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MPs’ fury at post office closures
Tuesday 1st July 2008, 11:42AM BST.
Workers at post offices across Staffordshire were today facing up to the reality of their branches being axed – while angry MPs hit out over the consultation process which ended in the closures being confirmed.
Campaigns were launched to try to save branches but have failed despite strong objections to the closures. Now 49 branches in Staffordshire and Shropshire will be axed, with the first closures expected in August. South Staffordshire MP Sir Patrick Cormack said he was “deeply disappointed” at the decision to shut the Seisdon branch.
He said there had been a “strong local campaign and virtually unanimous demand” that it remained open.
“The Post Office’s decision shows an arrogant disregard to those elderly people in particular who do not have transport and who will now have to make their way to Wombourne for post office facilities,” he said.
“This is a very harsh decision and as the period of consultation was as recent as June 9, it seems to me that consultation exercise was something of a charade.”
St John Street, in Chapel Lane, and Whittington Barracks post offices are being axed in Lichfield, prompting an angry reaction from the city’s Conservative MP who said it “made a mockery” of the consultation period.
Michael Fabricant said: “Hundreds of protest letters and my own representations made it clear to the Post Office that the closure of the St John Street Post Office in particular would create real difficulties for elderly and disabled customers who cannot easily make it to the post office in Bakers Lane.”
Stafford’s Labour MP David Kidney said the decision was “predictable but disappointing for residents who worked hard to save their local post offices”.
He said he would be writing to Postwatch to see if if planned to pursue procedures for a review of, particularly, the Marston Road and Great Bridgeford post offices in his constituency.
Mr Kidney said that the adage “use it or lose it” was a reality when it came to the survival of post offices.
Where the axe will fall
Among the post office branches that will now be closed down in Staffordshire and Shropshire are the following:
Borough Park, Willington Road, Tamworth; The Old Post Office, Codsall Wood, near Wolverhampton; Great Bridgeford, Whitgreave Lane, Great Bridgeford, near Stafford; High Street, Burton upon Trent; Hopwas, Nursery Lane, Hopwas, Tamworth; Marchington, Burnside, Church Lane, Marchington,
Uttoxeter; Marston Road, Stafford; Milford, Home Farm, Milford, near Stafford; Seisdon Post Office & Stores, Crockington Lane, Seisdon, near
Wolverhampton; St Aidans, Pye Green Road, Cannock; St John Street, Chapel Lane, Lichfield; Stowe-By-Chartley, Station Road, Stowe-By-Chartley, near Stafford; Uttoxeter Heath, High Street, Uttoxeter; Walton,
Fillybrooks, Stone;
Whittington Barracks, Lichfield; Wolverhampton Road branch in Stafford.
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Funny really, people don’t use the post office enough then complain when it gets shut down.
Much of what the post office now does is done by other companies anyway.
Stamps? Purchase in many shops. Benefits? Gosh, look at all the banks and cash machines.
Parcels – one of the few areas where a local post office can be beneficial, but how many people send parcels?
Years ago people used to use the post office. Then started buying elsewhere when other places, more convenient places, started doing some of the work.
So does the government keep putting money into a business that doesn’t pay for itself? Or use money elsewhere?
If people, enough people, use the post office for things then fair enough. But it looks like quite a decline in the last decade from where I’m sitting.
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Not a post office in the land has anything other than queues out of the door and yet they are closed down. Suspect costing again.
This is like a greengrocer refusing to buy potatoes because he sees it as a large bill. It is the economics of the madhouse and didn’t the clown in charge used to run the Football thingy?
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The post office closing at Whittington Barracks is appalling.That little post office has a steady stream of customers daily i know i worked there and used it daily when my husband was overseas,
That is a life line for the wives and families..who send blueys and parcels to thier loved ones during times of conflict and tours of duty.How anyone can think its not needed is pure stupidity.The bus service to the town is appalling,the walk is dangerous with young children crossing very very busy roads and alot of the young wives do not drive.
Appalling.lack of respect for peoples needs!!
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Sorry but if you choose to live in a rural community you have to expect such closures
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i sympathise with any community that loses its post offices as they are vital parts of day to day life.
my complaint is that more and more decent post offices are being filled with ‘tat and rubbish’ that nobody wants, the post office in wednesfield high street has turned into nothing more than a glorified car boot sale, i understand if rural post offices need to sell other things but as for town centre post offices, leave the ‘tacky rubbish’ for the market stalls.
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Yet if the post offices were used as much as people say, why close them?
Or could do what a few areas have done over the years and local people buyout the postmaster and have their own contract with post office counters ltd.
I must admit I hardly use the post office at all. Road tax is much easier and quicker online, stamps are available at dozens of shops and courier services for parcels are both cheaper and quicker.
Post offices aren’t as essential as they used to be.
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Mr. Davies should realise the arguments being used to close down Post Offices are entirely spurious. If he chooses not to use a Post Office then fine. That is his choice. However they are the only shop in many parts and they also double, effectively, as a “government” office. For the latter function they are underfunded and it is a role that could be expanded given the reluctance of large government departments to provide any point of contact.
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Not sure how the post office doubles as a government office. Never seen one like that.
And in many other parts they aren’t the only shop. We are talking post office counters here, not the shop that its in. Most shops that have a post office in (the majority of post offices) are owned privately. Whether to shut down the shop is of course down to the owner.
Or locals who NEED the shop to be open could always buy the owner out and run it themselves.
Now what exactly does the post office counter offer that is so essential anywhere?
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