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Brookline letter carrier gives rental scooters her stamp of approval

Brookline postal worker on a rental scooter

Matt Wunderlich spotted a scooter-powered postal carrier on Beacon Street in Brookline this morning.

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Comments

This pic makes me ask.. why hasn't the USPS gotten on this craze yet. They are always about eco friendly mobility, and I am sure their carriers would love not to walk all the time.

(although I got my bud Ryan who has massive legs now from being a carrier)

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They go on workers comp, disability, the union would fight it, workers would be having "crashes", no helmet in this photo, what happens if they go the wrong way or are "at fault" in a crash,

The list goes on and on as to why the USPS will probably never use these. Don't get me wrong, this is a fun photo and I hope the worker doesn't get in trouble, but I'm guessing this worker might be spoken to if a boss sees the photo.

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They crash. Occupants not wearing helmets. Costs lots of money in comp.

Kills more cops than bad guys, too.

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They drive cars. Your argument could be used for cars also. Just replace scooter with "car" and there you go.

They could do the same with scooters like they do with cars. Get an insurance policy to cover them, have rules to use them, and be done with it.

Its not that hard.

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And I'd be willing to bet that the rate of injuries vs. miles traveled is a fair bit higher than it is for a car/postal delivery vehicle. Some of the issues could likely be ameliorated, of course, by requiring letter carriers to use helmets and other appropriate protective gear (i.e. knee/elbow pads, wrist guards, etc.).

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But it is very hard to implement something like this into your work force.

And cars are different. We give driver's licenses for those. How are you going to test to see if you can drive a scooter? What if someone can walk straight but can't balance? What if an injury prevents them from using a scooter but not from walking and what if that injury happened on the job? Does the person who finishes his route on the scooter get to go home at the end of the day if he is done or does he get more mail?

How many helmets are you going to buy and how much is that going to cost? What are the scooters going to cost? Is the cost/balance for late mail worth it?

Insurance policy for scooters? That is tens of millions of dollars for a country wide program. I don't know how many "mailmen" there are, but there are 500k postal employees and I'm assuming most are in the field.

What concession are you going to give the union and how much is the training going to cost?

Again, looks easy, but isn't.

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After all, over half of all reported traumatic brain injuries are the result of an automobile crash.

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But you can bet if there is a crash and the operator isn’t wearing one, liability will be an issue.

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Most of the mail carriers in towns use ebikes. It just makes sense.

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And these things are more dangerous than a drunk prep school kid on a Puch weaving in an out of traffic on the Vineyard

Small, electric, "Kei car" styled vehicles that aren't electric skateboards of death are probably better suited for urban environments and exactly why we'll never get them.

The USPS still uses Grumman's that were obsolete over 25 years ago, and instead of thinking ahead to a new type of vehicle, decided to spend HALF A BILLION GENUINE AMERICAN DOLLARS on making those dangerous tin cans somewhat useable for a couple more years.

If it makes sense, then you can count on the USPS to not have any part of it. Mostly this is by design as the impetus to make our postal system better is nowhere near as powerful as Super PAC donations from FedEx and UPS.

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Like most things, politicians in the districts where those tin cans provide jobs decided that.

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Doesn't the USPS generate it's own revenue for equipment purchases?

Might as well piss and moan about UPS buying brown trucks.

They can use bikes or trikes.
Electric assist or not.
I think a testing protocol would be easy to design.

Road tests for auto drivers are a joke.
Most incompetent drivers can pass them.

I presume there is a USPS driver exam that is a little more challenging.

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You would be wrong.

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electric skateboards of death

Do you actually read what you write, out loud? /eyeroll

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They could free up all of the parking spaces on Beacon Street in Coolidge Corner that they fill with mail trucks too.

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As long as that parking generates at least $10 per hour. Cheapskate car drivers.

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This is USPS in the picture.

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You know damn well the USPS didn't comment that BS. Carriers would get hurt every day on those.

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still kinda cool.

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That term has been in use since the '70s.

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What if they're delivering envelopes with spreadsheets inside? Wouldn't that make them number carriers? Let's not get alphabet-chauvinistic here...

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Gender changed in headline after seeing some Facebook comments from people who know who she is.

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Is there a link to the post on Facebook?

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It wasn't in a public group.

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