
USPS employees are getting ready to collect food
The annual Stamp Out Hunger drive will take place May 10
This year’s Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive, the nation’s largest single-day food collection, is scheduled for Saturday, May 10.
USPS customers are being asked to leave a bag filled with healthful, nonperishable food items next to their mailboxes to be collected by Postal Service employees, who will distribute the donations to local food banks and pantries.
The drive is timed for the second Saturday in May to shore up food charities for the summer.
The National Association of Letter Carriers spearheads the drive, with assistance from USPS, the United Way, other unions and several businesses.
Additional information can be found on the association’s website. This includes a toolkit for participants, promotional materials, community engagement guidelines and ways to contribute online.
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His hobby is all the buzz
This beekeeping postmaster went from two hives to 80 in the past six years
My name is Kirk Kern, and I’m the postmaster for Star, NC, a town of about 800 in the central part of the state.
When I go home, I like to relax by keeping bees.
I had always wanted to have bees. About six years ago, a friend of mine who kept bees got stung in the face and almost died, so I bought one of her beehives to take it off her hands. There were so many bees in the hive that we had to split it in two.
Everything that could go wrong did that first year. The bees got every parasite, caught every virus. The second year, I did a lot of reading and learned I could catch my own bees in the wild. I keep about 80 hives now. We harvested 800 pounds of honey last year.
I want to have genetically superior honeybee queens, so I breed my own queens. One of the traits I watch for is hostility so I don’t have mean bees.
I did a presentation for second-graders at a local elementary school recently. I brought live bees in a special case that I made so they could see the queen bee. I had a few newly emerged bees, too, and I let the kids hold them.
When they asked why the bees didn’t sting, I told them that bees don’t sting unless they think you’re trying to hurt them, steal their food or harm their house. If one lands on you, don’t freak out. Just let it go. Bees know when you’re scared.
I love to help other beekeepers get started and grow. When people ask me how to get take up beekeeping, I tell them to take a class at a local community college and join a bee club.
I hope beekeeping doesn’t become a lost art.
“Off the Clock,” a column on Postal Service employees and their after-hours pursuits, appears regularly in Link.
Watch a video about powwows
These Native American cultural gatherings are celebrated on new stamps
The Postal Service has released a video about its Powwows: Celebrating Native American Culture stamps.
The three-minute video features comments from Steven Monteith, the organization’s chief customer and marketing officer; Mateo Romero, a Pueblo Cochiti artist who created the images featured on the stamps; and Kansas Begaye, a Native American recording artist who participated in the April 25 dedication ceremony.
“It’s a great collection of stamps that combines ancestral Native American tradition with the vibrant energy of modern powwows,” Monteith says in the video.
WestPac Area, ID-MT-OR District on top in scanning
A snapshot of Postal Service scanning data shows the national rating was 97.35 percent during the week ending May 2, down 0.3 percent from one week earlier.
The data was collected May 7.
WestPac led the four areas with a rating of 97.67 percent, while Central ranked last with a 97.08 percent rating.
Among the 50 districts, Idaho-Montana-Oregon, part of WestPac Area, ranked first with a 98.35 percent rating, while Kansas-Missouri, part of Central Area, ranked last with a 94.33 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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USPS employees are getting ready to collect food
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Off the Clock
His hobby is all the buzz
This beekeeping postmaster went from two hives to 80 in the past six years
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Watch a video about powwows
These Native American cultural gatherings are celebrated on new stamps
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Brief
WestPac Area, ID-MT-OR District on top in scanning