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Massive undertaking to deliver holiday mail


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Letters and packages from Lake Tahoe all go through Reno. Photo/Linda Fine Conaboy

Letters and packages from Lake Tahoe all go through Reno. Photo/Linda Fine Conaboy

By Linda Fine Conaboy

RENO – It’s the busiest mailing day of the year and surprisingly this humming and thrumming place was occupied by seemingly happy people, masters of their powerful conveyors, sorters, forklifts, trucks, and bins and bins of mail, all awaiting their attention.

The Reno Main Post Office on Vassar Street is the U.S. Postal Service’s regional hub, where each and every letter, magazine and parcel from as far away as the Oregon border, Northern California, Winnemucca, Carson City, the entire Lake Tahoe region as well as Reno and Sparks is processed.

Overseeing this organized chaos is Michael Sralik II, plant manager, and Karen Little, post office supervisor. Sralik, most recently from Arizona, has been here about a year, while Little, who’s from Colorado, has been on the job two years—both started their careers as letter carriers.

Sralik, who knows each and every facet and cranny of the place, will work practically around the clock during the busy season, with breaks when he dashes home for a quick four-hour nap and returns.

Karen Little, post office supervisor, checking the days mail. Photo/Linda Fine Conaboy

Karen Little, Reno post office supervisor, checks the mail. Photo/Linda Fine Conaboy

He said he’s hardly ever in his fairly plush and spacious office. He prefers being on the floor where the action is. The action on Monday night included the processing of a record 420,000 letters and 100,000 packages; nationally, the post office anticipates 612 million packages will fly out the doors of a huge network of postal offices in December.

However, Sralik added, if you think Dec. 14 is busy, wait for Dec. 21, when the anticipated peak delivery crunch will occur. Nationally, the figure this year will soar to 30 million pieces on a single day.

He attributes this phenomenon partly to online services.

“More than 7 million people are expected to use USPS.com,” he told Lake Tahoe News, adding that events such as Cyber Monday can be extremely beneficial to the post office.

The other employees in Reno work various shifts to keep the 250,000 square foot plant running on a round-the-clock schedule, every day of the year.

To get the job done, across the nation, about 30,000 seasonal workers are hired, while at the Reno facility, 40 people were added to the staff.

At the rear of the facility lies the loading docks where huge 18-wheelers are serviced as well as smaller neighborhood delivery vehicles, all being loaded and unloaded.

In this area too, are numerous plus-sized bins of packages and letters ready to head out of town.

“We fly about 80 percent of our volume by commercial airline,” Little said. “We buy tickets for our mail, which is why we ask all of those questions about content when a customer drops off a package.”

Because most of the post offices around the lake are smaller and can’t accommodate big trucks at their docks multiple trips are made each day.

“For the last three Sundays, we’ve been transporting there early in the day. South Lake Tahoe got two trucks in two days,” he said.

All of this increased activity bodes well for the Postal Service, Little said. “We’ve seen a 20 to 30 percent increase in package delivery over last year. Maybe it’s the better economy. But we’ve done a good job, so people are coming back to us.”

Routing mail to the appropriate address is a massive undertaking. Photo/Linda Fine Conaboy

Routing mail to the appropriate address is an intricate process. Photo/Linda Fine Conaboy

In addition, Little said the “If it fits, it ships,” slogan advertising flat rate mail has been exceedingly helpful. “It’s a convenience to customers. The carrier gets a notification, knocks on the door or picks up the package off the porch. How much more convenient can that be?” she asked.

Not only does computer automation help the home customer or business, but it’s been a boon to the post office too. Unless they’re oversized and culled from the herd, letters and even parcels are all loaded on conveyor belts, sorted, bar coded and distributed to carriers, all in the blink of a computer’s eye. This process happens for incoming and outgoing mail and happens to each piece.

Still, there is a downside to post office operations. Enter David Rupert, a corporate communications specialist based in Denver. “We’ve been self-sufficient since 1972,” Rupert said. “Before that we were taxpayer-supported. Over time, we’ve been required by law to break even and we have, but the last few years, we’ve struggled.

