AgreeSad to see that nomad burned out, but then I noticed the custom coupe in what was a garage too.
I can understand delivering to the homes across the street that are fine, but why deliver when there's no house anymore? Do them a favor and hold it at the office so they have a chance of actually receiving it.
I can understand delivering to the homes across the street that are fine, but why deliver when there's no house anymore? Do them a favor and hold it at the office so they have a chance of actually receiving it.
I can understand delivering to the homes across the street that are fine, but why deliver when there's no house anymore? Do them a favor and hold it at the office so they have a chance of actually receiving it.
If not now later for sureI just hope they are not cancellation letters from Fire Insurance companies
Phil
no need to comPILE a list... they'll have a PILE of undelivered mail at the end of their route, and hey! whaddaya know! it all conveniently has the addresses of the burned out locations. only have to do that once, and the next day they'll only have actual deliverable mail.You don't have to worry about UPS or FEDEX deliveries in the neighborhood, since there are no front porches to throw the package on, and drive off.
Seriously, I doubt there's any reliable way for the post office to quickly identify which houses are 'gone'. (Other than the carrier compiling a list on his route, then they'd need some software to process it.)
How often do you see video like this where a few houses are untouched? They'd be the ones complaining about no mail service.