Monday 10 July 2017

How to Complete a Postal Change of Address

Forwarding mail with the USPS Change of Address Form
If you’re moving, one of the tasks you’ll need to complete is a USPS change of address form. You can do this temporarily (like if you’re moving to college for the semester), or permanently if you’re changing homes. Changing your address means that your mail will be forwarded to your new address. While it’s a good idea to get in touch with those who regularly send you mail and update your address with them, for the contacts you can’t reach or just aren’t aware of, rest assured that your mail can still follow you to your new address. Let’s look at your options for changing your address with the USPS, how to forward mail to a new address, what mail will forward, and what mail won’t forward.

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Options for USPS forwarding
The USPS recommends changing your address 2 weeks before you want your mail forwarded since it can take 7-10 postal business days to begin receiving mail at your new address. According to the USPS, you can make the Change of Address (COA) process faster and easier by notifying everyone who sends you mail about your new address and the date of your move at least two weeks before you move.  Many bills and statements have an area for address change notification to easily update your contact information with the company. Check out this post titled Who Needs Your New Address for a checklist on who you should contact directly when you change your address.

When you’re ready to change your address, there are two choices: regular forward mail, and the USPS Premium Forwarding Service®.

Regular mail forwarding is the cheaper alternative, but not all your mail will be forwarded (more on that later). Regular forwarding service is free if you do a Change of Address form at your local post office or $1.05 if you complete the form online. You can choose a temporary change to have your mail forwarded for 15 days or longer, or select a permanent COA to have your mail forwarded up to one year. With regular change of address, your mail will be sent piece by piece to your new address.

Premium Forwarding involves an enrollment fee plus a weekly fee. With this service, your mail is held, packaged, and sent to you weekly. You can use this service from 2 weeks up to 1 year, though keep in mind that it's not available for PO Boxes. The enrollment fee for the Premium Forward Service is $18 at your local post office or $16.50 online, and the weekly cost is $18 each week you use the service thereafter.

How to Forward Mail to Your New Address
You can either forward mail over the phone, in person at your local post office, or online. You will choose from individual, family, or business forwarding.

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Individual. This means that you are the only one moving. Select “Individual” and repeat the change of address process for each person in the household if:
You receive mail by more than one name (maiden name, married name, or nickname)
Some members of your family with the same last name are moving but others are staying.
Some members of your family are moving but they have different last names.
Family. This means that everyone in your household has the same last name and is moving to the same new address. If someone with the same last name is staying at the old address, then select the “Individual” option. The USPS states that in all cases, family members with different last names or those family members moving to different addresses must prepare separate forms.

Business. This means that your business is moving. An individual change of address from a business addresses is not acceptable. Only a duly authorized representative of the business may forward business mail.
Change of address over the phone
Call 1-800-275-8777 to initiate the mail forwarding. You’ll need to provide a credit card since a $1 verification fee will be charged.

To forward mail at the post office

If you go to the post office, bring 2 forms of ID (at least 1 photo ID) and evidence of residence at the primary address. Acceptable forms of ID include:

Driver’s license or state ID card
Military, government, university or corporate ID
Passport, alien registration card, or certificate of naturalization
To prove residence, you can bring:

Current lease, mortgage, or deed of trust
Voter or vehicle registration card
Home or vehicle insurance policy
If you plan on selecting the Premium Forwarding Service, you also need to bring a form of payment (cash, check, credit card, or debit card). Payment for the entire period of service is due at the time of application.

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Filing a USPS Change of Address online
Visit the USPS website to go through their online process to forward your mail and pay the fees ($1.05 for regular mail forwarding, $16.50 for premium forwarding). If you forward your mail online, you'll also need a valid email address to get a confirmation email.

Confirmation of your change of address
When your COA is activated, you are sent up to three confirmations:

The first confirmation is a Validation Letter sent to your old address to help guard against fraudulent change of addresses. The validation letter will not mention your new mail forwarding address.

The second confirmation is a Confirmation Notification Letter. If you did an online Change of Address, the confirmation code will appear on both the email and on the physical confirmation notification letter. If you changed your address by mail or by phone, the confirmation code will appear only on the confirmation notification letter.

The third confirmation comes with permanent forwarding – a Welcome Kit. It has helpful information for new residents, a community guide, special offers, and coupons related to your new address. You can find the confirmation code on the left side of the confirmation letter attached to the Welcome Kit.
If more than 10 postal business days have passed since your COA was activated and you haven’t received any forwarded mail, call the USPS.

