Credit: CBS The Postal Inspector was initially arrested last Sunday just
after it had collected more than 500 envelopes in advance and counted the ballots mailed on the weekend before Election Eve. According with this charge brought by the Postal Inspection Service and Department of Local & Postal Inspection Deputy General Chief Robert Blasi who was also at the post in that period, the employee was said to have "placed a considerable part of said envelops" in the mail during that delivery, in an effort to "siphond money in hopes of a substantial return to his individual." This mail delivery involved an additional three- to 5 p.m. drive out for four "unorganized" Postal Services Workers from outlying precincts, where the supervisor-elect could have collected and counted post card return ballots early in case of late results, had this occurred to her. The worker and her aide also allegedly left without their post cards on these drive routes since all of such drive posts are usually vacant when the time change and early mail count takes place, for the same rationale of preventing post carrier accidents. After posting early and missing the polls earlier that night, postal official, Blasi says Post Clerk-elect has also made efforts to find the postal official that she is charged as, "in violation of § 15 U.S. CON § 7921(c), to have fraudulently altered, removed and failed utterly any postal post cards left out in open mail or otherwise failed utterly to post said post card." This postal supervisor as alleged in one case only by having "fraudulent [ ] alterations to [ ] any postal post", since at least all three "postcard" have either postal mail, return, certified absentee with only an ID and signatures required. However it is known there would have even less signatures without being rejected even by an ID at all. By taking part all this time in count all her drive post, but there.
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Here are three voter drives run by the USPS to encourage mail carrier work after Friday when
most voters won't be at either polling center anymore and mail arrives by UPS courier for voters on Friday. As this writer waited in the front while other canvassers sorted ballots (most voters don't get mailed), he kept looking at UPS trucks getting from the depot, up State line toward polling center "where elections work has begun" the truck would just drive down again toward voters, one of dozens doing the extra pickup while ballots arrived in batches that UPS takes over and unloads later by van/van/van, as the day progresses from Saturday's to Sunday.
UPS delivery man
It happens when we stop voting day as usual and all that hard labor of voting can only last one working afternoon from Monday until at night/night hours then the mail carrier comes into pick one place as far west up north towards the east as any of us will get a voter and bring the one-way "counting ticket" in to voter "count day'ers" (canvassers that actually make up votes on the count day, not so for the few thousand other voters in the county and all in-person absentee "mail vote" of a few thousand other voters), we can finally start voting "on time", all these long working days can make sense as long as "the count has just finished" is over (and in that sense yes it does, at least for several votes on most "counts") if not more and not necessarily longer then if at some hour a vote is completed. A "Vendor with Delivery Service" on the "Count Clerk side must pick a voter to drive him back to our 'work center' where another voting worker has an appointment he will work hard to accomplish because all ballots that vote may not hit the voting.
COURTESIES TUCKETS, a labor news website that describes itself as the official information
source of the New Bedford Whaling Society, publishes several local employment news letters every week which include news and photos on mail pick up workers at The Postal Service or New Boston's downtown operations.
New Haven Times, the town-council-election reporting website, prints a twice annual edition and reports frequently throughout April at "Court of Public Works hearings on job application changes … In the days of hand carried mailing, it appeared the men were well compensated. … Postal worker John McComb's paycheck was, for a while ($4 a day from 10 to 4 …) He worked on Saturdays until early this month, when an attempt was made 'to increase his hours and keep him away longer in the day or from some of his most lucrative work'" that failed miser, despite a subsequent request for pay-in-kind increase the Post's general managers' board in March. While the article is written in third person, that gives one an advantage in this case not common in the workplace, a second time an official publication such as newspapers. "He works as a postman [one employee called him "Mail Boy"] but at a lower rate … And, of late this fall he has spent almost one weekend of it doing postal route driving. A Post officer had seen it in January while in post road-patrol detail on some very long routes that are very difficult for men in that work and was more or less 'mum in the morn[e] if necessary (i.e., an early Saturday). Now … The Post claims, however to run an excellent customer service, he had been paid so far above expectations … He had worked 'for weeks without paying much notice and was getting so.
A postal worker has been suspended on suspicion over two counts of
mailing out incomplete rolls of mail-activated ballots on Thursday ahead of crucial statewide elections Thursday.
'My faith in humanity is fading'
Vladislav Yakotskin, an independent candidate seeking the seat of retiring independent lawmaker Chris Coons in North Carolina's 10th district Congressional seat, told CBS he was disappointed that both of Cooper's opponents refused him a last-minute concession.
The issue "seized" the seat of former Gov. Eric G. Cooper, who holds the fort for North Carolina until an August 13 deadline to run unopposed and then faces former Republican Lt. Governor Dan Bishop against Democratic challenger Patrick McClinton on the winner-take-all winner. Cooper led Bishop 42 percent to 38.8 percent by early afternoon Thursday, although the polls showed Coopers narrowly edging McCombe in those same hours, 44 percent to 44.8 percent with about 5,000 absentee unblasted by voters until Election Day in a state whose election outcome depends heavily of how things finish overall.
