Yorkshire Post

Watchdog hands Royal Mail £1.5m fine over failure to deliver first-class post on time

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ROYAL MAIL has been hit with a £1.5m fine by the communicat­ions regulator for failing to deliver first-class mail on time.

Ofcom said that Royal Mail missed its target to deliver at least 93 per cent of first-class post across the UK within one working day of it being collected.

In the financial year ending in 2019, only 91.5 per cent of firstclass post reached its destinatio­n on time, Ofcom said.

The company met its obligation­s the following financial year, Ofcom said.

The watchdog said it handed the hefty fine as the group did not provide a “satisfacto­ry explanatio­n and it did not take sufficient steps to get back on track during the year”.

Royal Mail said it is “disappoint­ed” with its first-class postal service for the 2018-19 year and “accepts and understand­s” the decision by Ofcom.

In a statement, it added: “We worked hard to restore our service quality in 2019-20 and, were it not for the pandemic and its impact on our business in the latter half of March, we were on course to deliver the requisite first-class regulated quality of service target of 93 per cent.

“Despite our best endeavours, some areas of the UK experience­d a reduction in service levels during March.”

The regulator also fined Royal Mail £100,000 for overchargi­ng customers for second-class stamps for seven days in March last year. Royal Mail increased its price for second-class stamps to 61p on March 25, 2019, overchargi­ng customers for seven days until the cap increased from 60p on April 1.

The company said it predicts that the move saw customers overcharge­d by around £60,000, which it is unable to refund.

“We accept and note Ofcom’s decision around the 2019 secondclas­s price cap. We made a mistake,” Royal Mail said.

“At the time, we sought to put this error right by publicly acknowledg­ing our mistake.”

Ofcom’s director of investigat­ions and enforcemen­t, Gaucho Rasmussen, said: “Many people depend on postal services, and our rules are there to ensure they get a good service, at an affordable price. Royal Mail let its customers down, and these fines should serve as a reminder that we’ll take action when companies fall short.”

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