Home / Royal Mail / Royal Mail could cut 1,000 jobs if it is allowed to scrap second-class letters on Saturdays and only deliver them every other weekday

Royal Mail could cut 1,000 jobs if it is allowed to scrap second-class letters on Saturdays and only deliver them every other weekday

Royal Mail has warned up to 1,000 jobs could be axed under bombshell plans put forward to slash its second-class letter delivery service.

The company has outlined cuts to non-first class letters by delivering them only on every other weekday – and scrapping Saturday deliveries entirely.

The postal giant said the shake-up could save it up to £300million a year but warned it could see 1,000 roles canned. 

The proposal is currently being looked at by Ofcom, the regulator overseeing the future of the universal postal service after it made a £419million loss last year. 

As part of the overhaul, the Royal Mail said it would keep a six-day-a-week service for first-class mail in a climbdown on previous calls for all Saturday letter deliveries to be scrapped.

The plans also include extending the delivery time for bulk business mail to three days instead of two.

Royal Mail has warned up to 1,000 jobs could be axed under bombshell plans put forward to slash its second-class letter delivery service (file photo) 

The dramatic shake-up of Royal Mail could save the firm about £300m a year (file Image)

The dramatic shake-up of Royal Mail could save the firm about £300m a year (file Image)

Currently, the price for a first-class stamp is £1.25, while the cost to purchase a second-class one is 75p. 

Parcels would continue to be delivered seven days a week, as they are currently.

Royal Mail revealed the proposals, if given the go ahead, would lead to ‘fewer than 1,000’ voluntary redundancies as the plans would mean daily delivery routes cut by between 7,000 to 9,000 within two years.

Just what is planned under the Royal Mail’s radical shake-up – and why

The Royal Mail has put forward radical proposals that would see first-class mail kept as a six-days-a-week service, but second-class letter deliveries cut dramatically.

The company is proposing that all non first-class letter deliveries – including second class and bulk business mail, such as bills and statements – are cut to every other weekday.

This would mean that second-class deliveries on Saturdays would be scrapped.

Under the plans, Royal Mail would deliver second-class mail in some streets on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, with others receiving letters on Tuesday and Thursday. 

Royal Mail said the move would save it up to £300million a year, with the universal postal service currently costing it up to £675million every year.

The cuts to second-class deliveries could see it axe up to 1,000 jobs, although it hopes this can be achieved through voluntary redundancy and staff turnover.

The group insisted it would not expect to make any compulsory redundancies and hopes the roles can be reduced through natural staff turnover among its 130,000 workforce.

It claimed the shake-up would not need a change in legislation, given it would still be delivering first-class post six days a week and called for Ofcom to put the changes in place by April next year.

Royal Mail said: ‘The proposal is designed to create a more financially stable future for the business and its shareholders, protecting tens of thousands of jobs and the best terms and conditions in the industry.

‘It closely aligns to changes successfully made in comparable countries – in Europe and around the world – over recent years, with limited changes for customers.’

Liberal Democrat business spokeswoman Sarah Olney branded the plans a ‘slap in the face for families being asked to pay more for less’.

‘It risks creating a cost-of-postage crisis, as people feel forced to pay for first class stamps because second class delivery days are being slashed,’ she added.

Martin Seidenberg, group chief executive of Royal Mail owner International Distributions Services (IDS), insisted the group had ‘worked hard to come up with a proposal that is good for our customers, good for our people and would allow Royal Mail to invest in products and services’.

He said: ‘If we want to save the universal service, we have to change the universal service.

‘Reform gives us a fighting chance and will help us on the path to sustainability.’

Ofcom has been consulting on the postal service reforms since January, with a deadline of April 3 set for responses.

A spokesman for the regulator said: ‘We’ll carefully consider all the feedback received, and provide an update in the summer.’

Royal Mail workers at work in at a sorting office in Cardiff, Wales

Royal Mail workers at work in at a sorting office in Cardiff, Wales 

Under its universal service obligation (USO), Royal Mail must deliver letters six days a week to all 32 million addresses in the UK for the price of a stamp.

Royal Mail has long been urging the Government and Ofcom to review its obligations, arguing that it is no longer workable or cost effective, given the decline in addressed letter post.

In a long-awaited report in January, Ofcom revealed options for an overhaul of the universal postal service that could see Royal Mail’s letter delivery service slashed from six days to five, or even three, a week.

Another option mooted was to extend letter delivery times, with a more expensive next-day delivery service available when required.

The proposals sparked an outcry, with ministers quick to dismiss any suggestion that the Government would sanction the scrapping of Saturday deliveries.

The six-day-a-week service is part of the universal service requirement stipulated by law under the Postal Services Act 2011.

Royal Mail also said in its submission that it would change all standard bulk mail – such as bills and statements – to a second class service, meaning they arrive within three weekdays instead of two.

It added that it would like to add new reliability targets, as well as ‘revised, realistic’ speed goals, and add tracking to universal service parcels.


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