What mail will get forwarded?
Most classes of mail will be forwarded after your change of address is completed. A common question is “Will certified mail get forwarded?”  And the answer is yes! See what types of mail will be forwarded for each type of service.

For regular mail forwarding with the USPS:
First-Class Mail®, Priority Mail®, and Express Mail® will be forwarded for up to 12 months at no charge.
Newspapers and magazines will be forwarded for 60 days at no charge
Package services (bound printed matter, media mail, and library mail) will be forwarded locally up to 12 months at no cost. For forwarding outside the local area, you will pay a fee upon delivery.
Special services including certified mail, collect on delivery (COD), delivery confirmation, insured, registered, or signature confirmation or special handling mail will be forwarded without additional fees to domestic addresses.
For USPS Premium Mail Forwarding Service:
Priority Mail Express® items will be rerouted to your new address.
Priority Mail® pieces will be either held and sent with your residential package or rerouted to you (whichever is faster).
First-Class Mail® will either be included in your residential package or rerouted separately (depending on size).
Standard Mail® pieces will be included in your residential package if they fit, or they will be shipped postage due upon delivery at the 1-pound Parcel Select® Nonpresort Rate.
Mail that will not forward
Not everything gets forwarded to you after completing a change of address form.

For regular mail forwarding, Standard Mail® (unless requested by the mailer) will not be forwarded. That includes:

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Circulars
Books
Catalogs
Ads
Credit card applications
Items specified “do not forward”
Items addressed to “current resident”
With premium forwarding, standard post and package services mail (bound printed matter, media mail, and library mail) will NOT be included in the residential package or rerouted. Instead, they will be shipped postage due upon delivery under the same price they were originally sent.

How The Post Office Sells Your Address

Have you ever wondered how junk mail follows you so easily when you move to a new address? How do credit card companies, catalogs, charities seeking money and everyone else all know when you have moved across town or across the country entirely?

Whenever you fill out a change of address form with the United States Postal Service, the USPS adds your new details into a database of 160 million previous address changes over the past four years. The USPS has deals with data brokers to sell this data to anyone who pays, provided they have your old address. That means data firms cannot buy the address of Leroy Jones in Cincinnati, but can obtain his new address if they know where he used to live, which they usually do anyway.

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It’s all there in the fine print when you sign up for a change of address: "We do not disclose your personal information to anyone, except in accordance with the Privacy Act.” Then it lists a number of exceptions including “to mailers, if already in possession of your name and old mailing address, as an address correction service.”

The Postal Service set up its current National Change of Address program, sometimes abbreviated as NCOA, in 1986. Until 2002, the USPS licensed to just 22 companies. After complaints about privacy violations, they reformatted the data to assure only those with the former address could obtain the new information, according to spokesman Roy Betts. That change allowed the postal service to distribute the address changes more widely. Today they license to about 500 companies, he said.

“Either weekly or monthly we distribute an updated file of change-of-address data to the licensed companies,” Betts said. “Mailers submit their address lists directly to these commercial data processors who update the information and return to the mailer.”

A full license with four years of data costs $190,000.  The post office also sells cheaper licenses with 18 months of data.  The Postal Service makes about $8 million a year licensing its change of address data, according to James Wilson, the USPS manager of address management. But the program results in big savings by avoiding additional cost of forwarding mail. "The ability to update customer address information through NCOALink has been previously estimated to save the USPS and the postal rate payer in excess of $1 billion annually," he said, referring to what they call undeliverable-as-addressed mail. " This amount does not include the savings to the mailing industry for wasted postage, production costs, and lost customers."

The Postal Service lost nearly $16 billion in fiscal year 2012, then another $3.1 billion in the first half of fiscal 2013.

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When the Direct Marketing Association holds its annual convention, the USPS sets up a large stand to pitch the service in a giant hall alongside the country’s biggest data brokers. Last fall, that’s where I met Bob Eide, an affable direct mail specialist who has been with the postal service since 1973. He told me about a fifth of the U.S. population moves every year, and that the sale of new addresses to data brokers saves the postal service money by reducing the amount of mail they have to forward to new addresses.

