I see that they are thinking of raising prices yet again to deliver snail mail, would it make sense to cancel the "Post" altogether & offer all householders a small fax machine for a reasonable price then anyone who does not posess a computer ( yes there are still people who are without) could still write letters & fax them to whoever & cut out not only expensive stamps but the outdated delivery service.
Good idea - but you couldn't include, say, official documentation with your letter, and how would it handle items that need a signature as proof of delivery?
So, when (as part of my work) I've got 500 completed 4-page questionnaires to send back to the office, instead of simply putting them into a pre-paid Special Delivery envelope and dropping it off at any Post Office (as I do now), all I've got to do is to fax (or scan and then email) 2000 individual sheets of paper. That will make things so much simpler for me, won't it???
Buenchico.....Your problem could be solved by sending your package via one of the many private carriers who have been operating for a good few years now.
SirOracle:
I use carriers such as Collect Plus quite a lot.
However they wouldn't be as easy to use for some of the work I do. For example, I could be stood in the middle of a field from 7am to 7pm (with a few breaks of course) interviewing people on part of a National Cycle Route that crosses. The following day I could then be stood in the middle of another field for the same hours but with a requirement to get the first day's completed forms into the office by noon on the following day. It's usually easy enough to find a village Post Office during my break but I might find difficulty in getting a carrier to pick up my package from the middle of a field!
;-)
Considering that we have already had eye-wateringly large price increases recently, I think its a ruddy liberty to be thinking of more.
But all this was on the cards when the previous Tory Government hived it off. Even a certain Tory lady stopped short of that. It will all end in tears, mark my words, like most privatisations.
Is it better to let the taxpayer subsidise it, mikey?
Recently I have rwalised the post is actually quite good value- it costs me 60 odd p to write to HMRC or my energy company whereas phoning them costs me a few pounds and I usually hang up without speaking to anyone after 45 minutes of waiting