® Greater New York Postal Customer Council Krista Finazzo USPS Operational Requirements April 16,...

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Transcript of ® Greater New York Postal Customer Council Krista Finazzo USPS Operational Requirements April 16,...

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Greater New York Postal Customer Council

Greater New York Postal Customer Council

Krista FinazzoUSPS Operational Requirements

April 16, 2008

Krista FinazzoUSPS Operational Requirements

April 16, 2008

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Agenda Agenda

New Address Standards for Flats

Letter-Size Booklets and Folded Self-Mailers

Flats Sequencing System

Combined Mailings — Standard Mail and Periodicals Flats

Pressure-Sensitive Scheme Bundle Labels

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New address standards for flats are effective in March 2009 and specify:

Address location

Address format

New Address StandardsNew Address Standards

4

The new address location standards apply to these presorted, automation, and carrier route flats:

Periodicals Standard Mail Package Services

New Address StandardsNew Address Standards

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Address location: Address must be in top half of mailpiece. Vertical address may cross midpoint if placed

within 1 inch of top edge. When the address is on an insert

polywrapped with the host piece, the address must maintain placement throughout processing and delivery.

New Address StandardsNew Address Standards

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Final Rule

Bound edgeon right

Joh

n D

oe

123 M

ain

St

An

ywh

ere, US

A 12

345

Joh

n D

oe

123

Ma

in S

tA

nyw

her

e, U

SA

12

345

Can face left or right

John Doe123 Main StAnywhere, USA 12345

Can be left or right justified, or centered

John Doe123 Main StAnywhere, USA 12345

Cannot readupside down

TopHalf

Bound edgeon right

TopHalf

New Address StandardsNew Address Standards

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Address format:

All commercial flats must be addressed using at least 8-point type (each letter or figure must be at least 0.080 inch high).

Sans-serif font and all capital letters strongly preferred.

New Address StandardsNew Address Standards

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Additional standards for automation pieces:

Address characters cannot overlap. Address lines cannot touch or overlap (0.028-inch clearance preferred).

Address elements may be separated by no more than five blank spaces.

New Address StandardsNew Address Standards

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Flats using POSTNET or Intelligent Mail barcode with a delivery point routing code may use 6-point type (each letter or figure must be at least 0.065 inch high) if the address is printed in all capital letters.

New Address StandardsNew Address Standards

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One-inch label using 10-point type and all required/recommended clear spaces.

New Address StandardsNew Address Standards

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Eight-point type.

Six-point type.

New Address StandardsNew Address Standards

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Final rule on pe.usps.com.

Implementation on March 29, 2009.

Contact local MDA for design assistance.

Contact PCSC for national rulings.

New Address StandardsNew Address Standards

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“Slim-jims”: Letter-size, unenveloped pieces. Shape-based pricing structure increases attractiveness. Commonly processed on flat sorters:

• Supervisor/operator redirects due to jams

• Increases cost

Booklets and Folded Self-MailersBooklets and Folded Self-Mailers

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Identify which types of booklets and folded self-mailers will process on letter-sorting equipment.

Develop new standards for mailpiece characteristics and required tabbing.

Align standards for “machinable” and “automation” pieces.

Booklets and Folded Self-MailersBooklets and Folded Self-Mailers

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Engineering test — Phase 1:

78 manufactured decks of 500 pieces.

Test size and thickness, tabs (strength, style, location), and spine location.

Booklets and Folded Self-MailersBooklets and Folded Self-Mailers

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Phase 1 results:

Thickness and tab integrity were the most important characteristics.

● Pieces 1/16-inch thick processed at acceptable rates when tabs remained in place

● Pieces 1/8-inch thick sustained unacceptable levels of jams and damage

Cover stock was also important, especially on thicker pieces.

Booklets and Folded Self-MailersBooklets and Folded Self-Mailers

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Engineering test — Phase 2:

More precise testing of tabbing, thickness, and cover stock.

Evaluation of cover friction, compatibility with current letter trays, and tab certification procedures.

Manufactured test pieces and “live” pieces submitted by mailers.

Booklets and Folded Self-MailersBooklets and Folded Self-Mailers

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Seven-part evaluation: Enveloped pieces Spine-right booklets Multifold booklets Single-sheet mailers Large postcards Booklets with flimsy inner pages Compatibility with letter trays

Booklets and Folded Self-MailersBooklets and Folded Self-Mailers

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Tentative Schedule

Advance notice: Available now

Phase 2 testing: June – July

Phase 2 analysis: July

Proposal for comment: Early Fall

Final rule: TBD

Booklets and Folded Self-MailersBooklets and Folded Self-Mailers

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Flats Sequencing SystemFlats Sequencing System

Automatic High Speed Feeders

Dolly Induction Subsystem

Carousel-style Sorter

Tray Staging

Integrated Tray Converters

Mail Prep Subsystem

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TODAY TOMORROW

Flats Sequencing SystemFlats Sequencing System

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New, auto-ready pallet will align mail preparation and entry with mail processing:

Bundle preparation

Pallet preparation

Presorting

Destination entry

Flats Sequencing SystemFlats Sequencing System

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Bundle preparation concepts:

One or two straps, no shrinkwrap.

No compensating or counterstacking of pieces.

Consistent bundle sizes for ACTs.

Flats Sequencing SystemFlats Sequencing System

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Pallet preparation concepts:

Multiple FSS zones on a pallet.

Non-FSS bundles on same pallet (sorted by APPS).

Need enough mail to build cost-effective pallet.

Flats Sequencing SystemFlats Sequencing System

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Presorting concepts:

Exploring options based on today’s carrier routes.

Auto-ready bundles would be scheme-specific, not route specific.

Developing models and data sets to determine appropriate pricing.

Flats Sequencing SystemFlats Sequencing System

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Destination entry concepts:

Entry points will expand and condense as FSS is deployed.

After full deployment, number of entry points may be same or fewer than today.

Flats Sequencing SystemFlats Sequencing System

27Auto-Ready Pallet Concept

FSS Bundles for Multi FSS Schemes

Non-FSS Bundles

Flats Sequencing SystemFlats Sequencing System

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New pilot option to combine mailings of Standard Mail and Periodicals flats on pallets:

Achieve finer presort and deeper drop shipment.

Copalletization — combine bundles into one mailstream.

Comailing — combine pieces into one mailstream.

Mixed ClassesMixed Classes

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Pallets must drop ship at DADC or DSCF. Pallets handled as Standard Mail. Existing rates and classification unchanged:

●Mailers must adhere to the volume minimums for Standard Mail by including at least 200 pieces or 50 pounds in each combined mailing.

●Periodicals publications must be authorized or pending authorization.

Mixed ClassesMixed Classes

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Pressure-sensitive scheme bundle labels available soon!

5-Digit Scheme (red)

3-Digit Scheme (green)

Use instead of Optional Endorsement Lines

Contact your BME manager

Bundle Label UpdateBundle Label Update

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Postal Explorerpe.usps.com

MailPromncsc@usps.com

DMM Advisorydmmadvisory@usps.com

“Flats Day” May 20th at National Postal Forumwww.npf.org

ResourcesResources

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