Plains, not fancy
Jimmy Carter, a loyal USPS customer, never lost the common touch
Jimmy Carter’s life was marked by humility, decency and grace.
Pat Conger, a USPS retail associate in Plains, GA, will be the first to tell you that. She knew the former president as a caring customer who stopped by the Plains Post Office in 2022 when she was out at a doctor’s appointment and inquired about her.
He also left a note — a cherished memento she has kept on her computer ever since.
“The fact that he wanted to come by the Post Office and see me, that made all the difference in the world,” she said.
Just days before Carter’s death, the U.S. Senate approved a bill to rename the small building on Main Street the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Post Office.
President Joe Biden is expected to sign the legislation soon.
Carter trusted the U.S. Mail with his most important communications. “When I want to communicate with a foreign leader privately, I type or write a letter myself, put it in the Post Office, and mail it,” he said in 2014.
No doubt there were many such letters, as Carter’s post-presidency was marked by extraordinary efforts domestically and internationally.
In 1982, he established the Carter Center to expand human rights; worked with Habitat for Humanity building houses for the homeless; and led the charge to nearly eradicate the scourge of Guinea worm disease, a painful parasitic infection. He also taught Sunday school for decades at Maranatha Baptist Church.
In 2002, he won the Nobel Peace Prize for “decades of untiring effort to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social development.”
In between his humanitarian efforts, Carter found time to write more than 30 books, including an autobiography, novels and “The Little Baby Snoogle-Fleejer,” a children’s book illustrated by his daughter Amy, based on a story he told her as a girl.
Conger, who joined USPS in 1991, became the go-to person for handling the former president’s mail, which can be a complicated affair.
She has known the Carters all her life — Plains is less a small town than “a large family,” she said — and was happy to do it.
In fact, she often told herself that she’d stay on the job “until something happened to him.” Now in her mid-70s, she often wondered if he was going to outlive her.
“He’s like the Energizer bunny,” she said about a year before his death. “He’s a special man. Always has been.”
A neighborhood Post Office returns with more to offer
USPS celebrates refurbished retail site
USPS reopened the Temple Heights Post Office in Washington, DC, part of the organization’s ongoing efforts to strength customer service, on Dec. 16.
The office, which closed in March 2024, serves 5,900 residential and business customers and now offers a range of services, including PO Box rentals, mail and package shipping, and postage and packing supplies.
The reopening was attended by Elvin Mercado, the Postal Service’s acting delivery operations vice president, and Judy de Torok, corporate affairs vice president.
Ashley Poling, a member of the Postal Regulatory Commission who lives in the Temple Heights neighborhood, also attended the ceremony and was the reopened office’s first customer, purchasing a pane of holiday stamps.
Appointments, awards and retirements
Here’s a look at recent USPS announcements
• Florida 1 District Manager Maged Aziz retired after 30 years with the Postal Service.
• Barbara Batin, manager of the USPS Remote Encoding Center in Salt Lake City, retired after 38 years with USPS. Johanna R. Luckau, the center’s senior operations manager, was named acting manager.
• Erik P. Dickerson, program manager and data analyst, was named Southern Area’s acting field human resources director.
• Andre L. McMurtery, finance and budget manager, was named Eastern Region’s acting processing operations finance and budget manager.
• Roderick Sallay, legislative policy and strategy development director, retired after 40 years with USPS.
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‘USPS Retirement Health Benefits’
Postal Service employees may participate in an upcoming webinar that will address benefits available after retirement.
The session, “USPS Retirement Health Benefits: Medicare, Dental and Vision,” will be held Wednesday, Jan. 15, from noon to 1 p.m. Eastern.
Representatives from Aetna, a provider of health plans for federal employees, will lead the discussion.
Participants must register before the event on the webinar website.
Participation is voluntary. Nonexempt employees must be off the clock or on authorized breaks.
Employees who have questions can email the USPS Benefits and Wellness team.
‘Digital Detox’
Postal Service employees may participate in an upcoming webinar on the effects of digital devices on our health and how to unplug from technology to rejuvenate the body and mind.
The session, “Digital Detox,” will be held Wednesday, Jan. 15, from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Eastern.
Representatives from Kaiser Permanente, a provider of health plans for federal employees, will lead the discussion.
Participants must register before the event on the webinar website.
Participation is voluntary. Nonexempt employees must be off the clock or on authorized breaks.
Employees with questions can email the USPS Benefits and Wellness team.
USPS recommends secure channels for mobile communications
The Postal Service wants employees and contractors to use secure, encrypted channels when communicating on USPS-issued mobile devices.
Instead of using a device’s phone or text message features, the organization recommends employees and contractors use features such as iMessage, Teams Call, Teams Chat, Zoom Call or Zoom Chat.
When connecting to Teams or Zoom meetings, the Postal Service recommends employees and contractors use each application’s audio feature rather than the “call me” or “dial in” functions.
The USPS information security team issued this recommendation as part of its ongoing efforts to monitor the cybersecurity landscape and protect the organization from threats.
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Plains, not fancy
Jimmy Carter, a loyal USPS customer, never lost the common touch
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A neighborhood Post Office returns with more to offer
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Milestones
Appointments, awards and retirements
Here’s a look at recent USPS announcements
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January15Datebook
‘USPS Retirement Health Benefits’
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January15Datebook
‘Digital Detox’
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Brief
USPS recommends secure channels for mobile communications