Chloe Chic Bowtique

Monday, June 20, 2011

Shipping to Canada

During the postal strike, I cannot ship to Canada, I understand the frustration this may cause my Canadian customers and I am truly sorry for that. I will resume shipping to Canada as soon as the situation is resolved and Canada post resumes operation. If you are a Canadian customer on my wait list I will be skipping your name until the situation resolves itself. if you were skipped, your name will remain at the top of the list, so that once normal shipping resumes it will be your turn! I hope this seems fair, as best as it can. You may read more about the US not accepting packages for mailing to Canada here: U.S. cuts off mail to Canada

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U.S. cuts off mail to Canada

Fotolia
Fotolia
The U.S. postal service is no longer accepting mail to Canada
By Sheldon Alberts
Postmedia News Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON — The United States Postal Service on Friday stopped accepting all mail to Canada on the expectation that the labour dispute between Canada Post and its workers will last at least into next week.
In a statement, the USPS said it would “suspend accepting mail destined to Canada” starting Saturday at 11:59 central daylight time.
“As a convenience to our customers and to minimize service disruptions, we arranged to accept mail destined for Canada as long as possible,” Giselle Valero, a USPS vice president, said in the statement.
“We will continue to closely monitor the strike situation, and once Canada Post resumes operations, the U.S. Postal Service will again begin accepting mail for Canada. We also will then resume processing any Canadian-destined mail currently held in our network.”
Canada Post locked out 50,000 employees and suspended operations across the country on Tuesday following 12 days of rotating strikes.
The Conservative government has announced plans to introduce back-to-work legislation to end the labour dispute.
A meeting Friday between Deepak Chopra, the chief executive of Canada Post, and Denis Leveling, president of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, did not produce any progress on major issues, Canada Post said.
“The union continues to have too many demands that would drive up costs, limit operational flexibility and restrict Canada Post’s ability to address fundamental problems such as declining mail volumes, competitiveness and a $3.2-billion deficit in the pension plan,” Canada Post said in a statement.
“The company’s financial position has been further weakened by uncertainty and rotating strikes that began on June 3 and cost close to $100 million in lost revenues.”
Americans can continue to send letters and packages via the USPS’s Global Express Guaranteed courier service during the strike.
Postmedia News

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