Home / Royal Mail / Why low letter boxes pose a hazard for posties – Yorkshire Post Letters

Why low letter boxes pose a hazard for posties – Yorkshire Post Letters

DAVID H Rhodes’s (The Yorkshire Post, January 8) experience of delivering leaflets gave him a taste of the hazards faced by posties due to ankle-height letter boxes.

The CWU has been campaigning about this and MP Vicky Ford brought the Low-Level Letter Boxes (Prohibition) Bill to Parliament in 2019. As a result, the Building Regulations Advisory Committee undertook to include low-level letter boxes in a review of building regulations for new developments. It was recommended that the minimum height for letter boxes should be 70cm (2ft 3in).

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Back injury is the primary cause of sickness in Royal Mail, with nearly 17,000 cases of back-related absences in 2018.

Correspondence has highlighted the difficulties that the county’s posties face. Photo by Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images.

Mrs Ford told Parliament that “having to bend or stoop to deliver mail to low letter boxes is a significant factor…also associated with increased likelihood of injury from dogs or cats… low-level letter boxes are more difficult to see, resulting in more hand injuries and more damage to mail, especially packages.

“Post that has been delivered into a low-level letter box is also easier for thieves to steal”.

So when choosing your new front door, spare a thought for the postie, the paper boy and the security of your mail!

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