Post Office Auctions $8 Million Worth of Mail Annually, Has No Idea What It's Selling (vice.com) 48
Whether its Pokemon cards, swords, or gift cards, the USPS Mail Recovery Center can accommodate all your shopping needs. From a report: Every year, the United States Postal Service auctions millions of dollars worth of undeliverable mail, an amount that could likely be far more if the USPS had any idea what it was selling, according to postal service documents. In 2020, as part of our special project on the USPS, Motherboard filed a Freedom of Information Act request with the USPS for a list of items auctioned by the Mail Recovery Center in Atlanta, Georgia, the USPS's "lost and found," a facility where some 67 million pieces of undeliverable mail annually are sent to. If the items are deemed to have a value of greater than $25, sentimental value, or otherwise possess "some material value," the items are stored in case the USPS receives an inquiry from the person who was supposed to get it.
After a period ranging from 30 days to "indefinitely," the USPS either recycles, destroys, or auctions the item. But the USPS doesn't auction the items individually. It contracts with GovDeals, a government surplus auction website, to sell them off in lots. Currently, the Atlanta Surplus Center has 645 lots on auction, with items ranging from gift cards to cell phones to laptops. But mostly the lots contain "general merchandise." Ironically, the lots must be picked up at the Atlanta facility, as the mail will not mail the lost mail to the winner of an auction. In response to Motherboard's request, the USPS said it doesn't keep much of any information about the auctions at all. "As information, the Postal Service does not have a record of the actual number of items auctioned, the sale prices of those items, nor the sale prices of the individual lots," the USPS said. The only information it included in the response was an annual breakdown of 2015 through 2019 of the number of lots auctioned and the total revenue from those auctions.
After a period ranging from 30 days to "indefinitely," the USPS either recycles, destroys, or auctions the item. But the USPS doesn't auction the items individually. It contracts with GovDeals, a government surplus auction website, to sell them off in lots. Currently, the Atlanta Surplus Center has 645 lots on auction, with items ranging from gift cards to cell phones to laptops. But mostly the lots contain "general merchandise." Ironically, the lots must be picked up at the Atlanta facility, as the mail will not mail the lost mail to the winner of an auction. In response to Motherboard's request, the USPS said it doesn't keep much of any information about the auctions at all. "As information, the Postal Service does not have a record of the actual number of items auctioned, the sale prices of those items, nor the sale prices of the individual lots," the USPS said. The only information it included in the response was an annual breakdown of 2015 through 2019 of the number of lots auctioned and the total revenue from those auctions.
So this is where my undelivered stuff goes.. (Score:1)
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That commenter should also throw in a cure for hysterical laughter while he's at it. The federal government under Donald Trump was an unmitigated and unprecedented disaster, while the Obama administration was the most competent, rational, smoothest, and quietest operation seen in American federal governance since the 1950s, and neither of those is an especially controversial viewpoint.
So if the comment had just indirectly made the claim by mentioning time periods, that would be one th
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They've managed to lose about $400 dollars worth of my stuff in the past couple of months. I filed the claims. They just say sorry. They don't pay the insurance. They were not a good service during Obama, then got much better under Trump.
Is this intended as some weird kind of irony? The Trump years had some of the worst mail problems in history, so bad that there's even a Wikipedia article about it [wikipedia.org] and people were speculating that it couldn't be coincidental, that Trump's Postmaster General Louis DeJoy was deliberately trying to sabotage the US mail [politico.com].
https://www.usatoday.com/story... [usatoday.com]
https://www.13newsnow.com/arti... [13newsnow.com]
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/m... [cbsnews.com]
https://slate.com/business/202... [slate.com]
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Hah, worst ever under Trump's "dismantle everything!" postmaster general. Enough so that this post feels almost like some astroturfing.
Re: So this is where my undelivered stuff goes.. (Score:2)
Writing your own address at the top of a letter is the standard way of doing it.
Your faith in humanity (Score:2)
Why aren't these items returned to sender?
Because they don't have a return address, or the return address was lost along with the address it was sent to.
... (I can't believe more than 8million worth of items have no return address)
Ah, your faith in the competence of ordinary people is touching. Naïve, but touching.
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I have not read the article. I do enjoy collecting stamps and learning about the USPS. 8 million dollars of valuables is an amazingly low number. When, I last looked 150 Million pieces of mail are deliver daily. In 5 days that's 1.2 billion, and 1 year that's 62 billion pieces.
An item that I do know about the USPS, it has a lost mail section in each region ( regional recovery center, was called a dead letter office), then ( I think ) in Colorado they have a separate lost mail division to handle what the oth
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What was in the package? :P
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In 2019 the USPS handled 143 _billion_ pieces of mail. Assuming the 8 million consists entirely of stuff valued at $25, or 320k pieces, that's about 2 pieces per million that wind up auctioned. How many pieces aren't worth auctioning per one that is I don't know, but let's assume 1000. So that's 1 in 500 that can't be delivered or returned. That doesn't seem all that infeasible to me...
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Oooh, even better, I overlooked that TFS mentions that 67 million per year are undeliverable. That's about 1 in 2000.
