HELPING THE POSTMAN
HOUSE TO HOUSE DEL-IVERIES. How delivery of correspondence to private residences can be speeded up and the postman - greatly helped was described by a writer in one of the southern newspapers. The postman, he stated, opened his gate, walked eleven yards to the door, delivered the, mail, walked eleven yards back and closed the gate. “Twenty-two yards in one day,” said the correspondent, “means one mile in eighty days or 4| miles in one year. Now he goes through the same performance at hundreds of other houses; he therefore -walks in the year unnecessary hundreds of miles.” Having worked out the postman’s effort in this way, the, correspondent nailed a letter-box inside his front gate just as the postman came along. “His sunny smile of appreciation paid him for doing it,” concluded the writer, who was in his own way dealing with a problem which gives constant concern to the Post Office —that of unnecessary extension of delivery routes through the distances to be travelled inside the f’’ont gates. The Post Office is fortified by regulations empowering it to refuse delivery more than a reasonable distance from the road, “reasonable distance” being subject to reasonable interpretation; and another regulation enabling it to refuse to extend a delivery to a new house unless a gate letter-box is provided. Where deliveries have to be made in lofty buildings, the postman is helped by a regulation that letters need not be delivered above the first floor unless a lift is provided. Most concerns meet this reasonable requirement by providing locked letter-boxes on the ground floor for all tenants.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 8 March 1939, Page 6
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268HELPING THE POSTMAN Wairarapa Times-Age, 8 March 1939, Page 6
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