The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Postmen’s fury as boss asks them to finishallr­ounds

- By Alex Lawson SENIOR CITY CORRESPOND­ENT

THE chief executive of Royal Mail has sparked fury – by asking postmen to deliver more letters.

In a bid to reduce postal delays, Simon Thompson has asked employees to muck in and clear their offices of all mail every day, if deliveries fall behind.

But reacting to the letter, one postman said: ‘This is very frustratin­g. Our routes are hard work and the volumes of mail have been high since the start of the pandemic.

‘We’ve been on the frontline delivering, risking getting Covid. To ask us to do more now is really dispiritin­g.’ Another simply described the letter as ‘a joke’. Postmen and women across Royal Mail’s 1,200 delivery offices are each given a ‘frame’ – their round of letters and parcels sorted in order of delivery – covering a certain route. This can cover several hundred addresses.

Every delivery office has a series of frames, which are distribute­d among posties. Staff are expected to carry out additional deliveries if their workload is lower or if a colleague is off sick but Royal Mail is now asking its posties to routinely pick up any slack if colleagues fall behind.

In the letter to staff, seen by The Mail on Sunday, Mr Thompson says: ‘This year I have one request. At the end of every day let’s make sure every office is cleared, not just individual frames.’ Strict rules on prompt deliveries of first and second class mail were relaxed during the pandemic, but the emergency measures were removed by regulator Ofcom last month, putting pressure on Royal Mail to improve delivery figures.

In his letter, Mr Thompson said a ‘small number’ of under-performing delivery offices were having a ‘disproport­ionate’ impact on the privatised company’s national performanc­e. He cited a day in August when just 25 of the 1,200 delivery offices were responsibl­e for a quarter of all mail delays nationally.

‘We must find a way to equalise performanc­e so every office can play an equal part in our success,’ he added.

One former Royal Mail executive claimed that a hardcore of experience­d staff tended to resist change. ‘In theory what we once called “job and finish” – where you finished

‘To ask us to do more is really dispiritin­g’

your round and left work for the day – ended years ago,’ he said. ‘But in reality, many managers allow more senior posties to have lighter walks and knock off early.’

A key attraction of a job as a postal worker has traditiona­lly been the ability to do a second job in the afternoon after finishing a round, but later working hours have made this less common.

An attempt to re-plan routes for posties is due to be completed next month after negotiatio­ns with unions. Mr Thompson is attempting to modernise the 500year-old company amid increasing competitio­n from rivals including DPD and Hermes.

He is also seeking to address widespread claims of bullying within the firm’s 120,000 workforce.

Also in his letter, he said the company would try to save money by hiring fewer temporary Christmas staff this year than the 33,000 extra workers it had to draft in last year to cope with festive shopping in lockdown.

‘Now that we will have a better balanced workload, we will revisit the number of temporary workers we require this year,’ he wrote.

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