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Daily printout: Oct. 3, 2025


Friday, October 3, 2025

An image of the USPS Informed Delivery app home screen.
Customers who use the new USPS Informed Delivery app can manage their incoming mail and packages, and scan tracking numbers and barcodes, among options.

USPS Informed Delivery now has its own app

Customers can track mail and packages from their mobile devices

The Postal Service has released its standalone USPS Informed Delivery Mobile app.

USPS Informed Delivery is a free feature that allows customers to preview their incoming letter-size mail and manage their package deliveries. Customers can access USPS Informed Delivery notifications from their email, on informeddelivery.usps.com and through the new app.

The app offers:

• Notifications for updates about incoming mail and packages;

• Biometric login;

• Enhanced package tracking capabilities, including scanning tracking numbers and barcodes and sharing package status; and

• Ability to view, interact with and manage incoming mail.

The app is available in the Apple and Play stores.

The USPS Informed Delivery Mobile app page on usps.com has more information.

Email us your feedback. Your comments could be included in our “Mail” column.

A woman and a man wearing postal uniforms stand next to a USPS delivery vehicle
St. Louis letter carrier siblings Karen Bomarito and Bill Brodtrick recently marked 25 years of working together.
People

Carrying on a family tradition

A pair of postal siblings mark a milestone, two longtime pen pals meet and a training duo learns some new skills

Two siblings who work as letter carriers at the Southwest Station in St. Louis recently marked 25 years of keeping it all in the family at work.

Bill Brodtrick and Karen Bomarito took the postal exam together at a local boys and girls club in 1998. After being placed on a waiting list, they were each hired as part-time flexible employees in September 2000.

The siblings initially worked at different stations, but eventually both joined Southwest Station.

“We’ve been together ever since,” Brodtrick said.

The family ties don’t end there: Their father, grandfather, great-grandfather and great uncle were letter carriers as well, and a cousin — Kim Nolan — is also a letter carrier at the station.

“It’s funny. While most family functions are usually on Saturdays, our birthday parties and events are always on Sundays because our family works for the Post Office,” Bomarito said.

Fifty years in the making

Two women who became pen pals as 11-year-olds in the 1970s recently met for the first time in person.

Debbie Houschild, who grew up in New Jersey, and Jane Bean from Kent, England, began writing to each other after they were paired by “Big Blue Marble,” an international children’s TV series that encouraged kids to connect across cultures.

“We would tell each other about what was going on in our lives at the time,” Houschild told the People website. “Over all the years, that changed from teenage types of things to getting married, jobs, having children and how our lives went from there.”

In August, as their golden anniversary approached, Houschild and her daughters traveled to London to meet Bean for the first time.

“To think they’ve been friends for over five decades but have never actually met … it’s crazy!” Kimberly Johnson, one of Houschild’s daughters, told People.

The pen pals spent time together touring London landmarks and local pubs.

“It was a great day,” Houschild said. “I did wonder how we would get along in person, but it truly was like being with an old friend.”

Training the trainers

Two USPS training technicians in Pittsburgh recently received some on-the-job training themselves.

Mitchell Faust and Tomille Jenkins reorganized a storage room in their workplace using the principles of Lean Six Sigma, a business improvement process that emphasizes innovation and efficiency.

As part of their efforts, they received yellow belt certification, a Lean Six Sigma designation for achievement.

Ed Ribar, the local employee development manager, praised the duo for improving the room, which he called “crucial” for keeping training materials organized.

“We now can keep a better inventory of supplies, thus reducing extra costs,” he said.

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

Boxes labeled as U.S. Flag stamps are stacked on top of each other in several rows
Boxes of U.S. Flag stamps are prepared for shipment in 2023. Do you know what a First-Class Mail stamp will cost in 2026?
News Quiz

The price is still right

Do you know how much a stamp will cost next year?

“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 Postal Service will not raise prices for market-dominant products until mid-2026, so the cost of a Forever stamp remains at what price?  

a) 72 cents

b) 78 cents

c) 84 cents

d) 92 cents

2. The nation’s longest mail delivery route — 195 miles and 305 mailboxes — is located where?

a) Alpine, TX

b) Anchorage, AK

c) Sidney, MT

d) Westfield, VT   

3. True or false: A Postal Service employee can give a gift of any value to a co-worker who earns the same or less pay.

a) True

b) False

4. Elizabeth Matthews, a USPS general clerk in Minneapolis, is preparing to participate in curling at the 2027 Winter Deaflympics, which will be held where?  

a) Bergen, Norway 

b) Calgary, Canada

c) Helsinki, Finland

d) Innsbruck, Austria

5. What is the first step for a USPS employee who is interested in taking a virtual leadership course?

a) Fill out the application form on Blue.

b) Find a colleague who will cover their shift.

c) Get approval from their manager.

d) Select the appropriate career path. 

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

October 8, 2025
Datebook

CFC virtual kickoff event

Postal Service employees may attend a virtual kickoff event for this year’s Combined Federal Campaign, or CFC.

The event will be held via Zoom on Wednesday, Oct. 8, from 2 to 3 p.m. Eastern.

The theme for this year’s campaign is “Your Gift. Their Future.” The organization’s overall goal is to raise $3 million.

Participation is voluntary. Nonexempt employees must participate off the clock or during authorized breaks.

The MyHR website’s events calendar has a link to the event. A recording of the kickoff will be posted to MyHR afterward.

Brief

Postal Bulletin highlights Cybersecurity Awareness Month

Postal Bulletin’s latest edition, published Oct. 2, looks at the critical role cybersecurity plays in advancing the Postal Service’s mission and how employee awareness strengthens the organization’s overall security.

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

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