Saturday, December 22, 2018

United States Postal Service

Oops, I just gave a gift card of $25!

Employee Tipping and Gift-Receiving Policy

All postal employees, including carriers, must comply with the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Exec­utive Branch. Under these federal regulations, carriers are permitted to accept a gift worth $20 or less from a customer per occasion, such as Christmas. However, cash and cash equivalents, such as checks or gift cards that can be exchanged for cash, must never be accepted in any amount. Furthermore, no employee may accept more than $50 worth of gifts from any one customer in any one calendar year period.

3 comments:

  1. Postal workers make on average $52K a year, our condo gives our mail man $250 in gift cards, I wonder if he claims it? I think it is way too much. Then they only give the garbage men $25, so unfair and they make less. I think giving a turkey and/or $25 gift card is enough, going overboard giving so much is not right at all. Postal workers already make so much more than the average citizen. I never get a bonus or gift from my work at all ever.

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  2. Why tip Federal workers? They are already getting our tax money and spending it on drugs and alcohol. I mean, take a look at most postal employees and you'll know what I mean. Aren't most of them Democrats? Who really cares about them except their fellow Democrats and RINOs?

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  3. With the excess of packages delivered to doors for convienant cyber shopping, they merit a Christmas bonus how much is up to the client and just how many packages. 4:26 you're not as funny as you think.

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