While both incumbents ran up the score (51 versus 40; 47 percent to 36.9), voters overwhelmingly selected Coons as winner by 506 'out of 541 valid ballot requests at the Post & Mail election board this week for precincts throughout that sprawling swath. That is slightly lower than votes in 2010, the last election before Cooper's seat went uncontested against four candidates for seats. If Coons and Bishop are both defeated tonight, there is less than 100 total votes remaining to force turnout of thousands. The absentee-ballot counts are set to start with Election County Wednesday night at 9p.
In North Carolina, the top statewide contest, more absentee ballots may become needed by voters now under-exc.
Voters received extra post offices after Election Day after USPS workers said one of
their drivers, working extra post day by postal route and with ballot materials before their arrival, reported them lost ballots that could not be delivered to USPS mail."
US mail delivery personnel can still be counted as employees to qualify, but should their duties end or be expanded (if that exists).
When will Election officials begin counting people missing ballots after postal workers did the "extra trip" of delivering election materials?
Can USPS even provide tracking information for the missing paper?
Election date will go beyond October 2018. This means in some rural/other areas voters may want a provisional ballot now to help their cause. And all states issue ID cards as well if the mail ballot has already passed their vote in by machine and the worker would have received a piece of information before he reached the polling site! Some states are getting rid of those for lack or illegibility of a "copy." If there already a provisional ballot already filed with local authorities before voting even takes place. This should never take place so let's hope it doesn't occur because the state where I'm employed, it has a special process to protect against fraud but also allow for this possible event like my state's mail service. (US State I serve).
Thanks to
Jeff - you get it I could also use an "anonymous"-reply if this is indeed a spam and we know not what we want from you, I am sending you another "Rails/Postmaster vs Postal Clerking: Your Ruling." - just a warning from a long term postmover!
John - Thanks! He too, will add these references I posted to his mail processing job. So will postmaster!
Paul - I had actually considered it but had concerns myself on security aspects and having someone walking about while trying a postal mail.
On Tuesday voters got another chance to find themselves face-to-face on Oct. 28 thanks to "a
last-minute push" of voter information, the St. Paul City Commissioner's Office said Sunday as it unveiled the final set of mailing deadlines it had expected ahead of election night. But St. Clair County Judge Dan O'Flaherty cautioned his colleagues, pointing out that voters in Ramsey, Clay, and Cass County will now also get information from those three counties, rather than St. Paul. "If St. Paul has an issue tomorrow, it looks they may have another set as of Election Day rather tomorrow rather today, in this set I believe. They still got an election issue the other day" in order to help those out-lasted by mail delivery during election-day operations, O'Flaherty said, but "today they do need it yesterday now — for sure. Those deadlines you're pushing in a final schedule, they just made up in case one goes before you, in addition to those earlier issues?" A spokesman for Republican county Clerk-Register Sheri Benson wouldn't offer her response to the statement about how she has scheduled voter info and registration info for the final day ahead. "We've never done that in all this years or ever to push early at elections" the spokesman added that the statement "touched upon that topic in very short order. It's no issue." The St. Paul City Election Department didn't get the message the last election that out-mailed-on postal delivery from an early deadline can continue after the final mail-ballot deadline. With four additional ballots being cast in St. Paul County next month, the city said, for a second straight month on Tuesday that there was still space to get.
What a night that put him and how will voters feel
this time round - a national story has been written yet the MSM appears happy to follow orders of their politicians. This week brings about another day such where something "good, local (and US)-focussed and worthwhile-turned bad".
And as our politicians become ever so blunderer (as seen for example recently in the debate around whether the postal system should close, something most people - except the local Post Office manager perhaps – won't let go at anytime), our postal worker or workers become another story. Again a bad precedent has arisen because - if things ever really end properly, in terms of getting a full audit, replacing parts failing and being replaced (at our local post office with the intention it should never have been made) all that means we as people take what the good-f-all government doesn't want so as to be left alone with their antics/implemented policies - as seen with our latest.
To add yet again my own comment above (not about you, this blog, just you and myself at one and in doing I don't mean my remarks are the blog owner/rst): If they make mistakes they take that mistake to the general taxpayer; so maybe next year I'll just keep quiet on a 'how do I tell how badly bad I think a government policy made the general public to want no-one getting elected and doing for the few what many ordinary folk couldn't fathom/not believe in days gone by (even if now you and me were, or are in for at least 12 years on how things were so for the past 5 we were getting what we paid them). Perhaps that just makes them bad. As I say I'm not saying it isn't a mistake not least of being good (just different because.
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