Royal Mail bosses to be called to Parliament over letter delivery failures

Royal Mail bosses to be called to Parliament over letter delivery failures

Peter RuddickBusiness reporter

Bloomberg via Getty Images

Royal Mail executives will be called to Parliament to answer questions about issues with the firm’s letter delivery service, the BBC has learned.

The Business and Trade Committee had given Royal Mail two weeks to respond to allegations, reported by the BBC, that parcels were being prioritised over letters, resulting in delays to important, time-sensitive mail.

While that deadline technically ends on Monday, the BBC understands committee chair Liam Byrne has decided the service is so poor that bosses need to provide answers to MPs.

Royal Mail did not respond directly to the call to appear, but said it understood how frustrating it was when post did not arrive as expected.

It comes after hundreds of people contacted BBC Your Voice to express frustration over late deliveries, saying they had missed hospital appointments, and had not received important documents including school certificates and bank statements.

More than a dozen Royal Mail postal staff from different delivery offices claimed rounds were being missed on a daily basis and parcels were being prioritised over letters as they are stretched beyond capacity.

In a letter earlier this month, the committee gave the company two weeks to respond to the allegations, and asked for commitments to improve what it described as “chaos”.

On Thursday Byrne said: “The Committee is very concerned by consistent and growing reports, and now many direct representations, about significant failures in Royal Mail’s letter delivery service.”

Royal Mail was bought by Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky’s EP Group last April, with Kretinsky promising to “put employees and customers at the heart of everything”.

Byrne said: “EP Group’s takeover was approved on a legal undertaking that it would maintain the Universal Service Obligation that is the bedrock of the UK’s postal service. But one year in, even first-class deliveries are way off track.”

In response to the BBC’s reporting, Royal Mail said the “vast majority” of mail was delivered as planned.

It said poor weather and staff sickness had caused some short-term disruption it was looking to resolve.

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