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Daily printout: Jan. 31


Friday, January 31, 2025

A man and woman stand in front of the door to a shingle-clad Post Office in Maine.
Margit Ahlin and Al D’Andrea celebrate in front of the Frenchboro, ME, Post Office — the last of 444 Post Offices they visited in that state.

The Maine attraction

This couple visited all the Post Offices in the Pine Tree State

Maine has more than 400 Post Offices — and Al D’Andrea and Margit Ahlin have been to each one.

The married couple’s trek began in 2010 after USPS released a stamp honoring artist Winslow Homer.

The Maine residents, who are stamp and postmark collectors, were near Prouts Neck, a coastal peninsula in Scarborough, where Homer painted.

“I just got this crazy idea. I thought it would be fun to get a hand cancel of the stamp from the local Post Office in the vicinity of where Homer lived and painted for many years,” D’Andrea said.

“Then I had this notion that it would be fun to take this stamp and go around to every Post Office in Maine and get a hand cancel.”

The couple visited 444 Post Offices during their decade-long trek, but currently the state has about 430 Post Offices, including contract offices.

Like Homer, D’Andrea and Ahlin were transplants from New York. They moved to the Pine Tree State in 2009.

“Because we were relatively new to Maine, I thought this would be interesting. We would really get to know the state and it would be a great way to see some far-flung places because you figure anywhere there are people, there’s going to be a Post Office,” Ahlin said.

The couple, who run a theater company, began their odyssey by visiting all the offices near Portland, ME.

Eventually, they broke out a state map and used the USPS Mobile App to plot their trips, including more than a few overnight visits.

The couple’s record was visiting nearly 30 Post Offices in one day. 

“I would go in and get the hand cancel and Margit would take a photograph of the Post Office and also some identifying marks around the building, like a nice view of nearby mountains or if it was overlooking the water or anything else that was quirky,” D’Andrea said.

The couple had 40 Post Offices left on their list when the COVID-19 pandemic sidelined their travel plans for nearly three years. However, once they were back at it, they were able to complete their goal, but not without other challenges.

“Maine is so unusual because of the number of islands and so many Post Offices are on islands. We were able to use our boat to visit one or two, but mostly we had to take ferries out and it was really a logistical challenge,” Ahlin said.

Both also said that their accomplishment led to a reinforced appreciation of the Postal Service.

“In Maine, there are a lot of seasonal people but also a lot of rural communities. The Post Office is the center of everything,” Ahlin said. “People come to Post Offices for their P.O. Boxes to collect mail, so it’s kind of the social hub and fabric of the town. It’s remarkable in this day and age that there’s one thing that can bring people together like that.”

Three people stand in a postal workroom near a cardboard display that resembles the back of a postal truck, stocked with a coffee machine and winter safety items.
Custodian Janice O’Neal, left, Michigan 1 District Manager Rick Moreton and Darlene Masich, another custodian, stand near the winter safety workstation at the Richmond, MI, Post Office.
People

Station break

A Michigan district promotes safety, a Post Office reopens and a carrier receives a special honor

A Postal Service district is making sure employees have the knowledge and materials to stay safe during cold weather.

Michigan 1 has set up winter safety workstations at its Post Offices to provide employees with tips on dressing, walking and driving. Some stations also offer ice scrapers and bags of salt, while others provide coffee, tea and cocoa.

The stations are in break rooms or workrooms, ensuring employees have quick and easy access.

“The initiative … creates a safer work environment,” said District Manager Rick Moreton.

At the Richmond, MI, Post Office, Janice O’Neal, a custodian, used cardboard and paint to create a workstation that resembles an LLV. An old carrier case was placed inside the cardboard vehicle to stock the winter items.

“I love being creative,” O’Neal said. “Along with having all the items carriers need through the winter, I get to do something I enjoy that benefits our employees.”

Back in business

The Mayfield, KY, Post Office reopened last week, more than three years after it was damaged by a tornado.

“The city of Mayfield is grateful to the postal system for their service that has never faltered during these past three years,” Mayor Kathy O’Nan told The Paducah Sun.

The Post Office operated from a temporary facility during the rebuilding.

Now that the original location has reopened, Postmaster Tabitha Tucker said she and her employees are proud to contribute to the revitalization of downtown Mayfield.

“I look forward to caring for as many people as possible and providing the absolute best service,” Tucker told the Sun.

Key to his success

Officials in Holly, MI — a village of about 6,000 residents about 55 miles northwest of Detroit — recently presented the first-ever key to the village to John Hansen, a letter carrier who delivers mail in the community.

Hansen, a USPS employee for more than 20 years, walks eight miles a day on his route and is known for his smile and outgoing personality.

“I love my job,” Hansen told the local ABC station. “I work five days a week. I have an all-walking route, and I get to see all these beautiful people every day — so my life is blessed.”

“People” appears regularly in Link. Got news to share? Email us.

A postage stamp bearing an 8-cent denomination and featuring the word Love spelled in a 1970s-era font
The first Love stamp featured artist Robert Indiana’s iconic 1960s Love design. Do you know when the stamp was issued?
News Quiz

A radiant heart

How much do you know about the newest Love stamp?

“News Quiz” is a weekly feature that lets you test your knowledge of recent Link stories. The correct answers appear at the end.

1. The Love (2025) stamp, based on an untitled work by artist Keith Haring, is part of a series dating back to what year?

a) 1973

b) 1981

c) 1990

d) 1996

2. How much did the price of a First-Class Mail stamp increase as a result of the Postal Service’s Jan. 19 rate changes?

a) 2.9 percent

b) 3.5 percent

c) 4.4 percent

d) No increase

3. Brandy Freeman, a graphic designer and brand coordinator at USPS headquarters in Washington, DC, performs in which competitive karaoke league?

a) American Tidal

b) Bling Sing 

c) District Karaoke

d) Drop the Mic

4. What does Eugene Leader say is the best part of his job as a letter carrier on Long Island, NY?

a) Being outside

b) Interacting with his customers

c) Staying fit by walking his route

d) Wearing the USPS uniform

5. What unusual sight did Angela Webb, a rural carrier in Mustang, OK, notice outside an older customer’s house that made her think something might be wrong?

a) A stack of boxes

b) An unrecognized dog barking on the porch

c) Broken glass

d) Two pairs of work boots

Answers: 1) a. 2) d. 3) c. 4) b. 5) a.

Brief

Postcard highlights rollout of new delivery vehicles

The latest Delivering for America postcard was recently mailed to employees’ homes.

The card focuses on the introduction of new delivery vehicles, both electric and gas-powered ones, as part of the Postal Service’s fleet modernization program.

The five-year, $9.6 billion effort — which includes acquiring 106,000 new vehicles, with 66,000 battery-electric models in the mix — is a core component of Delivering for America, the organization’s 10-year, $40 billion strategic improvement plan.

In addition to being sent to employees’ homes, Delivering for America postcards can be downloaded from LiteBlue.

Each card addresses a different topic and features information that employees can reference when discussing the plan with co-workers and customers.

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