Home / Royal Mail / Royal Mail fails to hit delivery targets in EVERY British postcode: Future of body ‘in doubt’ as households are left waiting up to two weeks for post – piling pressure on NHS over ‘missed appointments due to late letters’

Royal Mail fails to hit delivery targets in EVERY British postcode: Future of body ‘in doubt’ as households are left waiting up to two weeks for post – piling pressure on NHS over ‘missed appointments due to late letters’

The future of the Royal Mail has been cast into doubt after new figures showed that it is failing to meet delivery targets for any postcode in Britain.

Industry experts believe the company – which was partially privatised in 2013 before being sold off completely two years later – is due a reckoning as it faces stiff competition from other firms.

A source told The Times that the service faced a ‘make or break’ judgement in the next three months after losing a tenth of its business to rivals because of strikes.

The source added that it ‘could be curtains’ for the mail carrier, which delivered a £750million loss last year, ‘if they don’t start winning back big contracts’.

Official figures published by the postal service showed that posties were failing to hit a target of delivering 93 per cent of first class post within one day of collection across the country. 

Post piling up outside a Royal Mail sorting office in Bristol during strikes last year

The Royal Mail - which was privatised in 2015 - has lost a tenth of its business due to strike action

The Royal Mail – which was privatised in 2015 – has lost a tenth of its business due to strike action

Nationwide around 75 per cent of first class letters and parcels are delivered on time – and the figure plummets to as low as 57.5 per cent in the BR postcode area, covering Bromley and its surrounding communities.

Rural deliveries to areas such as the Scottish Highlands and islands are not included in the overall target – but the ZE postcode, for the Orkney Islands, saw just 35.5 per cent of first class post arrive on time.

Around 94 per cent of second class post is delivered within three days – short of a 98.5 per cent target – and almost one in 10 delivery routes aren’t even fully completed each day. In some areas, letters aren’t being delivered for two weeks.

The failure to deliver post on time is having a knock-on effect on other public services – including the NHS, which is having to deal with patients not being aware of appointments after letters failed to arrive in time.

Practices are reportedly mulling over piloting schemes to phone patients ahead of time to confirm they are aware of their appointments. 

A health service hospital volunteer said: ‘There are loads of patients who miss appointments because of late letters. It’s a continuous occurrence.’

The Royal Mail is also on course to miss its delivery targets for the seventh year in a row, the data has revealed. 

Industry experts believe the company - which was partially privatised in 2013 before being sold off completely two years later - is due a reckoning as it faces stiff competition from other firms

Industry experts believe the company – which was partially privatised in 2013 before being sold off completely two years later – is due a reckoning as it faces stiff competition from other firms

Targets for the Royal Mail are set by communications regulator Ofcom, which launched an investigation into the postal service earlier this year. 

Royal Mail bosses said that recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic was hampering its ability to deliver mail – but as far back as last December has been warned off of using lockdown as an ongoing ‘excuse’.

Lindsey Fussell, of Ofcom, said at the time: ‘He company’s had plenty of time to learn lessons from the pandemic, and cannot continue to use it as an excuse.’

The regulator said it will decide whether or not to fine the mail carrier by Christmas this year. It previously issued a £1.5million fine to the service for delivery failures in 2019.

It comes after the Royal Mail was entangled in a long-running dispute with workers over pay, jobs and conditions. 

Workers in July voted overwhelmingly to accept a deal to end the row, which saw more than 115,000 workers take 18 days of strike action in the final quarter of last year.

The Communications Workers’ Union (CWU) and Royal Mail bosses agreed to a ten per cent salary increase over three years, a one-off lump sum of £500 for union-grade employees, a new sickness policy and new working patterns.

The company argued the changes were necessary to allow it to compete in the booming parcel market, where it is losing ground to rivals like Amazon and Evri.

A Royal Mail worker holds a toy depicting Postman Pat as members strike over pay and conditions, outside of the Houses of Parliament in London, Britain, December 9

A Royal Mail worker holds a toy depicting Postman Pat as members strike over pay and conditions, outside of the Houses of Parliament in London, Britain, December 9

Royal Mail workers picket outside a Royal Mail depot in London, Britain on December 23

Royal Mail workers picket outside a Royal Mail depot in London, Britain on December 23

The deal was reached after it was revealed in May that the Royal Mail had lost £1billion in the past year.

The eye-watering figures for the 12 months to the end of March 2023 come after multiple strikes and poor performance.

Royal Mail’s parent company International Distributions Services (IDS) today reported £748million in annual operating losses – figures it blamed on the postal service’s performance.

This was against profits of £577million the previous year, but IDS said it was targeting a return to underlying earnings over 2023-24. 


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