong-communities

Protecting Canada Post
Daily mail service to everyone’s front door

Canadians in the 21st century deserve postal service to their doors. Canada Post is experiencing a decline in letter service, but an increase in parcel delivery. The impact of the internet cuts both ways: more emails reduce letters by post; on-line shopping has increased parcels. Small business is very dependent on postal service. We cannot afford to lose a strong Canada Post.

Fortunately, Canada Post is still profitable. It can be sustainable and profitable into the future. CUPW has long advocated a diversification of services. This is particularly valuable as Canada Post is in every community – big and small. As commercial banks have withdrawn their physical presence in many communities, Canada Post can offer much needed services. Other countries have allowed their postal services to sell insurance, provide banking services and other services to remote communities. Perhaps the best model is Israel where postal service has been diversified with over 70 different products and services.

We will reverse recent decisions to reduce home delivery and we will set Canada Post on a profitable course for its future.

w00t! Go Greens!

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

this is something that is just coming into the public eye, and I doubt the parties have embraced it yet.

BUT, in the States, Bernie Sanders has talked about making Post Offices banks...

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Gerrit's picture

public service for the public good is already on our radar and in the platform, as you see above.

But the key to transforming the PO is not in the national political parties. The key is right in our local communities. We can push our municipal governments into proclaiming the worth and importance of its local PO(s) loudly, clearly, and insistently. Our communities could highlight the importance of the local PO by feting it at every opportunity. All our civic orgs could push their membership to grasp this and celebrate our local POs. Our civic orgs and municipal govs could already do creative things to add services and tie municipal affairs to the POs.

When we celebrate our local POs and integrate them into our civic fabric, the corporatists and the national parties can go f*ck themselves. The people will not let them take away what they love. The time to look to national politics for solutions to local problems is over. Gone forever in our time. National politics has been captured by the corporatists. National govs are bankrupt - literally and ideologically. The cavalry is not coming. We must do it all, as Aretha said about the sisters, for our selves.

Win the PO war locally. Work for your local PO. That's how we will save and transform our POs.

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importer's picture

their endorsement. I believe he embraced the banking idea, among other things.

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Gerrit's picture

local help to succeed at the national level. If we work on strengthening our local POs and integrate them deeply into the civic fabric of our local communities, then that would help Bernie at the national level.

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Gerrit's picture

POs, our public pools, our public parks, our civic orgs, our local businesses, etc.

If we work to ban the corporation from our local communities: force all businesses to be single ownership, partnership, or cooperative, we'll change the very nature of how business is conducted back towards taking the common good into account. It will force the box store franchises out. Yes, you will lose some badly-paid, badly-treated jobs. But you won't lose tax revenue, because the frakkers don't pay taxes anyway. And you could help local business people replace the franchise box with a locally-owned, worker-owned cooperative. And make more tax revenue from a local business that pays local taxes and from better-paid workers who also pay more taxes and spend more money locally. You keep more money in town; it won't flow out of town to foreign (NYC is foreign :=) financial centres.

Folks, talk about banning the corporation as a business format with your local government reps. Brave jurisdictions who convert local businesses away from the corporate legal format will reap early and many benefits for a long time.

Fight to reclaim your public goods: libraries, POs, parks, pools, local services, etc. w00t!
Long live the cooperative!

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Gerrit's picture

to small towns and rural villages in these ways. And city neighbourhoods too. The corporatists have been strangling the PO slowly for decades. It is high time to stop and reverse this horrible trend.

This is how we fight the corporatists and their monster - the corporation, by reclaiming and repurposing the PO for the common good. w00t!

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

reintroduced. The privatization of our entire society has been it's downfall.

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Lookout's picture

Working for people not profit. Post Offices offer a great opportunity. The idea of banks has been around, but I love the food to table and electric charging centers too. Great ideas!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Raggedy Ann's picture

I am all about the post office living on. I live in a rural area and my mailing address is a PO box because we do not have "home" delivery. They tried to shut us down a couple years ago, but all they could manage was to curb some of our hours. It's tough when you get something you need to pick up at the window, but we still have Saturdays and I still have my post office. I'd love for it to do more, too.

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

It is NOT a Government agency.
The idea's expressed here could be substantially profitable to the corporation I would think.
They are certainly smart uses of post offices for the good of the people. Though there are fewer physical post offices now.
Still, they aren't public entity and corporations often are at odds with the common good.

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With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU

Gerrit's picture

the common good. As such it could never be a "corporation." The nutbars could pretend it was in their privatization madness, and create all manner of legal fictions, but no. The PO must be re-constituted as a public cooperative so that it could serve the common good again.

The Canadian PO is a "crown corporation." Crown because it is a public entity for the common good. And corporation, because the ratfuckers have been at work for decades trying to privatize it and profit from it. We the people will take it back. You must do the same.

Perhaps c99 would be more useful if it deliberately worked towards goals for the common good, like taking back the PO, rather than bleating on and on and on and on about top and clinton; all things over which we have zero control. Wasted energy, all that is.

