Skip to main content


Canada's postal strike - Bigger context


I don't know how many people outside Canada, but Canadians certainly know, that for several weeks we've had a postal strike that of course severely impacts businesses and customers in the lead up to Christmas. There is a short Wikipedia article. Usual issues of wages not keeping up with inflation and benefits - what, they don't already have paid breaks? #canadapoststrike

What people may not have heard of is how since several years the postal union has been advancing innovative ideas for how the postal service could be more sustainable and useful to the community in multiple ways going forward into the future. Seems to fall on deaf ears in management whose forward looking focus seems to be expanding hours of parcel delivery by hiring more part-time rather than full-time workers.

deliveringcommunitypower.ca/ou…

in reply to fionag11

I am really happy Canada Post is on strike once again, as it is saving me tons of time not having to clear out the piles of junk mail they deliver each week. It is also saving my municipality money not having to pay to recycle it all.

Canada Post loses $1M a day normally so this strike is saving the taxpayers a lot of money in subsidies.

If I was CEO of Canada Post I would offer to seel the entire operation to the union for a dollar.

in reply to Adam Hunt

Is it actually saving money..don't they still have costs but now no revenue?

Not sure how that works.

In the good old days we used to have those "no Junk mail" stickers to put on mailboxes. I don't have one anymore but nevertheless seem to have made it onto a "do not receive" list and haven't had flyers for years, not even the local stores. Of course there is still the addressed junk mail like banks trying to get me to sign up to credit cards and charity appeals.

in reply to fionag11

in reply to Adam Hunt

Wow! yes, I think it has been mismanaged for years and it's a shame.

It's so much easier to pay bills online now that was inevitable.

The package rate starts so high for even the teenyist item it really discourages one from sending anything. I understand it costs money to move items but really wonder if they could drum up so much more business and economies of scale with a cheaper rate..I don't know.

Another crazy thing: Apparently there are agreements between nations on rates for moving each other's mail, and China's rates still reflect its previous status as a developing country not the major economic powerhouse it is now. So that's why you can order gizmo's from Chinese ecommerce sites for less than the cost of a parcel delivery within Canada.

in reply to fionag11

That all makes sense.

I don't see any easy fixes for Canada Post's woes. I remember many of their past failures while trying to move into new areas. Some years ago they offered an email serve as "the last email address you will ever need to sign up for" in two year it was gone. Then there was their e-billing service, where they would open you mail and scan your bills and email them to you. It was a good thing no one took them up on that one, although I got lots of paper junk mail from them trying to sell it.

Now the union wants them to get into stuff like banking??? There is no trust there, so that would be another big #fail.

#fail
in reply to Adam Hunt

in reply to fionag11

@fionag11 - that sounds like La Poste in France. They have long offered "bank" acounts with 24/7 cash machines outside, had copiers inside in case you needed one, and their carriers on rural may check on seniors.
in reply to fionag11

They really need a whole new business model, because the current one is just failing badly.

I am not a fan of Maxime Bernier, but he has a policy of privatizing Canada Post. That may be the only way to save it, but I always ask "who would buy it?" I can;t think of anyone other than CUPW. I mean UPS or FedEX might, but only to shut it down.