USPS Wants to Make Your Holiday Even Greener
The United Stated Postal Service wants you to save money – and the enviorment – this holiday season.
Holly branches and pine boughs aren’t the only green signs of the holiday season. According to a release from the United States Postal Service, mailers and shippers can also count on their local post office to help them go green, save green and be green this time of year.
“The Postal Service is one of the greenest mailing and shipping companies in the world,” said Thomas G. Day, chief sustainability officer. “We offer more than a half-billion eco-friendly mailing and shipping supplies, free package pickup and holiday cards printed on recycled paper available in 2,000 post offices, and the Postal Service is leading the adoption of green practices by engaging our employees, customers and suppliers.”
The Postal Service offers customers options to help reduce their carbon footprints, just as it consistently seeks ways to reduce its own environmental impact.
“We have a ‘fleet of feet’ delivering mail the greenest way possible – by walking,” Day added. “Nearly 9,000 of our carriers will be delivering holiday mail on foot this season. And we also have nearly 80,000 ‘park and loop’ routes, where carriers will drive vehicles from the Post Office to neighborhoods and then deliver those holiday packages and cards on foot.”
Green Packaging
The Postal Service has established sustainable green packaging standards for its Priority Mail and Express Mail supplies, and a majority of ReadyPost boxes, envelopes and labels. By buying packaging made with recycled content, USPS helps sustain green jobs in America as it reduces greenhouse gas emissions to the environment. Priority Mail and Express Mail supplies are free to customers and can be delivered at no charge by ordering from the Post Office that's always open 24 hours a day.
Green Postage
Tens of billions of postage products, including stamps and stamped envelopes and postal cards, are made with post-consumer recycled content, providing an environmentally responsible use for waste paper. What's more, a large assortment of holiday stamps and customized holiday cards is available at the Postal Store or the Design Mail and Postage Store.
Green Shipping
Customers can save fuel this holiday by ordering free shipping supplies, print shipping labels and pay for postage, all from the comfort of home or office. The Postal Service will pick up packages free the next business day and send them to loved ones wherever they are. Skip the trip and save time, money and fuel this holiday season.
Green Delivery
According to the USPS, the Postal Service will deliver 16.5 billion cards, letters and packages between Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve using the largest civilian fleet in the world — 215,000 vehicles. Among them are a range of alternative fuel-capable vehicles, including three-wheeled electric vehicles with zero gas emissions that operate at a cost of only 2 cents a mile, as well as vehicles that can operate on compressed natural gas, propane, ethanol, and fuel cell. There also will be 30 large all-electric trucks delivering holiday mail in Manhattan.
Recycling
The Postal Service has made recycling a priority. Secure recycle bins in more than 10,000 Post Office lobbies make it easy for customers to read, respond and recycle their PO Box mail during the holidays, and helped customers divert approximately 56,000 tons of paper from landfills last year. The Postal Service recycled nearly 225,000 tons of paper, plastics and other waste in 2010, which avoided more than 700,000 metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions. Customers can go online to find one of 100,000 recycling centers around the country.
The Postal Service has won more than 75 environmental awards, including 40 White House Closing the Circle, 10 Environmental Protection Agency WasteWise Partner of the Year, Climate Action Champion, Direct Marketing Association Green Echo, Postal Technology International Environmental Achievement and Climate Registry Gold Status.
For more information about going green with USPS, visit usps.com/green.
The Postal Service receives no tax dollars for operating expenses and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund its operations.
Virginia Rueber
6:48 am on Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Well, they may be green but the window service SUCKS! And the clerk is rude. What's with one window opened at NTN on a Monday morning at 9:45, with 15 people in line? I waited in line 15 minuets while she waited on one person so I got out of line and went to Eagleville The lines in NTN are always long.!
Nick Graff
11:09 am on Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Close Norristown Post Office. Cost $2.00+ to park there. That is a joke. Montco doomed that office with the parking fee law which should technically be unconstitutional. Bluebell, Conshy, and Ply Meeting has a full parking lot and its what..FREE!! Like the woman above me said, they only have one clerk who is rude, slow, and lets people who don't have their postage papers filed correctly go to the side and let them butt in the front of the line. If its wrong, go to the back of the line!! People have to get to work.
James Myers
12:31 pm on Tuesday, December 13, 2011
I did think it was odd that Norristown didn't leave a few spots in front of the post office for 15 minute free parking. It would have been a nice feature. Perhaps residents can request the change at the next council meeting.
Admittedly, there are plenty of local post offices that don't offer free parking. I lived in Wayne for a short while and all of the spaces around the post office there were metered spots.
Nick Graff
12:39 pm on Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Metered and kiosk is two different systems. Put a coin in, get enough time to go to post office. I can justify that, a nickel, dime or quarter. Why do we have to pay $2.00 to park to ship a package though our poor bleeding U.S postal service????
Like I said in the 1st post, ill just stick to Ply Meeting, Bluebell or Conshy.