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Daily printout: March 5


Thursday, March 5, 2026

A woman wearing an orange safety vest and hard hat checking an industrial air conditioner
Accurate recordkeeping and yearly leak calculations are required for all equipment with the capacity to hold 15 or more pounds of refrigerant.

The rules about refrigerants must be followed

Chillers, air conditioners, freezers and more require proper management

The Postal Service is reminding employees to properly manage equipment containing refrigerants to comply with regulatory requirements.

This equipment includes chillers, air conditioners, fire suppression systems, drinking fountains, refrigerators and freezers.

Requirements include keeping updated maintenance records, investigating leaks, performing repairs, securely storing and properly disposing of refrigerant cylinders, and ensuring only certified employees handle refrigerant.

As of 2026, recordkeeping and annual leak calculations are now required for all equipment with a capacity of 15 or more pounds of refrigerant. The threshold has been lowered from 50 pounds.

Postal Service employees and contractors are strictly prohibited from venting or intentionally releasing refrigerant into the atmosphere.

The Refrigerant Management Environmental Compliance Bulletin has more information.

Employees with questions can contact a USPS environmental specialist.

An analog clock displaying 2 o’clock and sitting among yellow flowers
Daylight saving time begins on March 8. Set your clocks ahead one hour at bedtime on March 7.

Daylight saving time begins on Sunday

Move your clocks one hour ahead

Daylight saving time returns Sunday, March 8, at 2 a.m.

In areas where the change is observed, clocks should be set ahead one hour.

Standard time will resume Sunday, Nov. 1, at 2 a.m., when clocks are set back one hour.  

Daylight saving time is an effort to extend daylight hours during conventional waking time in the summer months so that darkness falls at a later clock time.

Mail

More praise for this father-daughter story

Readers cheer on an area maintenance technician’s journey guided by a legacy

Email us your feedback. Your comments could be included in our “Mail” column.

Brief

Central Area, Minnesota-North Dakota District lead in scanning

A snapshot of Postal Service scanning data shows the national rating was 97.5 percent during the week ending Feb. 27, down 0.31 percent from one week earlier.

The data was collected March 4.

Central led the four areas with a rating of 97.83 percent, while Atlantic ranked last with a 97.19 percent rating.

Among the 50 districts, Minnesota-North Dakota, part of Central Area, ranked first with a 98.5 percent rating, while Alaska, part of WestPac Area, ranked last with an 94.48 percent rating.

Scanning data allows customers to track their mail and packages, which helps USPS deliver excellent service, boost loyalty and drive revenue.

To see the latest data, go to the Informed Visibility website and select “Customer Experience,” followed by “DES 2 Scan Performance.” Postal Service employees must request Informed Visibility access through eAccess.

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