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climate change is the only issue.
Trying to stop it and trying to survive it.

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With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

we are not going to "stop" it... that time has long past.

Surviving it means we have to adapt. The things we are talking about here are adaptations. By shrinking things down from Global to Local...these are things WE the People can manage. We can do things on the local level that will help our immediate communities adapt to survive....

Time to stop thinking Global and start thinking Local...

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

Everyone thinks letting the Post Office do MORE for their communities is a grand idea....but the MegaCorps want them gone....

So how do we use the ideas found here ----> http://caucus99percent.com/content/resilience-local-communities-dismantl... to re-take control of OUR community Post Offices?

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Gerrit's picture

I will take an off-the-cuff stab, using my two-fold distinction. While trying not to become distracted by how corporatists have kneecapped, then blamed our POs.

Personal:
Use private courier companies only when unavoidable. Post packages through the PO, even when it costs more and goes slower. If we support our PO financially, it would regain some of it's ability to compete with them on price and speed.
Become friendly with the PO workers. Hear from them about the local PO. Hear their views on "what should be done." Most of all, let them know we support them and will stand by them.
Write letters to our local politicians, federal representatives, LTEs, etc to raise awareness.
Talk with friends and family about the PO and specifically the local PO.

Local:
Create an informal local interest group, similar to the "Friends of the Library" groups in local communities.
Folks who have a heart for restoring public services for the common good.

Oops, time to take Youngest Daughter to kung fu. I be back.
Ok, I'm back: brainstorming button pushed, let's see,

A lot of the Friends of the Library folks would have a similar interest in saving and expanding the local PO. So activists could begin with them: sit down with their members and ask questions about who, what, where, how, why, when, and so on. Then make plans from there.

Next, create a formal "Friends of the PO" group.
Brainstorm with interested folks. At first, all three of them, including you and your spouse :=)
For heaven's sake, make sure to include someone bright from the PO workers. Pick the sharper of the two :=)

- Create an awareness campaign.
Find resources and free media.
Think of your local civic orgs and schools; make presentations to them about the value and potential of your local PO.
Create "Support Our PO" doo-dads, like bumper stickers, lapel pins, school pencils, etc. Ask your local civic orgs - like the Lions, Rotarians, Knights of The Great Pumpkin, etc - to pay for the doo-dads.
Help the PO to create a float in the village's Christmas Parade.
Find speakers on PO/Common Good issues and bring them in. I know; the buggers usually charge a lot. See blackmailing below :=)

- Connect the dots.
Find all the similarly threatened public services in your local community and bind them together.
Join together the Library, the Food Bank, the PO, the public transit, all such into a "Protect the Common Good Here In Our Local Community" movement.
Use the library as the common meeting point.

Involve your local gov:
Do whatever you can to get some insiders onside. How's that for taking all sides?
Find create ways to get some of them interested in the welfare of the PO. Usually this takes food, drink, money, and/or hookers.
Oh, and blackmail, where feasible :=) "Ah, Councillor X, remember when I protected you form all the bullies in primary school? It's payback time."
The brighter ones will see the public good. Some will even care.
find someone who is good at schmoozing local gov. S/he doesn't have to care about the PO, but maybe care about something or someone that would make them help the PO cause.

Find a sugar daddy:
Find an outside organization or a person who can inject money and expertise into the PO project.
(See for example in the resource library the links to the Institute for Local Self-reliance and others who have a heart for the common good, local empowerment, and public service.)

- Work on a handful of pilot programmes that could be "integrated" in unofficial ways into the life of the local PO.
There must be some smaller things that the local municipality or civic orgs could run through the PO.
Think of low-hanging-fruit pilot projects, ones that would not alarm the POs or govs bureaucrats.
I dunno: the provincial health dept runs a healthy food-purchase programme in our rural towns. We pay $10 for a large bag of fresh veggies and fruit every 2nd week. Lovie volunteers for them - packs bags for folks. I also tried to help, but the ptsd made a mess of it. In our village, they left the hockey arena when the bastards wanted them to pay rent. Now they're happy in our local French school. In a similar circumstance, why not offer the PO building? It's maybe not a realistic example, but it gives the general idea of low-fruit projects that would wrap the PO tightly into the civic fabric of the local community.

- Work on longer term plans for the real projects:
e.g. adding a credit union service to the PO.
Make sure never to use corporatist legal frames for PO projects. Always use cooperatives as the base legal frame.
Add a free wi-fi service to the PO. Get the town to pay for it.
Draw in outside expertise on removing or bypassing the legal, financial obstacles.
Build sound, flexible plans with defined action steps and responsibilities.

Well, that's all I could come up with off the top of my head. I hope it is somewhat helpful :=)

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

How about working to oppose those community mail boxes that will effectively end to-the-door services? I have an 80+ year old friend who fell on the ice going to get her mail this last winter. She wasn't hurt too badly, just bruised and managed to get home on her own, but it could have been devastating in sub-zero weather if she had broken something or had lost consciousness.

