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Topic: postage going up again
itsmetina's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:12 PM
it will be a dollar to mail things off soon

gurlgmr's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:13 PM
i don't trust the postal service anyway.
but the increase in price probably is not only due to inflation, but also due to the very popular way to do things now... via Internet.

soxfan94's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:14 PM
where did you learn that it was going up again? I hadn't heard anything...

Cambolaya65's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:15 PM
how do go from lick it or stick it to stamps...whoa!

itsmetina's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:16 PM
news darling

itsmetina's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:16 PM

how do go from lick it or stick it to stamps...whoa!
i'm multifuctional baby

soxfan94's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:17 PM
Yes thank you I understand that's where people get news...from the news report. But I meant which source...there's nothing about it at all online from anywhere.

darkowl1's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:18 PM
Edited by darkowl1 on Mon 02/11/08 08:19 PM
don't know what to say about that, so hysterical laughter is the best medicine!!!!!!laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh :angry: mad mad explode
phukin figures!!!mad

itsmetina's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:19 PM
Edited by itsmetina on Mon 02/11/08 08:20 PM
news 2 houston kprc postage hasnt gone up going to though till may 12th only a penny this time

IndnPrncs's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:20 PM
I haven't heard anything.. I would think that a jump to a dollar would be not only a ridiculous move but stupid as well... Most do online banking why would we pay a dollar to mail a bill? I think it's a spoof.. I read the news every day.. Where was it that I could have missed it?

ujGearhead's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:20 PM
It's just a matter of time before counterfeiter concentratte more on stamps than on cash!

itsmetina's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:21 PM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17693955/ found it on the net darlings

itsmetina's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:22 PM

I haven't heard anything.. I would think that a jump to a dollar would be not only a ridiculous move but stupid as well... Most do online banking why would we pay a dollar to mail a bill? I think it's a spoof.. I read the news every day.. Where was it that I could have missed it?
i was exagerating its not a dollar yet but one day will be

IndnPrncs's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:24 PM
It doesn't say anything about a dollar it's an old piece about the raise to 41 cents...

James C. Miller III, chairman of the postal board, said the forever stamp could go on sale as soon as next month, at the 41-cent rate.

The postal governors asked the regulatory commission to reconsider some of its proposals, saying the suggested price for sending things like catalogs was too high.

For most people, the first-class rate has the greatest impact and the cost of sending a letter will rise from 39 cents to 41 cents, a penny less than the Postal Service had originally requested.

Price of heavier letters will go down
But folks sending heavier letters — such as wedding invitations — will see a reduction in the price.

That’s because the 41-cent rate is for the first ounce, but each additional ounce will cost just 17 cents, down from the current 24 cents.

That means a two-ounce letter will cost 58 cents to mail, compared with 63 cents now.

Also expected to be attractive to many people is the forever stamp.

The first forever stamps will sell for 41 cents apiece, but they won’t have a price printed on them and they will remain valid for sending a letter regardless of any future rate increases.

While a forever stamp will always be valid for mailing a latter, that doesn’t mean the price won’t go up. If rates were to increase to 45 cents, for example, that’s what a forever stamp would sell for. But stamps already purchased at a lower rate could still be used without adding extra postage.

In a telephone interview, Miller said there is no limit on sales of the forever stamps, but he said they are generally intended for consumers and won’t be produced in the massive rolls often used by businesses.

Shape-based pricing is also included in the new rates. For example, if the contents of a First-class large envelope are folded and placed in a letter-sized envelope, mailers can reduce postage by as much as 39 cents per piece.

Implementation of one part of the new rates was delayed until July 15. That covers higher prices for magazines and newspapers. Miller said publishers need extra time to update their computers to the new rates.

Three other provisions of the ruling will take effect with the rest of the rates in May, but the post office asked the regulatory commission to reconsider them. Those are:

Standard mail flats, a category largely composed of catalogs. The commission recommended an increase for some catalog mailers of as much as 40 percent, more than double what the Postal Service had proposed.
The surcharge for larger items that cannot be sorted by machines. The postal governors would like to see incentives for mailers to provide letters that can be processed at lower cost on sorting equipment, but the commission didn’t make a differentiation.
The Priority Mail flat-rate box was set at $9.15 by the commission. The post office had recommended $8.80.
The post office applied for the higher rates last May and the regulatory commission issued its decision Feb. 26.

Postage rates last went up in January 2006.

Under new legislation the regulatory commission has been directed to devise a new, simplified system for setting postal rates, but the post office will be allowed to seek one more increase under the old system in the meantime.

Miller said the governors have not decided whether to do that.

The rates taking effect May 14 include:

Letters, bill payments, greeting cards: 41 cents for the first ounce, up from 39 cents.
Wedding invitation (2 ounces), 58 cents, down from 63 cents.
Postcard, 26 cents, up from 24 cents.
Priority mail flat-rate envelope, $4.60, up from $4.05.
Express Mail flat-rate envelope, $16.25, up from $14.40.
Parcel Post, 1-pound package, $4.50, up from 3.95.
Bank statement, 2 ounces, presorted, 45.9 cents, down from 54.4 cents.
Utility bill, bar coded, 31.2 cents, up from 29.3 cents.

PATSFAN's photo
Mon 02/11/08 08:31 PM
:smile: drinker

soxfan94's photo
Tue 02/12/08 06:49 PM

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17693955/ found it on the net darlings


Lol it's already 41 cents, that article is from March 2007.

eileena9's photo
Tue 02/12/08 07:08 PM
The rate of postage will be going up to 42 cents a standard letter. That is the rate it was first intended to go up to at the last increase. The increase will take place on May 12, 2008.flowerforyou

soxfan94's photo
Tue 02/12/08 07:11 PM
Edited by soxfan94 on Tue 02/12/08 07:13 PM

The rate of postage will be going up to 42 cents a standard letter. That is the rate it was first intended to go up to at the last increase. The increase will take place on May 12, 2008.flowerforyou


I'm really not trying to be a pain here, but I'm just really curious where these sources are.

Edit: http://www.usps.com/prices/welcome.htm

Although it still needs to be approved and make sure it passes the guidelines of some Postal Act.

seahawks's photo
Tue 02/12/08 07:11 PM

it will be a dollar to mail things off soon
when can we start shootin postal employee's lmao

eileena9's photo
Tue 02/12/08 07:13 PM


it will be a dollar to mail things off soon
when can we start shootin postal employee's lmao



SEAHAWKS!!!!!! I AM A POSTAL EMPLOYEE!!!!!!!!sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad sad

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