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Daily printout: Feb. 14


Friday, February 14, 2025

A young person holds a USPS crate full of colorful envelopes
Annie Taggart, a volunteer for the Valentine Project, displays some of the mailpieces collected by the group.

They use the mail to show their love

This group sends Valentine’s Day packages to ill children and their siblings

The Valentine Project has a mission to spread love every Feb. 14 — as well as year-round — to children with pediatric cancer or other chronic illnesses.

Each Valentine’s Day, the nonprofit organization mails packages filled with cards, treats, toys, crafts and other surprises to these children and their siblings across the country.

“We are Santa Claus for Valentine’s Day,” said Andrea Margida of Danville, KY, who is the Valentine Project’s president and CEO.

Throughout the year, the group also sends cards to the families. Volunteers make the cards and include jokes or riddles.

“These kids absolutely love it and then the jokes and riddles lighten the day for everyone else in the family who are going through a dark time,” said Margida.

Each package includes a new book, a handmade pillowcase and a work of art or craft — all provided by volunteers.

“It’s a huge undertaking and we specifically send personalized packages to the children’s home rather than a hospital because it’s a chance for all the kids in the family to just feel like they’re regular kids. It’s a respite from all the things they’re dealing with on a regular basis,” said Margida.

She knows what the families the organization serves are going through.

Her daughter, Michaela, was diagnosed with a brain tumor at age 5. As she and her husband dealt with Michaela’s treatment, they also had a 5-month-old son, Gregory, to care for.

Michaela recovered, but the experience led the family to help others. In 2010, the Valentine Project was born.

Gregory came up with the idea to send valentines to children battling illness and to their siblings to show unconditional love. Michaela collected the cards and the siblings joined forces to send packages anonymously, like secret valentines.

They started with a group of 88 children in Ohio.

“It’s now grown, shifted and bursting at the seams,” Margida said.

The Valentine Project has 900 volunteers lifting the spirits of more than 1,000 children.

The organization prepares its mass annual mailing in Jewett, OH. Volunteers deliver the outgoing mail in wagons to the local Post Office.

Debbie Gaba, a retail associate at the Jewett Post Office, has helped to process more than 500 of those packages.

“It’s a great way to show sick children and their siblings that we love them and to put smiles on their faces. I enjoy doing this every year and I feel fortunate that I could help them,” she said.

And the feeling is mutual.

“The Post Office workers are dear hearts and treat us as more than a business transaction. We consider them part of the Valentine Project family,” Margida said.

Here’s what’s behind the new USPS Ground Advantage commercial

The video explains why the TV spot was made

The Postal Service has released a video that takes viewers behind the scenes of the new TV ad promoting USPS Ground Advantage.

Several executives offer insight into the purpose of the commercial, titled “Stay in the Know.”

The three-minute clip also includes comments from postal employees who appear in the ad.

A man wearing a USPS uniform stands in a Post Office workroom
Jerry Loney, a Topeka, KS, letter carrier, will be honored by the National Association of Letter Carriers for his heroism this spring.
People

Loney’s star rises again

A heroic letter carrier receives a new honor and an art director reflects on a special stamp design

Topeka, KS, Letter Carrier Jerry Loney will be honored by the National Association of Letter Carriers this spring for delivering a lifeline to a customer in distress.

The union highlights acts of courage and compassion by letter carriers at an annual award ceremony in Washington, DC.

Last year, Loney was delivering mail when he was approached by a man with self-inflicted wounds to his hands and wrists. The Postal Service employee called 911 and used the man’s own shirt to fashion a tourniquet to stem profuse bleeding.

Loney’s quick actions are credited with saving the customer’s life.

In addition to Loney, the union’s ceremony will recognize two other letter carriers who have not been named yet.

“I am very humbled. It’s great. It shows that we as mail carriers are out there doing more than just delivering mail and packages. We know our customers,” Loney told a local TV station.

Loney, who was also recognized by the Postmaster General’s Heroes’ Program, was profiled in Link’s “Off the Clock” column last year.

Toussaint’s ‘joy’

Ethel Kessler, an art director for USPS, did not know much about New Orleans musician and composer Allen Toussaint before she began working on the 48th stamp in the Black Heritage series.

“All it took was for me to research his discography and play some of his recordings for me to get hooked,” Kessler told Stamps Forever, the website that shares the stories behind new stamps.

“He was everywhere. All the top players have either played with him or played his music,” she said.

For the stamp, Kessler chose a 2007 image of Toussaint performing in New York City. It was a bittersweet moment for the musician, as he was in the middle of an extensive tour after Hurricane Katrina had destroyed his home and recording studio in 2005.

“I looked for a moment where he seemed fully immersed in the joy of his music,” Kessler said.

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

A scene from an animated video series featuring Mr. ZIP, a cheerful letter carrier, speaking to two children on bicycles
How much do you know about the new “Mail with Mr. ZIP” series?
News Quiz

Teaching kids about USPS

Did you know that Mr. ZIP has his own YouTube series?

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

1. In what year was Mr. ZIP, star of the new “Mail with Mr. ZIP” YouTube series, introduced to teach customers about the ZIP Code system?

a) 1953

b) 1963

c) 1973

d) 1976

2. The first in a series of news briefings across the country highlighting the ongoing success of Project Safe Delivery took place where?  

a) Boston General Mail Facility

b) Miami Processing and Distribution Center

c) Philadelphia Processing and Distribution Center

d) Postal Inspection Service headquarters

3. What caused the injury to the man helped by Lisa Hansen, a letter carrier in Lakeside Park, KY?

a) He slipped on the ice outside his front door.

b) He was bitten by a stray dog.

c) He was cleaning up trash around his mailbox when he lost his footing.

d) He twisted his ankle while stepping off the curb.

4. The Delivering for America plan is reaping positive results as the Postal Service’s net income for first quarter of the current fiscal year was $144 million — compared with a net loss of how much for the same quarter last year?

a) $800 million

b) $1.6 billion

c) $2.1 billion

d) $3.1 billion

5. Who provides the introduction during the four-minute video celebrating the life of Allen Toussaint, the 48th honoree of the Black Heritage stamp series?

a) Gary Barksdale, chief of the Postal Inspection Service

b) Elvis Costello, singer and songwriter

c) Luke Grossmann, USPS chief finance officer

d) Diana Krall, jazz pianist and singer

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

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