It would ALSO do away with carrier jobs.

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Gerrit's picture

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

suggestions!

I especially like the idea of a "Protect the Common Good Here In Our Local Community" movement.

Gotta get some coffee, and think on this.

Edited to add: I was just reading two links (see below) that Joe posted to me over in his Open Thread... and I was thinking about how people might "poo poo" the idea of a Post Office Bank and I thought... For the Sake of the Gods! We have grocery chains who now offer banking... Fortinos comes to mind. If the GROCERY STORE can do it, what is so strange about the Post Office offering financial services?

Joe's links -

https://ellenbrown.com/2012/08/12/saving-the-post-office-letter-carriers...

https://ellenbrown.com/2012/01/09/saving-the-post-office-the-models-of-k...

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riverlover's picture

In one of the many PO streamlining efforts (to save $$), that little office was slated to close, leaving a zip code without its own PO. There was local pushback, the PO is still open, with at most 2 staff, open for limited hours. But it's still there. A tiny, free-standing building. Probably not large enough to accommodate more.

At least some Post Offices in the US (Ithaca being one) now does "last mile" delivery of packages from UPS and FedEX. I have no idea how that final routing decision is made. The Ithaca PO also does Sunday package delivery, unlike UPS or FedEx. Always a shocker when I get Sunday packages in my mailbox, or in the Garbage Can marked for deliveries at the bottom of my drive. This is a PO truck rural mailbox delivery. I know the (female) driver. It was she who asked me to place a can at the end of the driveway, for some reason the %^&$* UPS drivers have not yet mastered that concept. FedEx delivers to my door (900' drive).

The Main Ithaca PO, near the airport, has extremely pleasant and helpful staff. A joy to visit, ample parking. The old stone downtown branch has 2 street parking spaces, nice planning for cars.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

how we can help the PO take on new responsibilities and to make things better for them and us? See what she thinks of some of the ideas that we have been discussing here...eh?

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LeChienHarry's picture

from France. First a bit of an ad: the idea that government-run organizations can't innovate or change quickly is bunk. When the French PO system sees an opportunity to participate more and provide additional services, they jump on it. So here is a list of what we have heard of so far:

-- Bank * which works especially well in very rural or less wealthy areas; -- Cell phone provider * it's not top of the line, but a good alternative for those who can't afford the bells and whistles; -- Checking on Grandma and shut ins as part of regular rounds. * The carriers consider it a duty...family and friends are relieved; -- Delivering daily bread. * In France it is a necessity. In rural areas or for shut ins it provides an essential part of daily life; -- Blood draws for people with health conditions which need regular checks. * Part of the delivery system as well as medically-trained staff to conduct the draws.

For the US: we first need to unburden the Postal System from the 75 year pension in advance law put in place by Republicans. Secondly, revive the parcel post: rural areas are desperate for better parcel delivery and take away, including medical clinics and pharmaceuticals. Let them be a store for stationary, pens, stamps, envelopes more than they are today. Solar power on the roofs; lots of native green space including the parking lots; gathering areas in case of weather events - the Postal carriers know the people on their routes; IDK, there must be more, much more.

I looked at some of the threads on the US Postal Service and wasn't sure I saw a clean list of possibilities. I'm probably repeating some and missing a lot of opportunities. People love their postal workers.

Thanks for the resource library. I would like to add the category [people] who have skills which are disappearing but we might need. Some countries like Japan have people designated as heritage workers or artisans. Not sure the official title. There are many people doing great work for social justice, sustainability, organizing for different things. Reinventing the wheel takes time we may not have. There are folks out there doing things quite successfully we could learn from.

The Teaching Company uses top of the line university lecturers taped and then their courses available for download. It's a great way to learn something like music, history, art, and so on.Teaching Company.

I'll stop now.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

French postal workers with US and Canadian postal workers so that these ideas can be shared and adopted here... Thanks for that! Some great stuff.

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sensetolisten's picture

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“I never did give them hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell.”
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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

Cross posted from today's Open Thread - 4/29/2016
----------------

snip from source:

Nain, the northernmost permanent settlement in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador, is home to just enough people to support a few stores, a lodge and a common sight in Canada’s rural communities: the post office. Until
recently, the Nain Canada Post branch offered banking services through the Bank of Montreal. This pilot project was originally going to last two years: instead it continued for 17. Canada Post eventually put an end to the cohabitation, but thanks to strong community support, BMO opened its own branch in the community.

Residents of Moose Factory, Ont., haven’t been so lucky. From 1999 to 2007, Moose Factory, a northern community of a couple thousand residents, experienced a taste of postal banking when the Bank of Montreal was housed in the local post office. Eventually, it closed. Records and accounts were moved to Timmins, over 300 kilometers away and inaccessible by road (a one-way plane fare runs over $400).

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