NALC: Postal Service has long history of using bikes for city delivery | PostalReporter.com
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NALC: Postal Service has long history of using bikes for city delivery

From the 2011 NALC Postal Record:

The Postal Service has a long history of using bikes for city delivery. The Postal Service estimated recently that the carriers on bikes in nearby Sun City, AZ, alone save 7,800 gallons of gasoline a year, which adds up to roughly $27,300 at today’s prices for gasoline.

The Postal Service has a long history of using bikes for city delivery

Some other countries still rely on bicycles as a significant part of their postal delivery systems. Urban residents of Denmark and Holland get much of their mail delivered on two wheels. In New Zealand, 80 percent of letter carriers deliver using a bike. But changes like automation, and the longer routes that resulted, caused the U.S. Postal Service to drop bikes in favor of trucks. Today, bike routes are found only in areas with warm weather and flat terrain like Arizona and Florida.

Letter carriers deliver on foot, via LLV—even by bike: If you’re a carrier, what’s your mode? goo.gl/vUBP2c