Royal Mail to scrap second-class post on Saturdays
Royal Mail may end the delivery of second class letters on Saturdays and only deliver them on alternative weekdays. under reforms being planned by the Ofcom
The regulator considers the changes to the second class service are needed as part of a review of the the Universal Service Obligation (USO) under which Royal Mail is required by law to deliver letters six days a week and parcels five days a week.
Ofcom said the postal delivery service needed modernising. âIf the universal postal service does not evolve to align with customer needs, it risks becoming unsustainable, and people could end up paying higher prices than necessary,â it said. The changes could save Royal Mail hundreds of millions of pounds.â
Lindsey Fussell, Ofcomâs group director for networks and communications, said: âNo change is not really an option. Postal usersâ needs are at the heart of our review. âIf we decide to propose changes to the universal service next year, we want to make sure we achieve the best outcome for consumers.
âWeâre now looking at whether we can get the universal service back on an even keel in a way that meets peopleâs needs. This wonât be a free pass for Royal Mail â under any scenario, it must invest in its network, become more efficient and improve its service levels.â
Martin Seidenberg, chief executive of International Distribution Service which owns Royal Mail, which agreed a ÂŁ3.57bn takeover by Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky in May, said: âLetter volumes have fallen from their peak of 20 billion to just 6.7 billion a year today meaning the average household now receives just four letters per week. Yet whilst most countries have adapted their Universal Service requirements to reflect the new reality, in the UK the minimum requirements have not changed.
âOur proposal for the future of the Universal Service has been developed after speaking to thousands of people across the country and is designed to protect what matters most for customers. It can be achieved through regulatory change with no need for new legislation.
âThe universal service faces a very real and urgent financial sustainability challenge. Change cannot come soon enough.â
The loss-making business told Ofcom the changes could reduce costs by ÂŁ300m a year if implemented. Unions warned it could result in thousands of job losses. The changes would reduce 7,000 to 9,000 daily delivery routes over the next 18 to 24 months, Royal Mail said.
Ofcom said that regardless of reforms Royal Mail needed to improve its delivery record. The postal service is currently required to deliver 93 per cent of First Class post within one working day and 98.5 per cent of Second Class within three working days. Despite this it only delivered 73.7 per cent of First Class and 90.7 per cent of Second Class post was delivered on time between 2022-23 and was fined ÂŁ5.6m.
âWe have been pressing the company on what it is doing to turn things around, and we are currently investigating its latest failure to hit its annual delivery targets. Regardless of how the universal service evolves, Royal Mailâs delivery performance must improve,â Ofcom added.
Tom MacInnes, at Citizens Advice, said: âWith Royal Mail failing to meet its targets for nearly half a decade, the current Universal Service Obligation (USO) clearly doesnât protect consumers as it should. Reforms to the USO need to address this. They canât just be a disguise for cuts that prioritise saving Royal Mail money over providing a good standard of service.
âWe agree that improving reliability and affordability is essential. But cutting deliveries wonât automatically lead to the more reliable service people need. Ofcom has acknowledged some of Royal Mailâs failings but we need to see that recognised with action. The regulator needs to make sure we have a USO that serves its basic purpose of protecting consumers â not Royal Mailâs bottom line.â