FURY has erupted with the Royal Mail facing a huge change to it’s daily post under bombshell plans.

The abolition of the Saturday post is just one of many changes being considered as part of a shake-up of The Royal Mail.

The Saturday post could be dropped as part of the plans

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The Saturday post could be dropped as part of the plansCredit: Alamy
Royal Mail could be set for some major changes according to industry sources

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Royal Mail could be set for some major changes according to industry sourcesCredit: PA

A service agreement that stipulates deliveries on six days could be scrapped. The price of stamps could go up too.

Regulator Ofcom is set to publish a document on Wednesday which will look at a raft of far reaching changes to Royal Mail, reports Sky News.

Industry sources believe is likely to include reforms such as modifying first-and second-class delivery targets and higher stamp prices.

Furious Brits took to Twitter to share their anger at the proposals.

One asked: “How will this impact the NHS getting letters out to patients?

“Some patients are already receiving appointments in the post a day too late!

“How will this impact those who receive their bills by invoice through the post?

“How will this impact bank holidays?”

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Another added: “We already see delayed mail from Royal Mail, now there’s a proposal for us to lose a delivery day, move delivery targets even further away, whilst raising the price for stamps and parcels.

“Not only have the Royal Mail screwed their own staff, now they might screw the general public too.”

Royal Mail was privatised by the coalition government in 2013. Over recent years it has been rocked by a wave of industrial disputes. MPs recently criticised the company’s performance.

In November it was fined £5.6m by Ofcom for failing to meet first- and second-class delivery targets during the 2022-23 financial year.

In a letter to MPs this week, Martin Seidenberg, chief executive of Royal Mail’s parent company, International Distributions Services (IDS), wrote: “Delivering the current Universal Service requirements – in a financially sustainable way – is increasingly difficult, if not impossible, to achieve as the mix and number of parcels and letters changes.

“The bar set by the regulations is unrealistic given the market realities.”

He said there were several ways to address the challenge facing Royal Mail, “including significantly increasing prices, seeking a government subsidy, and/or reforming the Universal Service so that it is more reflective of the customer needs and market realities of today, not the needs of the past”.

“Whilst we welcome the forthcoming Ofcom review of the Universal Service, the inertia we have experienced means that we are now facing a far more serious situation than we would have been if action had been taken sooner,” Mr Seidenberg wrote.

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“Every day that Ofcom and the Government further delay reform just creates more risk for the long-term sustainability of the Universal Service, and indeed Royal Mail itself.

“We must maximise every pound spent to transform our business for the future and deliver more for our customers – not continue to sustain a service standard that was designed in a pre-internet era and no longer reflects customer needs.”

This post first appeared on thesun.co.uk

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