“We’re still losing lots of money because first class mail is down 30 percent over the last six years. Parcels are on the increase, but not making up the difference yet. We welcome this, but we still struggle over decreasing volume. In part, it could be that many people are now paying their bills online,” he told Lake Tahoe News.

But even the battle to overcome a difficult past record can’t dampen the spirits of the crew at Vassar Street. Heck, you’d think that any minute Santa was going to pull up to the loading dock. This is one happy crew, eager to deliver good tidings.

“This is a very choreographed, organized process, believe it or not,” Stralik laughed.

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Notes:

Important mailing dates are fast approaching. For a stress-free season remember to mail first class letters by Dec. 19; priority parcels by Dec. 21; and express mail by Dec. 23.

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Comments

Comments (9)
  1. Denise says - Posted: December 17, 2015

    I want to thank the USPS and all its employees. I know firsthand that our mailing system is the best in the world and I appreciate all they do for us. A mailed card will never be replaced. I know of no one who doesn’t experience delight in finding a personal piece of correspondence hidden within the bills and advertisements.

    I snail mailed over 140 Holiday Cards. I won’t receive that many and that’s okay because I’m a firm believer that it’s “better to give than to receive”. Each and every card made it to its destination thanks to everyone on the USPS team. I hope they realize that in all the chaos of this time of year, there are people out there that appreciate all their efforts.

    After this article I am even more grateful for the job they do! Thank you and Merry Everything.

  2. yobobbyb says - Posted: December 17, 2015

    The delivery service in the county up here is the worst I have experienced. We are constantly redelivering mail meant for neighbors, and having mail redelivered by neighbors several streets away to us. Just yesterday I had to deliver mail to two households down the block. I have had numerous conversations with supervisors, but the constant turnover in employees must prevent reliable delivery. No wonder more people are eschewing snail mail.

  3. Dogula says - Posted: December 17, 2015

    If we have the best postal system in the world, the worst must be. . . interesting.
    I bought a box of cards at Raley’s at the Y. They were standard length, but very narrow. Still, since they were in a normal store, and there was nothing on the box or any of the envelopes indicating special postage requirements, I figured they’d be fine.
    Got them all addressed, stamped, mailed while in another state, but wrote my own return on address in the proper place.
    A week later, I got a stack of 5 (of the dozen or so of these cards) in my po box marked, Undeliverable because they didn’t meet minimum size requirements.
    Undeliverable? They managed to deliver them back to the return address, in a different state than they originated. Wouldn’t it have been just as easy to get them to their addressees instead of back to me?
    That was one of the most ridiculous things I’ve ever seen.
    We need to change the law, and allow private companies like UPS and Fed Ex to deliver 1st class letters as well as parcels!

  4. rock4tahoe says - Posted: December 17, 2015

    Dog. I use the Post Office all the time. Takes three days to get a letter back East and is less then 50 cent.

    The “law” you referred to is the US Constitution and since the Republicans in charge have a hard time passing gas, good luck with that.

  5. Ryan Payne says - Posted: December 17, 2015

    I have dealt with our local post offices on a daily basis for over 8 years and they are the best!

    Our business relies on the USPS to ship 100% of our mail, including dozens of packages and letters daily, and we always receive great service!

    Merry Christmas and HAPPY HOLIDAYS to all the delivery people out there! Thank you for all your hard work this season!

  6. Dogula says - Posted: December 17, 2015

    The post office can suspend the Private Express Statutes if it WANTS to. But it doesn’t want to.

  7. billy the mountain says - Posted: December 17, 2015

    ” I figured they’d be fine.”
    You deserved to have all of your letters rejeced. You messed up. Things have consequences.
    ‘but i was wrong, and it is their fault. government. wah.’

  8. Dogula says - Posted: December 18, 2015

    Must be so much more comfortable for a slave to be so enamored of his master. Don’t have to think so much that way.