The Oban Times

ROYAL MAIL UNDER FIRE AGAIN

- by Sandy Neil sneil@obantimes.co.uk

Royal Mail is under fire again after a pensioner in Oban, who fears she may have cancer, missed seeing medics at Oban hospital because her appointmen­t letter did not arrive at her Longsdale home in time.

The letter arrived a week after it was sent out from the hospital just a mile away.

‘The Royal Mail service is non-existent,’ said Lynda Low, a former nursing assistant at Oban’s Lorn and Islands Hospital, who lives less than a mile away on Hazeldean Crescent. ‘We are lucky if we get it once a week. It has now been 10 days.’ Lynda, 69, is diabetic and when her toenail turned black hospital staff set up an emergency appointmen­t for her. ‘There is a chance this could be cancer,’ she said.

But on Friday April 1, she received a surprise call from the hospital. ‘They called this morning wondering why I had not turned up for my appointmen­t,’ she told The Oban Times. ‘They said my appointmen­t was half an hour ago.’ Staff told her the appointmen­t letter had been sent a week before.

‘Even if it turns up now, it is too late,’ she said. ‘I feel tearful. I have not been seen by a podiatrist for two years because of Covid. This appointmen­t was very important. They have reschedule­d.’

Lynda had also not received the card her son sent for Mother’s Day the previous Sunday March 27. ‘I want my Mother’s Day card from my boy,’ she said.

When she visited the Royal Mail’s Oban Delivery Office on Albany Street on Saturday April 2 to ask about her missing mail, she was handed a bundle of post, including her late hospital appointmen­t letter.

She said it was written 10 days earlier on Thursday March 24 at Oban’s Lorn and Islands Hospital – the envelope’s return address – and the date of the

second-class frank was Friday March 25.

The bundle also included her son’s Mother’s Day card, ‘sent two weeks before’ from Blackpool, she said. ‘They have been holding onto my mail for a fortnight. It was not even out for delivery. What really galls me is I sent a parcel to my brother in the US, and it got there in five days.’

After complainin­g to Royal Mail, she told us: ‘They said something about there being a partial service in the Oban area. It is not a partial service. There is no ******* service.’

On Monday April 4, The Oban Times office received a week’s worth of post, containing both first and second class envelopes franked as far back as Monday March 28 – a week beforehand.

People have also been taking to social media to ask what is going on.

In November last year, one hospital appointmen­t letter took 20 days to travel less than 20 miles – a distance that could be walked in a day.

The Oban Times was contacted by a resident in

Taynuilt, a village 12 miles away from Oban, who received an appointmen­t letter sent by Oban hospital on November 9 (which was also the date the second class envelope was franked), 20 days later on November 29. He had therefore missed his medical appointmen­t on November 16, 13 days earlier.

That month, we reported that Taynuilt residents missed lifesaving Covid vaccines due to first class NHS appointmen­t letters arriving a day or two after their clinics, up to eight days after they were posted.

The Royal Mail chief executive officer’s office apologised – blaming staff shortages – to one affected villager, who also that week received an appointmen­t letter from a Paisley hospital for a serious condition, on the day the procedure was due 90 miles away.

Earlier an Oban resident missed an operation after four first-class letters from a Glasgow hospital, postmarked October 12, 13, 19 and 20, all arrived on the day she was due for surgery on October 26 - 14 days after the first letter was posted.

A Royal Mail spokespers­on said this week: ‘The vast majority of mail is delivered safely and on time. We aim to deliver to all addresses we have mail for, six days a week. In the local area, we are experienci­ng some delays to service due to high levels of sickness absence, Covid-related self-isolation and resourcing issues.

‘We completely understand the disappoint­ment expressed by our customer about missing a hospital appointmen­t after not receiving a letter the hospital reported having sent, and we apologise to any customers who may have experience­d delays to their mail.

‘We have been working hard to get our levels of service back to normal as soon as possible. Anyone who has concerns over the delivery of their mail should contact the Royal Mail customer service team on 03457 740 740 or via the website www.royalmail.com.’

The Oban Times understand­s a number of new postmen/ postwomen are set to start working for the Royal Mail in the local area, which is expected to bring some considerab­le improvemen­t.

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