Where does this obviously false idea come from? It can’t be the law, because the USPS wouldn’t break the law, at least not that blatantly. It can’t be from any other regulation, for the same reason.
And, yes, it is obviously false. I lived in a place the USPS does not deliver to.
I do not get home delivery. My box is at the nearest post office. It’s a very small office that’s opened til 1p.m. Not on Saturday.
We have a 911address but it’s on a county line.
UPS and FedX have occasionally delivered to my drive. Usually I get a message in my p.o.box saying I have a package at one of their facilities.
I live on a private road on particular numbered county road. 7 years ago they found us and assigned us a 911 address. So that’s what I put if a physical address is needed. It is of no use for anything else. We were specifically told we had no viable fire service.
I assume if someone was murdered out here the County or State police could find us.
The USPS does not deliver to every household, but does deliver mail to everyone in the US. In small towns, it’s in a post office box, where recipients have to pick it up. This means they have to move the items from the source to that post office. Just because they don’t go the last mile in some areas doesn’t mean they’re not delivering to people. And they’ll deliver it to the post office even if you don’t have a post office box.
So it’s really only a tiny bit of hyperbole: the USPS delivers to everyone is the US who has a valid address, just not always to their door.
I live in an area without delivery to the door and for that reason the post office provides a PO box free of charge. I had assumed that that would be the case for anyone without home delivery.
Right. Their mandate is to make a delivery point available as near as possible to the maximum number of people, not necessarily to deliver to every physical site. So the no-fee POBox is the alternative for those persons who do not get carrier delivery to their home or to a dropbox cluster.
I lived in a small community in California where there was no home delivery, and P. O. boxes weren’t free. Everyone who wanted to receive mail had to rent one and pay the fee just like everywhere else.
Strangely though, that same post office did deliver to all the rural addresses for miles and miles around in the surrounding farmland.
San Miguel, San Luis Obispo County, just north of Paso Robles. The town is right on highway 101 yet so small I drove right through it several times before I even noticed it was there. This was in the 1990’s.
As of a few years ago they did at least. I don’t know if they have free boxes or not. A couple of my friends live there and they love it. It’s where the locals socialize.
Carmel has steadfastly refused to have address delivery as well. And all I have to say further on this subject is that some people are willing to build an electron microscope from scratch in order to pick the tiniest of nits. I assume they get something from the exercise.
That’s a bit of a cheat isn’t it? If you have to leave your house and go to a different location to get it, then that isn’t delivery. If it was, I could open a restaurant and say that I deliver to everyone, but you have to come to my restaurant to get it.