About 75 percent of First-Class Mail will keep its current service standards, according to USPS, and 14 percent will see an ...
Learn how wildfire survivors in Los Angeles can access, hold, or forward mail to make sure it gets to their temporary address ...
The U.S. Postal Service will start rolling out changes impacting First-Class Mail and package services, among others, on ...
Rallies against the privatization of mail delivery were held across the country on Sunday, including in Cleveland and Akron.
About 1,200 residences along with businesses around Lambeau Field will be affected, according to Desai Abdul-Razzaaq, a ...
An interactive map will also be available to display expected delivery times based on mail class. For more details on the service standard changes, customers can visit USPS Delivering for America.
By punching in the ZIP codes, the search results will show available mail classes and expected delivery dates. The USPS is also unveiling an interactive map that will show expected delivery times.
Starting April 1, USPS will deliver 75% of first-class mail at the same rate, 14% at a faster standard and 11% at a slower rate, Newsweek reported. All mail will stay within the delivery standard ...
According to the USPS Office of the Inspector General, that equates to one in five letters not making it to your mailbox within the standard two-day delivery. "Mail has never been great here ...