Hamilton and Canada Post in a standoff over super mailboxes
Council voted to charge Canada Post $200 for every community mailbox it installs in Hamilton
Canada Post and the city of Hamilton appear headed for a legal showdownover installation ofsuper mailboxesas the corporation phases out door-to-door mail delivery.
City council votedWednesday to charge the corporation $200 for every community mailbox itinstalls in Hamilton the only Canadian city so far to do so. The amended bylawalso dictates that the corporation work with the city on future mailbox locations. If Canada Post doesn't comply, the city canissue a fine.
But Canada Post says it doesn't have toplay by the city's rules. Spokesperson Jon Hamilton saidin a statement that Canada Post has "exclusive jurisdiction" over where to put the mailboxes.
And the new rules the city passedan amended version of the Roads-Equipment Installation Bylaw contravene federal mail delivery regulations, he said.
This is precedent setting and we need to stand our ground.- Coun. Terry Whitehead
"Canada Post has exclusive jurisdiction over postal services in Canada and the legal authority to install community mailboxes on municipally owned property," he said.
It has this right, he said, under the Canada Post Corporation Act. And the bylaw amendments conflictwith that.
The city doesn't think so. And as of Wednesday, it says, Canada Post has to pay $200 per mailbox to cover the city's costs as it pertains to assessing and servicing the sites.
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Coun. Terry Whitehead of Ward 8 says a municipality needs to stand up to the Canada Post plan.
"This is precedent setting and we need to stand our ground," he said.
If Canada Post doesn't comply with the city bylaw, "there will be charges for it and there will be fines for it," he said.
"We will charge them and it will be determined through the courts."
It's the latest in a series of measuresHamilton city council has triedto discourage Canada Post from installing super mailboxes.Ithas already passed three motions against the plan and written a letter to the federal government.
But the process has already started on the Mountain, where Canada Post is mapping out locations for mailboxes to serve about 36,000 residents. Itwill phase out door-to-door service for 117,000 Hamilton residents over the next five years.
Eventually, Canada Post will phase out most urban door-to-door mail delivery across the country.
Hamilton's $200 fee is necessary, in part, to pay forafull-timecity staff member for four years to investigate the mailbox sites, a staff report says.
Canada Post has been working on the plan to phase out much of the door-to-door delivery in Hamilton since last June.It mailed surveys to 36,000 residentsand knocked on nearly 2,000 doors on the Mountain to determine locations, the corporation said.