Right now as it stands in the US mail is free it costs nothing to be a part of it. Now, sure, it costs to send something but overall this cost is fairly small for ordinary things like letters, bills, etc.
Mail is so cheap due to in large part bulk mailing, ads and such that are sent out by companies by the thousands that help to fund the post office, struggling in these days to stay afloat when social contact and bill paying is being done on-line. But, of course, bulk mailing is a pain in the ass.
I get one bill in the mail every month that I have to pay for by check because there's no automatic deduct available the rest of my mail is mostly trash.
So would you, dear reader, be willing to pay a small fee to the Post Office every month to opt-out of bulk mailings? Say the fee was something like $10-$20 a month, or $150 a year or something. For that price any piece of mail addressed to "Postal Patron", "Our Neighbor", "Valued Customer", etc. doesn't go in your box to ensure this you're given a sticker or some-kind-of mark/trinket you place on/in your mailbox to let the postman know you're in the program. (An occasional check by the post-man ensures that the medallion is current/belongs to the address it's being displayed at.)
Mail is so cheap due to in large part bulk mailing, ads and such that are sent out by companies by the thousands that help to fund the post office, struggling in these days to stay afloat when social contact and bill paying is being done on-line. But, of course, bulk mailing is a pain in the ass.
I get one bill in the mail every month that I have to pay for by check because there's no automatic deduct available the rest of my mail is mostly trash.
So would you, dear reader, be willing to pay a small fee to the Post Office every month to opt-out of bulk mailings? Say the fee was something like $10-$20 a month, or $150 a year or something. For that price any piece of mail addressed to "Postal Patron", "Our Neighbor", "Valued Customer", etc. doesn't go in your box to ensure this you're given a sticker or some-kind-of mark/trinket you place on/in your mailbox to let the postman know you're in the program. (An occasional check by the post-man ensures that the medallion is current/belongs to the address it's being displayed at.)