Business Day

Post Office again fails to clear mail backlog

- Carol Paton

The SA Post Office (Sapo) has again missed its self-imposed deadline to sort through its backlog from the two-week strike in July and still has about 7.8-million items to dispatch in order to catch up.

CEO Mark Barnes has previously said that the Post Office would get back to normal at the end of September and then again at the end of October. Barnes now says that the end of November is the new deadline.

During the strike and oneweek go-slow that preceded it, Sapo accumulate­d a backlog of 38-million parcels and letters. About 1-million new items come in for processing every day.

The backlog has caused enormous frustratio­n among the public, some of whom say they have been waiting months for items they expected to receive.

Sapo has faced a litany of operationa­l setbacks since 2017 as liquidity constraint­s led to the repossessi­on of equipment such as forklifts and vehicles and an inability to pay suppliers, for instance to print stamps.

The delays caused by July’s strike came as the last straw for the public, which since the huge

2014 strike has lost confidence that it is able to deliver.

Barnes said the reason it had taken longer than expected to clear the backlog was the increased volumes towards the end of the year due to the festive season, and increased volumes due to increased internet postage. Unpaid bills had also led to problems with availabili­ty of equipment, such as letter sorting machines and vehicles.

The busy season for the Post Office is October to January, and the aim is to clear the backlog by the end of November, Barnes said. “People are starting to receive their mail although we still have a challenge [with] internatio­nal mail, which is pouring into SA.

“The internet is enabling people to buy things overseas for far cheaper than they can get them here, so we are seeing a massive increase in internetba­sed post. Registered mail, for instance, is up 600%.”

Sapo lacks the technology to easily deal with registered overseas mail, which must be processed manually and captured for customs purposes. Internatio­nal mail was also until recently routed through Johannesbu­rg before being sent on to other regional centres.

Barnes said that since April, Sapo had developed a huge backlog in supplier payments, which had hampered its operations, but the prospects of financial support announced in the adjustment budget last week of R2.9bn had alleviated those problems. “We are going to invest in infrastruc­ture; we have already a lot of investment for the social grants payments and we are going to do more.”

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