Among those buying full licenses are some of the country’s most prominent data brokers including Acxiom ACXM -1.08%, Epsilon, FICO, Harte Hanks, InfoUSA, Merkle and KBM Group. Licensees in turn sell that data to direct marketers. Prices vary; a few I looked at charge around $1,000 to update one million address records. Other companies incorporate the information into their comprehensive dossiers on almost all Americans (one leader in the field, Acxiom, recently said it would allow consumers to see their individual dossiers for the first time from the end of the summer).

If you want to forward your mail, the USPS does not offer an option to opt out of sharing the data, or even paying for the privilege of opting out. Members of Congress have from time to time proposed creating an opt-out option, but to date such initiatives have failed. Some continue to lobby for the idea.

“There's nothing terrible about NCOA, but people should be given a choice,” says Bob Gellman, a privacy expert who worked for many years as a Congressional subcommittee staff member. “New movers are fodder for data brokers, who sell mailing lists to marketers and who also maintain lifetime files on every household in America.  NCOA is a prime source of this information.”

“USPS justifies the program on the grounds that they don't ‘sell’ the list but license its use. That is a subterfuge.  Supposedly, you only get a new address if you have the old address already.  Because data brokers have every household in America in their files, the information goes from NCOA to the data brokers, who flag every change and resell lists of new movers to anyone. “

There is, however, a loophole that keeps data brokers from accessing your updated address. When you fill out the online form to change an address, you can indicate a temporary change that provides six months of forwarding that can then be extended for another six months.  That information, unlike the changes marked as permanent, is not included in the master list sold to data brokers.

Even if you do not file a change of address with the post office, data brokers often learn that you have moved when you update your magazine subscriptions, deed registrations, phone connections, credit card details or have transitions with other companies. Then they include you into a list of ‘new movers.’ Data brokers such as Experian sell such lists to doctors and dentists, lawn maintenance services, furniture and appliance dealers and others who want to lure the business of the new kid in town.

"Given that a customer has the option to submit a change-of-address or to make alternative arrangements to have their mail forwarded, along with the option of submitting a temporary change-of-address, we believe providing an opt-out from allowing the updating of outdated address information yields minimum benefits while it can result in significant cost increases," said Wilson of the USPS. "Also, since customer address information is routinely compiled and disseminated by a whole host of channels outside of the USPS change-of-address program, adding an opt-out option to the USPS change-of-address program significantly burdens the mailing industry with little effect on preventing the disclosure of customer information by these other means."

usps change of address

Wednesday 12 October 2016

How To Send A Certified Mail

Have you got something important and secure that you need to send, and that requires confirmation of receipt? Sending USPS Certified mail will ensure that your important pieces of mail, including legal and confidential documents, arrive at their intended destination. Follow this guide to either send Certified Mail from your local post office or to send Certified Mail online.

Method 1. Send Certified Mail From Your Post office

1. Visit a local post office and obtain a Certified Mail Form 3800.
This form contains a green and white sticker that includes a barcode, which will allow you to track your mail through the USPS.
The form also contains a perforated receipt, which serves as proof that you mailed the item.
Write all of the required information on the form, including the recipient’s name and address.
2. Remove the backing and place the sticker along the top edge of the envelope you are mailing, directly to the right of the return address area.
Make sure to leave room on the top right portion of the envelope to apply correct postage.
On a package, the sticker can be placed to the left of the address area.

3. Pay the appropriate postage for the specified type of mail delivery. Then pay for additional services, including a fee for USPS Certified Mail ($3.30USD as of 8/18/2014 and Return receipt (PS Form 3811) cost $2.70).
Both first-class and priority mail can be sent via certified mail.
First-class mail includes envelopes and packages that weigh 13 ounces or less.
Priority mail service offers delivery in a timely and expedited fashion, generally within two to three days.

4. Decide if you want to purchase restricted delivery service.
Restricted delivery service guarantees that a specified person receives and signs for the certified mail.
If you select this option, you need to endorse, or initial, the column on the certified mail form that is marked for this service.

5. Determine receipt service. Choose whether or not you want to pay for return receipt service, which provides you with a receipt that gives you the certified mail recipient’s signature.
You can choose to obtain this receipt via e-mail, with a PDF image of the signature included, or as a physical receipt via snail mail.
As with the restricted delivery service, you need to initial the column on the certified mail form marked for this service.

