Posted: September 6, 2007 - 09:00
Your Public Post Office Delivers Campaign / Fact Sheet
Fact sheet 4
The federal government is considering doing a review of Canada Post for the first time in 11 years. What would this mean for postal workers and service? CUPW has prepared a summary of previous reviews, with a few highlights, to help people understand what we may face should the government decide to proceed with an examination of our public post office.
As you will see, previous reviews have come in many shapes and sizes. Some have been much more public than others. As a rule, reviews have made recommendations that were both bad and good. Governments have implemented some but not all recommendations, sometimes with catastrophic results.
In short, reviews have the potential to shape our jobs and our public post office. They need to be taken very seriously.
There have been four reviews in slightly over two decades.
In 1985, the federal government appointed the Review Committee on the Mandate and Productivity of Canada Post Corporation. The committee was chaired by Alan Marchment. All members of the committee, but one, were business representatives. The committee held hearings in just seven cities and visited only five postal stations. The hearings were not open to the public so there was no opportunity to rebut inaccurate information. Little time was permitted for groups to decide if they wished to make presentations. No effort was made to obtain the views of people in small communities. The committee began its hearing in July and reported in November.
Recommendation highlights
The report of the review committee recommended that the corporation scale back plans to invest in parcel distribution and electronic bulk mail. Canada Post did this.
As well, the report recommended that privatization be considered if Canada Post failed to become financially self-sufficient by 1990. The corporation started making profits in 1989.
The report also recommended
In 1988, the government created an ongoing, independent review body called the Postal Services Review Committee. It said the committee would give people “a voice in the planning of postal rates and service”. The Minister Responsible for Canada Post said that committee recommendations would be rejected “only with good cause and a considerable amount of bravery”. Committee hearings were open to the public. A variety of groups made presentations to the committee between 1988 and 1989.
Recommendation highlights
The committee's first and last report, issued in November 1989, told Canada Post, in no uncertain terms, that the corporation should improve service. It also urged Canada Post to balance its two objectives of financial self-sufficiency and service to customers.
The committee's report recommended postage rate increases be allowed “in order that Canada Post, as a first priority, improve service to households and small business customers while, at the same time continuing on its course towards financial self-sufficiency”.
It also recommended that Canada Post not go ahead with most of its plans to deregulate products and services (Note: this is different than deregulating the post office by removing the exclusive privilege to deliver letters).
In the end, the government approved Canada Post's plans to deregulate products and services in spite of the committee's recommendations and in spite of the fact that the corporation had provided insufficient information to justify its proposals. The government abolished the Postal Services Review Committee in its 1990 budget.
A parliamentary committee reviewed Canada Post in 1989. The committee's mandate was to review Canada's postal service by “examining its current and future relationship with the federal government, the marketplace (urban and rural), its employees and the interests of the Canadian public”.
Committee hearings were open to the public. The committee began its review in October 1989 and reported in April 1990.
Notably, Liberal Party representatives on the committee issued a minority report. This report pointed out that the committee only heard from 28 organizations and did not travel outside of Ottawa. They complained that communities facing closures and experiencing delivery problems did not have a chance to share their views with the committee.
Recommendation highlights
The committee made 39 recommendations, including the following:
In August 1995, the government announced the Canada Post Mandate Review. In May of that year, a coalition of Canada Post's competitors had called for a review to reconsider the mandate of Canada Post, specifically whether the post office should be allowed to compete with private interests.
The mandate review received 440 submissions and 1,084 letters from individuals and groups, including one submission from CUPW national and 21 from CUPW locals. It held six public hearings in urban centres. CUPW appeared at each hearing. The review did not conduct hearings in rural and remote areas even though the union and others had asked that non-urban residents be given an opportunity to make their views known. Instead, it agreed to conduct a number of focus groups in rural and remote locations.
Recommendation highlights
The report of the Canada Post Mandate Review was made public in October 1996. It contained 31 recommendations, including the following:
In the end, the government did not ask Canada Post to get out of all competitive activity, but it did order the post office to get out of its economy unaddressed admail business, as the review had recommended. As a result, Canada Post fired 10,000 admail workers, the largest lay off in Canadian history.
The mandate review also recommended
Post review recommendations
Following the mandate review, the federal government hired TD Securities and Dresdner Kleinwort Benson (TDS-DKB) “to assess the impact of the recommendations of the Mandate Review on Canada Post's ability to remain self-sustaining”. In the end, TDS-DKB rejected the recommendation that Canada Post break-even and instead made the case for a commercial rate of return and the payment of dividends. The TD Securities Report was released in April 1997, more than a decade ago.
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