NOTE: Use your USPS Employee ID number (EIN) and USPS Self-Service Password (SSP) to access LiteBlue and PostalEASE via the web. Use your USPS EIN and current 4-digit USPS PIN to conduct self-service transactions on the telephone using IVR. If you don’t know your USPS Self-Service ...
It is a request by a bargaining unit employee to be considered for a posted position.What is a “b id cluster ”?It is a group of facilities for which all employees at each facility can bid on posted positions at any other facility. Seniority within a craft is defined across all ...
To ensure that every citizen can have complete confidence in the integrity of the federal government, each federal employee, including each postal employee, must respect and adhere to the principles of ethical conduct set forth in 5 C.F.R. § 2635 [the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employe...
(c) No person who has been an attorney, officer, clerk, or employee in the Postal Service will be recognized as attorney for prosecuting before it or any office thereof in any case or matter with which he was in anywise connected while he or she was such attorney, officer, clerk, or ...
A former high-level employee at Microsoft Corporation, Melinda French Gates founded the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation with her then-husband Bill Gates in 2000. In 2021, Melinda French Gates became a billionaire in her own right after Bill Gates transferred $2.4 billion worth of stock to her...
The reason you need to take the form to the Post Office is so that you can provide ID to a Postal Service employee. Now, as you will see on the application, it mentions ID. On the form, it states thatyou will need two valid forms of ID(one photo and one non-photo) when you ob...
This person is usually a senior enlisted person (E7-E9) or civilian employee with a grade of about GS-9.3-2.3 Mail SupervisorThe mail supervisor is the mail manager's immediate superior and supervises and oversees all mail operations on the installation. Contact this person if an issue ...
When the union objected to the promotion of an African American to clerk-in-charge in December 1922, Second Assistant Postmaster General Paul Henderson defended the promotion, saying the employee was both qualified and entitled to it and that if necessary he would “call upon the U.S. Army ...