Because apparently the U.S. Snail wasn't slow enough already.
Important news for anyone who sends comics, books, videotapes, DVDs, CD-ROMs, or other disks through the US Mail regularly, or is planning to in the near future:
"Media Mail," formerly calledbound-printed-matter Book Rate [my bad, bpm = junk mail], among other designations, has long been a boon to fandom, allowing dubbed videos, fanzines, comics, and other fannish goodies to be shipped within the United States at a cost considerably below that of standard First Class or Parcel Post shipping.
I discovered this morning, when I went down to send off a set of Static Shock tapes (want your own? just ask!), that ALL Media Mail packages must now be presented UNSEALED at the Post Office, so that the contents may be inspected by postal workers. You still need to provide your own package-grade tape -- this means bring some down with you, or you'll pay through the nose for the stuff they sell at the office.
Also consider calling your representatives in Congress to protest this violation of the privacy and sanctity of the mail. No other grades of mail are being subjected to this new policy. I seem to remember something in the Constitution about "freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures," and a policy of searching only information-intensive packages is disturbing, to say the least, in these "Patriot Act" times.
Edited to add: After contacting the USPS customer service hotline, I discovered that this is not in fact being implemented as a blanket measure in all U.S. post offices, though postmasters have discretion to do so. From the comments to this post, however, I see that mine is not the only local post office going with the most intrusive policy regarding Media Mail packages.
It makes sense, obviously, for the USPS to have discretion to search any and all packages -- nobody, I think, wants to make it easier for terrorists to send bombs, biological agents, etc. through the mail. I can also understand postal workers needing to search packages presented for Media Mail IF they have reason to suspect the package contains something other than media (clothes, food, kitchen sinks). A blanket-search policy still seems unnecessarily intrusive and obstructive, though. Bringing one package unsealed to the post office isn't too big a deal, but if I was, say, selling comics via eBay, and needed to send out several packages at once? I'm disabled. I don't know how I'd manage more than two packages if they were larger than 9x12" envelopes.
There are several postmasters in my family, as it happens, and I'm looking into the most politic way to get the postmasters who have implemented blanket searches of Media Mail to switch to a more reasonable policy. More info will be posted as it becomes available.
"Media Mail," formerly called
I discovered this morning, when I went down to send off a set of Static Shock tapes (want your own? just ask!), that ALL Media Mail packages must now be presented UNSEALED at the Post Office, so that the contents may be inspected by postal workers. You still need to provide your own package-grade tape -- this means bring some down with you, or you'll pay through the nose for the stuff they sell at the office.
Also consider calling your representatives in Congress to protest this violation of the privacy and sanctity of the mail. No other grades of mail are being subjected to this new policy. I seem to remember something in the Constitution about "freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures," and a policy of searching only information-intensive packages is disturbing, to say the least, in these "Patriot Act" times.
Edited to add: After contacting the USPS customer service hotline, I discovered that this is not in fact being implemented as a blanket measure in all U.S. post offices, though postmasters have discretion to do so. From the comments to this post, however, I see that mine is not the only local post office going with the most intrusive policy regarding Media Mail packages.
It makes sense, obviously, for the USPS to have discretion to search any and all packages -- nobody, I think, wants to make it easier for terrorists to send bombs, biological agents, etc. through the mail. I can also understand postal workers needing to search packages presented for Media Mail IF they have reason to suspect the package contains something other than media (clothes, food, kitchen sinks). A blanket-search policy still seems unnecessarily intrusive and obstructive, though. Bringing one package unsealed to the post office isn't too big a deal, but if I was, say, selling comics via eBay, and needed to send out several packages at once? I'm disabled. I don't know how I'd manage more than two packages if they were larger than 9x12" envelopes.
There are several postmasters in my family, as it happens, and I'm looking into the most politic way to get the postmasters who have implemented blanket searches of Media Mail to switch to a more reasonable policy. More info will be posted as it becomes available.