6. Keep records. Collect and keep your receipt that has been stamped with the mailing date. A number that is unique to your mailing allows you to confirm the mail delivery online.
Keep all documentation for the mailing in a safe place.
7. View the delivery information. Check online at the postal service’s Web site to see when and to whom the certified mail was delivered. The recipient must sign for the mail upon delivery, and the post office keeps a record of this signature.


Method 2. Send Certified Mail Online


1. Sign up for a free account. There are several web businesses that offer USPS Certified Mail delivery. You shouldn't have to pay any monthly fees for an account.
Look at the price for sending Certified Mail. Decide if the price is worth what you will pay for the service.
Make sure that the service offers next-day USPS tracking for your letter.
Check to see that the service provides proof of mailing and USPS proof of delivery.

2. Prepare your letter for mailing.
Write a letter in your word processing program. Print and sign it if needed.
Alternatively, use a form provided by the recipient. Again, print the form and sign it as needed.
3. Scan the document using a scanner. Save the scanned document on your hard drive. Make sure that the document is legible and easy to read.


4. Upload your document file onto the website of your mailing service. The service will then address, print and mail the letter on the same business day.

5. Keep a copy of your proof of mailing as well as the USPS proof of delivery.

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Junk mail

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How To Make An Envelope

Homemade envelopes add a personal touch to any greeting or thank you card, and they are also a fun and easy craft to try with kids. Reuse discarded paper or buy decorated paper from your local craft store to make a personalized envelope.

Method 1. Making A Pouch Envelope

Fold a standard-sized (8.5 x 11 inches) piece of paper into four halves. An easy way to do this is folding the paper into half, then folding it into half again. This will outline the four squares you will use to make an envelope. After you fold the paper, unfold it, and you will see the outline of the four squares.

Cut the paper into two halves. You can cut down the horizontal or vertical fold, as long as the paper is in two pieces.

Fold the two halves of paper into two rectangles. The two halves of the paper will each have one crease down the middle. Fold the paper along this crease again to make each halve into a rectangle.

Tape together the open left and right sides. Use tape to securely close the two open edges of the rectangle, leaving the top open. The top is where you will insert your letter.

Fold down the top to make a flap. Make a small flap by folding down the open edge of the rectangle. This will keep the letter from falling out of the envelope. A flap that is about 1/2 of an inch will work.


Insert the letter or card. Bend back the flap, and insert your letter, card, or other contents. Fold the flap down again after this is done.

Glue the flap to keep your message enclosed. Place a thin line of glue along the inner edge of the flap, then press the flap down. This will keep the envelope closed until the recipient opens it. You can also secure the flap with decorative tape or a sticker.

Method 2. Making A Taped Envelope

Lay a standard-sized (8.5 x 11 inches) piece of paper down. Keep the paper oriented lengthwise (landscape-style) throughout the instructions.


Fold the paper in half lengthwise. Match up the edges of the paper to ensure the fold is straight, and press down on the folded edge with your fingers to make a crease. Then, you can unfold the piece of paper, and it will have a crease in the middle.

Fold the top right corner along the center crease. When the edge of the top right corner is touching the center crease in a straight line, fold the corner down. This will make a triangle shape with the top right corner.

Fold the top left corner along the center crease. Fold the top left corner down as you did the right corner. Remember to smooth out the paper with your fingers to make a straight fold. You will now have two small triangles sitting on top of a rectangle.


Fold one inch of the top and bottom edges toward the center crease. The measurement here does not have to be exact, so you can eyeball the fold. Both the top and bottom edges should be folded towards the center, leaving enough room in the center for a letter or card to fit, about one inch.
At this point, the paper should still be laying lengthwise
The triangular point of the paper should still be facing left.
Fold the right edge of the paper along the bottom of the triangle. The edge of the folded triangle on the left-hand side of the paper should be parallel with the edge of the right hand side. The triangle itself will still be visible. Smooth out the fold with your fingers, then unfold it.


Fold your message so it fits into the envelope. Large cards may be too big for this method, but regular letter-sized paper will fit if folded in half or in thirds.


Insert your message. Your note can go between the horizontal creases of the envelope. Use the bottom flaps of the triangle and the two length-wise flaps at the side to keep the message in the envelope.

Close the envelope. Fold the right hand edge of the paper back up to the edge of the triangle, just like did a moment ago. Fold the triangle top towards the center of the rectangle. Now, you will notice the back of your envelope looks like those bought in stores.


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Junk mail

USPS mail forwarding

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USPS delivery times