
USPS helps this group deliver support to breast cancer patients
Girls Love Mail has sent 13,000 letters this year alone
While undergoing treatment for Stage 1 breast cancer in 2009, journalist and author Gina Mulligan’s mailbox was running over with well wishes.
“I received over 200 letters, many from friends of friends — people I had never met. They were all around me, and I realized letters are a precious gift with the power to heal,” she said.
As Mulligan underwent radiation treatments, she would surround herself with the letters and cards and read them. However, during these treatments, she noticed her fellow patients didn’t have the same outpouring of support.
“If you have a support system, you think others do, too. That’s not always the case,” she said.
Once Mulligan finished her treatment, she started Girls Love Mail, a Folsom, CA-based nonprofit organization that sends handwritten letters of encouragement to women diagnosed with breast cancer at hospitals and treatment centers in the United States and Canada.
Her organization of volunteers has encouraged more than 285,000 women since 2011 and sent 13,000 letters in 2025 alone.
Both individuals and groups can write letters. Groups have included classrooms, high schools, colleges, book clubs, businesses and scout groups.
“We have a lot of companies that write letters in bulk. We recently received 1,700 letters from one corporate event,” she said.
Girls Love Mail volunteers review all letters to make sure they meet the group’s guidelines, which are outlined on its website.
“The letters then go in our special Girls Love Mail envelope and are packaged up and mailed through the Postal Service. We love our local Folsom Post Office. We’re there all the time,” Mulligan said.
Girls Love Mail collects batches of letters and sends out more than 100 packages a month through the Folsom Post Office.
“We’re in the customer service business so when they come in, I try to do whatever I can to offer up assistance with the large mailers,” said Ryan Morris, a retail associate who often assists with the mailings.
The Girls Love Mail website has instructions on participating, including letter writing tips.
Mulligan said the organization’s success demonstrates how beneficial receiving a letter can be during a moment of despair.
“One woman wrote to us about the one letter she received through our organization,” she said. “She kept it on her nightstand, read it every night, took it with her to every doctor’s appointment and reread it during her full year of treatment. That’s how much it meant to her.”
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She goes the extra mile for her customers
A carrier shares her pride, a new postmaster takes office and a P&DC dishes out employee recognition
No one was more surprised than Jolena Kees to learn she has one of the nation’s longest delivery routes.
Kees, a Grayson, KY, rural carrier, drives 135 miles each workday to serve 479 delivery points.
The Postal Service recently named Kees’ route one of the nation’s longest, a list released last month to help mark the organization’s 250th anniversary.
“I love going the extra mile for my customers and taking pride in knowing I’m taking care of this community,” said Kees, a 23-year USPS veteran.
Besides offering her a sense of professional fulfillment, the route also offers its share of natural wonders: On any given day, Kees sees cows, deer, goats, horses, owls, peacocks, pigs, sheep and turkeys.
“I love the natural beauty,” she said.
Ready to get started
Beatriz Ibarra is the new postmaster in Pauma Valley, CA, a community of about 6,600 residents in San Diego County.
She oversees six employees, 4,800 PO Boxes, and two delivery routes serving Pauma Valley and two neighboring communities, Pala and Palomar Mountain.
Ibarra joined USPS as a letter carrier in 2001 and became a customer services supervisor in 2020, later serving as officer in charge at the Ramona, CA, Post Office.
She said she’s eager to begin her first postmaster position in Pauma Valley.
“This is a new community to me, and I look forward to building strong connections, supporting the dedicated team of employees and providing excellent customer service,” Ibarra said.
Dishing it out
The Salt Lake City Processing and Distribution Center held two barbecues for its employees recently — and it seems no one left with an empty belly.
Managers served as grill masters during the events, dishing out more than 930 hamburgers, 820 hotdogs, 1,040 bags of chips and 630 cups of lemonade.
“Our employees had a great time and thought it was fun to see the managers barbecuing,” said Danielle Price, an administrative assistant at the facility who helped promote the event.
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Eyes on the prize
How much do you know about Jimmy Carter?
“News Quiz” is a weekly feature that lets you test your knowledge of recent Link stories. The correct answers appear at the end.
1. When did the Norwegian Nobel Committee award new stamp subject Jimmy Carter the Nobel Peace Prize?
a) 1977
b) 1982
c) 2002
d) 2024
2. True or false: Since October 2024, postal inspectors have issued 247 voluntary discontinuance orders to individuals and businesses who have used counterfeit postage.
a) True
b) False
3. How much money does USPS want to raise during the latest Combined Federal Campaign?
a) $2.7 million
b) $2.8 million
c) $2.9 million
d) $3 million
4. Fill in the blank: The Breast Cancer Research stamp has raised almost (blank) since its introduction in 1998.
a) $98,000
b) $980,000
c) $9.8 million
d) $98 million
5. Match the USPS webinar in Column A with the date it was held in Column B.
Column A
a) “Breast Cancer Awareness”
b) “Building a Plant-Based Meal”
c) “Power in Pink”
d) “Understanding Colds and Flu”
Column B
I) Oct. 1
II) Oct. 2
III) Oct. 7
IV) Oct. 8
Answers: 1) c. 2) b. Postal inspectors have issued 358 voluntary discontinuance orders to counterfeit postage users since October 2024. 3) d. 4) d. 5) a. III., b. II., c. I., d. IV.
Deadline for relocation expenses is Nov. 14
The deadline to submit reimbursement requests for USPS employee relocation expenses is Nov. 14.
This deadline ensures that the organization has adequate time to record and report all relocation expenses for 2025 tax purposes.
Employees who submit requests for relocation reimbursements between Nov. 15 and Jan. 1, 2026, will receive disbursements or reimbursements after Jan. 2.
Employees should refer questions to their relocation counselor or send an email to the USPS relocation team.
The MyHR website’s Relocation page has more information.
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USPS helps this group deliver support to breast cancer patients
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PeopleShe goes the extra mile for her customers
A carrier shares her pride, a new postmaster takes office and a P&DC dishes out employee recognition
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News QuizEyes on the prize
How much do you know about Jimmy Carter?
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Brief
Deadline for relocation expenses is Nov. 14