Mail delivery still sucks

Book reviews for March 2026 at the APL on Washington Avenue

Yes, my mail delivery still sucks. A couple of weeks ago, my wife and I saw a mail truck on our street. She started to feel elated. I said there was little correlation between seeing the vehicle and our receiving mail; sure enough, nothing in our mailbox. A couple of days earlier, I saw a mail truck on my block, actually three doors down, and a package was delivered there. Indeed, I received a package recently, on a day when we received no other mail.

My wife recently spoke to a postal worker who knows about this problem, and the worker feels terrible about it. They are not allowed to work sufficient overtime to rectify the problem. So it is not a problem just in my neighborhood, but in several locations.

I received mail on Thursday, Feb 12, then on Thursday, the 19th, and, shockingly, on Saturday, the 21st.

A Facebook buddy of mine writes: Join me, if you wish, in raising the alarm. When someone asks, “Is anyone getting mail?” respond with the following:

+++ They’re trying to break the Postal Service and sell it off to private corporations.

I also believe they are making it harder to have mail ballots counted in elections.

Here’s a complaint letter that you can copy and send to the Postmaster. Postal carriers (mailmen) are asking us to raise the issue so they can continue delivering mail! +++ https://tinyurl.com/where-is-my-mail

Oh, and here’s a piece from WNYT, Channel 13, from Tuesday, February 17, on the topic, featuring, er, me. 

FFAPL

The Tuesday book reviews are at the 161 Washington Avenue branch of the Albany Public Library at 2 pm in the large auditorium.

March 3 | Book Review | Emmy Noether — Mathematician Extraordinaire, a biography by David E. Rowe.  Reviewer:  Jonathan Skinner, PhD, amateur classicist & mathematician.
March 10 |Book Review | Coney Island:  The People’s Playground by Michael Immerso.  Reviewer:  Donald “The Soul Man” Hyman, teacher, actor, singer. writer, TV host/producer, & veteran.
March 17 | Book Review | The Sisters, a novel by Jonas Hassen Khemiri.  Reviewer:  Elissa Kane, a seeker, an organizer, a teacher, & an artist, who has worked in libraries & our state & city governments.
March 24 | Book Review | The Four Agreements:  A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom by Don Miguel Ruiz.  Reviewer:  Ezra Scott, Jr., MA, MBE, is a native of Niagara Falls, NY, a public servant, an educator, & the proud father of Khari C. Scott & Ezra P. Scott III.  (Rescheduled from December because of a snowstorm.) 
March 31 | Book Review | Why Weren’t We Told?  A Personal Search for the Truth about Our History by Henry Reynolds, a prize-winning Australian historian.  Reviewer:  Tom Ellis, educator & activist.

Mail delivery three days a week?

Make Elections Great Again (MEGA) Act (?!)

The intrepid Arthur wrote a series of posts, going back to January 2013, about how New Zealand Post had proposed reducing mail delivery to as little as three days a week starting in 2015 to cope with falling volumes.” He noted. “I get most of my former mail—bills, statements, newsletters, etc.—by email. Hardly anyone I know sends greeting cards anymore, and no one sends personal letters. I don’t, either. I also don’t subscribe to any paper magazines (though I have subscriptions to a couple electronic versions). We pay all our bills online one way or another.”

I got a taste of that recently. My subscription for USPS Informed Delivery told me we would get 14 pieces of mail on Friday, January 23. We should have gotten 8 pieces each on Saturday, the 24th, and Monday, the 26th, but we got NONE. Instead, we got 17 pieces on Tuesday, the 27th, including the 3 due that day. None of the 10 pieces arrived on Wednesday, the 28th, but they came, along with the 6 for Thursday, on the 29th.  

Part of the volume is that my mother-in-law moved to a new facility, which does not include mail delivery. So her mail comes to our house. In fact, most days, her items outnumber the pieces for my wife, my daughter, and me combined.  

Voting 

One of Arthur’s concerns in 2024 was whether his ballot would be counted. Americans in this country have new reason to worry. “House Republicans are rolling out a massive election overhaul package ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, including new voter ID requirements as well as limitations on how and when votes are cast.

“The Committee on House Administration is unveiling new legislation on Thursday called the Make Elections Great Again (MEGA) Act, which would impose new federal standards on national elections across the U.S.”

From The Hill: “The bill would require mail-in ballots to be received by the close of polls on election day to be counted, making an exception for members of military stations overseas. Several states currently allow mail-in ballots to be counted if received up to a certain point after Election Day, as long as they are postmarked by Election Day — often leading to delays in determining election winners in states like California, where the vast majority of ballots are cast by mail.”

So, if the mail is delayed by bad weather or cuts to the Postal Service, there is a very real possibility of disenfranchising citizens. 

“Nationalizing” the vote 

“In addition to requiring photo ID when casting a ballot and citizenship verification upon voter registration, the bill implements restrictions on how states administer and maintain their election systems — some of which became flashpoints in the 2020 election, fueling [FOTUS’s] claims of election fraud.”

There are other worrisome franchise issues. FBI searches Fulton County elections office in Georgia. AG Pam Bondi’s letter to MN Gov. Tim Walz (D) called on the state to provide the DOJ with access to unredacted voter rolls, which contain identifying information such as driver’s license numbers and partial Social Security numbers. 

And now, the DOJ is suing more than 20 states in a bid to open voter rolls to federal challenges aimed at purges. And he said it out loud, declaring that the Republican Party should “nationalize the voting” in the US and take away individual states’ power to administer their elections. They want to steal the 2026 election if we let them.

Ramblin' with Roger
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