Follow us! >

USPS OIG – Alaska Mail Services

Background
The U.S. Postal Service is required to provide universal service to every person in the United States. Most of Alaska’s communities are not connected due to its vast geography and lack of surface highway and road infrastructure. To meet its mission in Alaska, the Postal Service uses airplanes, helicopters, hovercraft, and other modes of non-traditional transportation to deliver mail to 82 percent of the communities that are not accessible by road.
Alaska mail services includes two primary classifications of mail — priority and non-priority service. Priority mail consists of First-Class, Priority, and Express Mail; and non-priority mail consists of in-house non-priority and bypass mail. Bypass mail is prepared and tendered by authorized shippers directly to air carriers for transportation and delivery to rural Alaska, thus bypassing the Postal Service.

What We Did
Our objective was to evaluate the internal controls for mail movement and payment processes of the Alaska mail services. We conducted site visits in Anchorage, Bethel, and Fairbanks the week of May 23, 2022. In addition, we interviewed Postal Service management, reviewed internal controls for mail acceptance, and analyzed air carrier payments and bypass mail program costs.

Read Full Report

Sign up to receive our Daily Postal News blast

Related Articles

Tell us what you think below!

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Hot this week

Mail thefts, robberies, fraud and other postal crimes – 12/15/25

Postal crimes are almost a daily event.  These are the ones we found today

USPS bets it all on critical ‘last-mile’ plan as boss warns agency will be ‘out of cash’ by early 2027

THE United States Postal Service is leaning on its critical plan relating to its “last-mile” delivery services in order to help pull the federal agency out of financial troubles.

The New Era of US Postal Inspection Service Waste

The pattern is unmistakable. When faced with a public-safety crisis, the Postal Inspection Service does not adapt. It deflects, obscures, and protects its bureaucracy at all costs.

Retirement Application Backlog Builds but Use of Portal Showing Some Impact

The inventory of retirement applications pending at OPM grew in November to about 49,400 from the 34,600 in October, although the average processing time there decreased from 79 to 73 days, as use of the online portal OPM launched in the summer is starting to show some impact.

Parcel carriers score 98% for on-time delivery during holiday rush

Major domestic parcel carriers are achieving high on-time performance levels even as volumes surge during the holiday peak shipping season
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img
Secret Link
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x