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The post office actually tries extremely hard to get lost mail somewhere. They will attempt to recover the address on the label as best they can (i
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I can't believe more than 8million worth of items have no return address
There were ~129 billion items shipped via USPS in 2020. From the summary 67 million pieces of undeliverable mail sent to the Atlanta center. This would represent just 0.05% of mail that is undeliverable. It isn't that hard to believe that 5 people out of every 10000 people may have accidentally messed up when labeling their mail.
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I lost a vintage computing item in the mail last month. Bizarrely, USPS delivered the flimsy empty box that it was shipped in to me. Clearly at some point the box had gotten ripped open and the contents had fallen out. The shipping box had the shipping label, but the contents did not.
When I talked to the people at the post office, they didn't say anything about any way to try and retrieve the item. They just pointed me to the USPS site where I could request reimbursement.
That really ticks me off now, becaus
Something tells me GovDeals picks it over first... (Score:2)
And removes the good stuff! I suspect there won't be any laptops in your auction box. ;-)
Undelivered electronics? (Score:2)
If a laptop etc isn't delivered and is lost, doesn't the seller flag the serial # for future appearance? And if I buy a device from something like PostOfficeLots.com (which I made up), could I be charged with stealing it?
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There is actual law about this:
your question is about being defined as theft: the answer is No
it works on the basis of storage and shipping law. ... ...
it goes
lost item
if item is reported by shipper then it's "lost and could be recovered in the future" + insurance carrier has rights to claim if they paid out
if shipper does not report item lost and it's sold by the US government. The item will be free and clear of all future claims from shipper, insurance carrier can claim and because it's a US government en
Set up a new bureaucracy (Score:2)
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Increased revenue does not automatically equate to increased profit. If the cost of implementing and managing such a system adds more cost than value, it's a net loss. There's a reason why the third party that already does the work chooses to do blind auctions. They likely get a percentage of the proceeds. If they thought they could get more profit by identifying and sorting items, they already would be doing such.
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Also, I don't necessarily want the Postal Service to be in a position to directly benefit from selling misdirected mail. Somewhere along the line this could very well lead to more mail being "misdirected", or the lost mail resolution folks not trying so hard to resolve delivery because of a profit motive.
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You can guess what's inside most of the time (Score:2)
if you only buy mail that is ticking.
Isn't this illegal (Score:2)
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It's most likely items in damaged packaging. Things fell out of a box/envelope and are loose. The mailing label fell off or got blurred by moisture. If an item has no distinguishable shipping/sender information, it cannot be properly directed.
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return to post-office (Score:2)
I get it that some items are mal-addressed for both the sender and the recipient, but is there really no other information to go on?
For example some mail is picked up by the mail carrier, can they not reject mail that is clearly lacking an address. Some mail is franked, can the franking machine not be traced, can mail be returned to a "lost and found" box at the post office that first handled it for a while, so people can go look for undelivered items and if there is no other option than to sell it that the
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Wrong address is given, bad zip code, stuff like that. And also no return address so there's nothing to do with the package. The fact that there's enough of this stuff with high enough value to give it to a third party to auction means that there's a LOT of mail going through the USPS. Mistakes get made, especially when there are many millions of items being delivered.
I myself routinely get mail for a past homeowner, I've been here 20 years and I get mail not for the previous owner, but the one prior to
GovDeals doesn't do shipping? (Score:2)
After winning a bid you have to separately contract to ship things? This shrinks your potential pool of bidders significantly.
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After winning a bid you have to separately contract to ship things?
Yup. You have to pay a 3rd party shipper to go get it for you, pack it up, and ship it to you.
This shrinks your potential pool of bidders significantly.
I'm sure it does. I've bought a few things from sites such as these. Really, the process is pretty painless, just more expensive than you'd think. For most of the 3rd parties you can send them a lot number and your zip code, they'll give you a quote in a few hours. If you win: Pay the auction, sign a release, pay the shipper, shit shows up at your door a week later. It can certainly be a little intimidating,
Buyers also don't know what they are buying (Score:3)
The OP forgets an important detail. The buyers also don't know what they are buying. They bid blind. The USPS has a crate of stuff. Its sealed and buyers bid on it. They may be getting 700 lbs of USB drives or 700 lbs of toilet paper. The winner comes and hauls off their prize, what ever it is. Then it's their problem to either flip it for profit or dispose of it at their cost
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I get 3-4 per year (Score:2)
Airliners deal with the same thing (Score:3)
people lose stuff, it's part of being human. Airliners also have 3rd party people to deal with unclaimed luggage. So who cares? I'd rather see a lost item find a new home then go in the trash.
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"Airliners also have 3rd party people to deal with unclaimed luggage"
This is totally different. There's no such thing as "unclaimed mail". The USPS is supposed to deliver all mail to your mailbox/home. Unless you put your mail on hold, you never go to the post office to claim your mail.
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Or if you move, or if you never pick your package up after repeated warnings, or if the address isn't right ect ect.
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I hope they give away/sell them properly instead of blindly.
Get Rich Fixing It (Score:2)
If you are really convinced that the post office is leaving a bunch of money on the table it's a great opportunity for you to get rich *and* help the the government earn more money: start buying up the shit the post office auctions off and resell it for a profit.
If you can't make this work then the criticism of the post office seems unjustified. If you can make it work then go do it. You'll make a bunch of money and, in so doing, increase demand in the post office auction and help the government make mor
"Undeliverable"? (Score:1)