The Province

Door-to-door mail delivery up for review

Liberals following up on election pledge to restore Canada Post letter carrier service

- JORDAN PRESS AND TERRY PEDWELL

OTTAWA — Canadians could find themselves with door-to-door mail delivery again at the end of what the government says will be a sweeping review of every business line at Canada Post.

The federal government unveiled Thursday a four-member panel that will look at the future of the Crown corporatio­n, including whether the national letter carrier should get back into the banking business.

Privatizat­ion of Canada Post — in whole or in part — is not on the table, said Public Services Minister Judy Foote.

She said any changes will have to carry a reasonable cost, with the ultimate goal of making Canada Post self-sustaining.

Seniors groups and advocates for the disabled cried foul when Canada Post announced a controvers­ial plan to phase out home mail delivery and switch millions of Canadians to community mailboxes as part of cost-saving measures.

During the election campaign, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau pledged to restore door-to-door delivery. Once in power, he temporaril­y halted the move to community boxes that was already underway.

“Home delivery, yes. Home delivery in what format in terms of time is another question,” Foote said when asked about the campaign promise. “I don’t think we specified in terms of home delivery being seven days a week or five days a week. We need to hear from Canadians what it is they need and Canadians are responsibl­e and I think they will understand that it has to be at a reasonable cost.”

NDP MP Erin Weir said the Liberals were clear on the campaign trail that they were going to restore home mail delivery and now appear to be backing away from that pledge.

“To most Canadians, that would mean to re-establish the existing service,” Weir said.

“So it’s quite strange for the minister to muse about two days a week or three days a week because at this point the Liberals aren’t restoring home mail delivery for any number of days per week.”

The panel will provide an interim report by the end of summer, with final recommenda­tions to be made before year’s end, Foote said. The total cost of the exercise is $2 million.

The union representi­ng more than 50,000 postal workers said the review was a historic opportunit­y to reinvent Canada Post.

The union has been pushing the banking option as a way for Canada Post to make money and held rallies Thursday as part of that push.

The postal service ditched its financial offerings in 1968, but the Canadian Union of Postal Workers argues that re-introducin­g banking at the agency’s more than 6,500 outlets could generate revenue that’s been lost as fewer people send letters.

Foote said the union will have a voice in the review.

The union and Canada Post are in the midst of negotiatio­ns on a new collective agreement with a work disruption possible by the summer if the two sides can’t agree.

 ?? NATASHA FILLION/FILES ?? Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau pledged to restore door-to-door mail delivery during the federal election.
NATASHA FILLION/FILES Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau pledged to restore door-to-door mail delivery during the federal election.

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