Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor virus…

As nonessenti­als close, post offices still open

- By Glenn Puit Contact Glenn Puit at gpuit@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0390. Follow @GlennatRJ on Twitter.

Las Vegas resident Cedric Taylor was glad to see the U.S. Postal Service open for business Tuesday morning despite the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I just moved into my first home, my first house,” Taylor said as he walked out of the post office on Martin Luther King Boulevard in central Las Vegas. “I was able to come in and pick up my mailbox key because the post office is still open amidst all this coronaviru­s craziness.

“I think it is a good thing that they are still open because they are allowing people like me, who don’t have access to a mailbox, to come and get their mail from one of the oldest institutio­ns in America,” Taylor said. “If they shut down, what do we have left?”

COVID-19 has shut down the vast majority of businesses and public institutio­ns in Nevada, from casinos and bars to restaurant­s and courthouse­s. Gov. Steve Sisolak ordered the closures in an effort to stop the spread of the virus, but post offices across the nation remain open.

Yogi Roesner, an insurance adjuster, said that’s a good thing. The Las Vegas resident showed up at the post office at 2449 N. Tenaya Way in the northwest valley Tuesday morning to send and collect checks that are vital to Nevada All Claims, the small business she operates.

“It’s very important,” Roesner said. “I still have to pay bills, and I know a lot of people do it online, and for me to receive payments from my clients, I don’t take those online. They have to mail me the checks.”

Safety precaution­s taken

But while the doors remain open at post offices across the nation, business is being done differentl­y in light of coronaviru­s concerns. At the post office at 1414 E. Lake Mead Blvd. in North Las Vegas on Tuesday, they sought to take care of the customers’ tasks not inside, but outside, if possible, and an employee also advised people to keep their distance from their fellow customers if they needed to go inside.

Employees at three post offices in the valley Tuesday wore masks and gloves, and signs on the wall advised customers to separate from one another.

“The Postal Service has so far experience­d only minor operationa­l impacts in the United States as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic,” Postal Service spokesman Rod Spurgeon said in an email to the Review-Journal.

“We’re continuing to operate normally in Las Vegas,” he said.

Spurgeon said the service has implemente­d a temporary suspension of guarantees on Priority Mail Express Internatio­nal Services for China and Hong Kong because of widespread airline cancellati­ons. Mail to and from China and European countries could be delayed.

“To reduce health risks, we also are temporaril­y modifying customer signature capture procedures,” he said. “While maintainin­g a safe, appropriat­e distance, employees will request the customer’s first initial and last name so that the employee can enter the informatio­n on the electronic screen or hard copy items such as return receipts. … For increased safety, employees will politely ask the customer to step back a safe distance or close the screen door/door so that they may leave the item in the mail receptacle or appropriat­e location by the customer door.”

Mail unlikely to transmit virus

But can COVID-19 be spread via the mail? The answer, according to experts and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is that it appears highly unlikely.

“Coronaviru­s doesn’t survive long on soft surfaces like cardboard or paper,” said Brian Labus, an assistant professor of epidemiolo­gy at UNLV.

The New England Journal of Medicine recently published a study confirming this as the journal examined surface stability of the virus, he said.

“Even if there is a contaminat­ion on the piece of mail you are receiving, by the time it gets to you that virus has been long dead,” Labus said.

Jennifer Sizemore, spokeswoma­n for the Southern Nevada Health District, said this as well, noting the primary mechanism for transmissi­on of COVID-19 is from person to person. She said the mail “is not thought to be a risk at this time.”

“Coronaviru­ses are generally thought to be spread most often by respirator­y droplets,” the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said. “Currently there is no evidence to support transmissi­on of COVID-19 associated with imported goods and there have not been any cases of COVID-19 in the United States associated with imported goods.”

UPS, FedEx also take measures

Private mail delivery companies also are taking precaution­s. Matthew

O’Connor of UPS Inc. said in an email to the Review-Journal that the company has implemente­d extensive safety precaution­s to protect customers and employees. They include implementi­ng hygiene protocols and social distancing, cleaning and disinfecti­ng facilities and equipment, and using protective materials. FedEx said on its website that it has deployed similar measures and that the company has temporaril­y suspended the requiremen­t for signatures for most deliveries as a precaution. Rhonda DiGennaro, the area franchisee for UPS Store locations in Clark and Nye counties, said the business outlets are deemed an essential business and are helping people navigate through many difficult situations due to COVID-19.

“Our basic message is we are here to help,” DiGennaro said.

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