
USPS, NRLCA reach tentative agreement
The 36-month contract covers 130,000 employees
The Postal Service and the National Rural Letter Carriers’ Association (NRLCA) have reached a tentative negotiated agreement.
Upon ratification by the union membership, which will take several weeks, the agreement will run through May 20, 2027.
“This agreement is economically responsible, fair to our employees and serves the best interest of our customers,” said Acting Postmaster General Doug Tulino. “The agreement aligns with the Delivering for America 10-year plan’s intent to provide reliable, value-driven mail and package delivery service to all Americans in fulfillment of our universal service obligation.”
The NRLCA represents more than 130,000 rural letter carriers nationwide.

Today’s lesson: How to mail an egg
This high school teacher relies on USPS to help students learn physics
A physics project at a Pennsylvania high school teaches students about the concept of freefalling — but it also instills a valuable lesson in how to use the U.S. Mail.
During the past 30 years, teacher Ted Barbour’s egg mail design project has become well-known in Montoursville, a town of 4,700 in the north-central part of the state.
Students, mostly working in pairs, take a raw egg, create a package for it, mail it to the school and then drop the packaged egg 16.5 feet — where it will reach 20 miles per hour before hitting the concrete floor.
Points are awarded for how well the package is designed, how inexpensively it is mailed, and whether the egg survives without damage.
“For many of these kids, this will be their first visit to a Post Office,” said Barbour, a former mechanical engineer. “It can be a daunting experience for them.”
Eggs are mailable but must be carefully packaged to help protect USPS processing machinery.
Publication 52, Hazardous, Restricted and Perishable Mail, has complete information about mailing requirements for eggs. Publication 52 can be found on the Postal Explorer website.
Steve Zondory has seen firsthand the students’ enthusiasm for Barbour’s project in his 27 years as a retail associate at the Montoursville Post Office.
“The students get an education when they come here because they just don’t know how to use the mail system,” Zondory said. “They’ve never placed their return address on a parcel or letter.”
A few years ago, one of the students had to ask his mom for their address, even though he has lived there his whole life, Barbour said.
Meanwhile, a former student recently told Barbour that he went to the Post Office to mail a package, and he confidently knew how to do it.
“It’s one of the lasting and unintended consequences of a worthy physics project,” Barbour said.
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He was appointed by Truman
One of the nation’s longest-serving postmasters dies at 102
Edgar Kumley, who was appointed postmaster of Redig, SD, during President Harry S. Truman’s administration and who served in that role for 65 years, died April 6 at age 102.
Kumley’s tenure as postmaster was the third-longest at the same office in postal history. His father, Earl, and his mother, Ella, also served as Redig postmasters.
He even worked as a relief postmaster in the area after retiring from USPS in 2015.
“I’ve never met a problem I couldn’t solve,” Kumley told the Rapid City (S.D.) Journal at his retirement celebration.
Kumley spoke with the USPS historian’s office in 2012 and recounted memories of the Dust Bowl, when he saw entire families walking west across the prairie with everything they owned.
“We would take them in and feed them, and the next morning they were on their way again across the gumbo,” Kumley said. “Gumbo” is a term commonly used in the Great Plains for fine clay soil that can get particularly mucky when wet but develops large cracks in drought conditions such as during the Dust Bowl.
“I always enjoyed his stories on how the original PO Box section was hauled over on a covered wagon,” said Dorothy Wallace, postmaster of Bowman, ND.
According to his obituary, Kumley also worked as a telephone lineman, sheep herder, night lamb guardian, mechanic, welder and rancher.
His granddaughter, Victoria Constantin, now serves as Redig’s relief postmaster, carrying on the family tradition.
“Edgar was always busy,” Constantin said. “At 98, he was still running around fixing cars and feeding cows. And in the summers, he would cut, swath and haul hay to prepare for winter.”
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Finger on the pulse
Do you know about the USPS employee survey?
“News Quiz” is a weekly feature that lets you test your knowledge of recent Link stories. The correct answers appear at the end.
1. Results from this year’s Postal Pulse employee survey will only be reported for work groups when how many people in that group complete the survey?
a) Three
b) Five
c) Seven
d) 10
2. Under price changes recently proposed by USPS, what will be the cost of a domestic postcard stamp beginning Sunday, July 13?
a) 60 cents
b) 62 cents
c) 64 cents
d) 66 cents
3. Chicago Letter Carrier Doriel Carson helped save the life of an older customer who had fallen after doing what?
a) Changing a light bulb
b) Exiting the bathtub
c) Washing the dishes
d) Mopping the floor
4. True or false: A U.S. passport can be used in place of a Real ID-compliant driver license when boarding a domestic flight.
a) True
b) False
5. Why didn’t Palmetto, GA, Mail Handler Brajawn Upshaw sign himself up for his “American Idol” audition?
a) He missed the deadline.
b) He wanted his agent to handle it.
c) He doesn’t enjoy singing.
d) He doubted himself.
Answers: 1) b. 2) b. 3) a. 4) a. 5) d.
Powwows stamp ceremony
The Postal Service will dedicate its Powwows: Celebrating Native American Culture stamps on Friday, April 25, in Albuquerque, NM.
The ceremony will be held at 1:30 p.m. Mountain Time at the Tingley Coliseum and Expo, located at 300 San Pedro Drive NE.
The speakers will include Steve Monteith, the Postal Service’s chief customer and marketing officer.
Attendees are encouraged to RSVP online.
Postal Bulletin offers information about preventing heat illness
Postal Bulletin’s latest edition, published April 17, outlines the Postal Service’s Heat Illness Prevention Program.
Updates to the organization’s policies, procedures and forms are also included.
Employees can go to usps.com to read and download the latest Postal Bulletin, along with past issues.
View past printouts
Printout details
What's included
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USPS, NRLCA reach tentative agreement
The 36-month contract covers 130,000 employees
-
Today’s lesson: How to mail an egg
This high school teacher relies on USPS to help students learn physics
-
People
He was appointed by Truman
One of the nation’s longest-serving postmasters dies at 102
-
News Quiz
Finger on the pulse
Do you know about the USPS employee survey?
-
April25Datebook
Powwows stamp ceremony
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Brief
Postal Bulletin offers information about preventing heat illness