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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Sisters Post Office makes changes They took away
the "Sisters Mail Only" slot.
An efficiency expert in the
regional postal center at Eugene decided "it would work better if all
our local mail went to Bend before being brought back to Sisters for local
distribution," said temporary postmaster, Pat Green, who refers to herself
as "the officer in charge."
"And, it is possible they
might be right," she said. "We'll have to wait and see."
Many times, she said, there
was "so much local mail and not enough hands to sort it" that it waited
an extra day for delivery here.
"Now, local mail goes out
with the rest, is sorted by our delivery routes overnight in Bend, and
returned to us the next morning. It then goes directly to the route person
already sorted," she said.
"One of the noticeable advantages
will affect Tollgate," Green said. "We should be able to get the mail
up there around noon, about three hours earlier than now. Other areas
will still get their mail about the same time as before."
Black Butte Ranch and Camp
Sherman have their own substations and sort, deliver and forward their
own mail.
Green, who has been the temporary
"officer in charge" here for about a year, said that Sisters will have
its new, permanent postmistress by July.
"Julie Pilcher from Batavia,
Illinois, will be moving here to take over," Green said. "I'll be going
back to my original job as postmaster in Culver, a small branch just south
of Madras near Lake Billy Chinook.
"I asked for the permanent
job here, as I do like the people and love this area," she said, "but
the higher-ups ruled otherwise."
Asked about the frequent delays
in mail that's forwarded from here she said, "All mail to be forwarded
from Sisters is marked here and goes out the same day. Eugene is where
the bottleneck is, if there is one. They apply the new address sticker.
We have no control over that."
One delay-making hassle rests
squarely on the shoulders of the public.
"Our big hang-up here, and
where we could use some help from our customers," Green said, "is with
the undeliverable mail that mainly is addressed to local businesses.
"We get about this much each
day," she said holding her hands a foot apart, "and we just don't have
the time to look up all those postal box numbers. Sometimes we can do
that when it's a parcel, but with letter mail, we just have to return
it. It would really help us if those in our Sisters area would call a
business and ask for their mailing address before dropping that letter
or bill payment in the outgoing mail box."
Because Sisters has so many
retired people who travel or are gone in the winter, "we have over 100
new addresses each month that need forwarding," Green added.
"We'll just have to wait and
see what the effect of our closing the 'local mail only' slot will be
here. If it doesn't work, we'll try to get that 'efficiency person' in
Eugene to reverse his or her decision," she said. |
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