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Thursday,
October 25, 2001
Postmaster
suggests handwashing
By
Randolph E. Schmid
Associated Press
WASHINGTON Postmaster General John F. Potter said Wednesday
he cant guarantee the safety of the mail, and he and
other postal officials began suggesting Americans wash their
hands after handling letters.
Improved
safety gloves and masks are being sent to mail workers as
the Postal Service awaits next weeks delivery of its
first high-technology equipment to sanitize mail.
Worries
have mounted about mail safety because of anthrax cases in
Florida, New York, Washington and New Jersey, at least some
of them stemming from mailed items.
Deborah
Willhite, a senior vice president of the Postal Service, said
the agency is simply urging people to use common sense.
We
believe that people should wash their hands in soap and water
after they handle their mail every day, just to make sure
that if anything is on the envelope, that theyre clean,
she said in an interview.
We
have no reason to believe that there would be anything on
them, but whats the problem with clean hands?
Later,
Willhite urged organizations that send bulk mail through a
contaminated Washington post office to have their employees
tested for anthrax.
The
tests have focused on postal workers so far, but she said
that should be extended by up to 200 more people, including
employees of operations like the International Monetary Fund
and Humane Society of the United States, who collect large
volumes of mail at the center.
Potter
stressed the agency has delivered more than 20 billion pieces
of mail since Sept. 11, and that only a handful of anthrax
cases have been reported. However, he admitted that he could
not guarantee the safety of all mail.
The
post office is scrambling to tighten its health and safety
systems after two workers died of anthrax and others became
ill.
We
are taking concrete steps immediately to protect employees
and the public through education, investigation, intervention
and prevention, Potter said Wednesday.
But
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, questioned whether the Postal
Service and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
did enough to protect postal workers and the mail still
being delivered in the Washington area. The agencies have
been criticized for waiting several days before testing people
for anthrax at the contaminated Washington distribution center.
It is critical that your agencies retrace your steps
to ensure that no one else dies from this scourge, Grassley
wrote to Potter and CDC director Dr. Jeffrey Koplan. It
is up to public health authorities and the U.S. Postal Service
to demonstrate that mail delivered in Washington, DC is not
dangerous.
The
Postal Service is at war, Potter has said, insisting that
the agency will continue to deliver the mail.
Willhite
said the post office is expected to deliver universal mail
service. We are going to provide safe and secure mail
service everywhere in the United States, she said.
Sen.
Bill Frist, R-Tenn., said Wednesday that he wouldnt
recommend shutting down the
mail system but would consider suggesting closings in targeted
areas.
President
Bush released $175 million to help the agency, and the postal
governing board authorized an additional $200 million in emergency
spending to help pay for equipment and other measures.
The
high-tech sanitizing equipment coming next week uses an electron
beam to kill bacteria and spores and is similar to technology
used to sterilize medical equipment and sanitize foods.
Willhite
said has not yet determined where to locate the equipment.
Mail
sent to Congress already is being held for screening, she
said, and there is no plan to destroy mail.
Even
as we speak we are taking tractor-trailers of mail to be sanitized
as a demonstration project to see how that process would work,
Willhite said.
We
need to make sure that while we are sanitizing the mail we
are not destroying peoples keepsakes. If its going
to ruin your grandmas homemade cookies, we want to let
you know. So far, that doesnt seem to be the case.
she added.
The
post office also reported that it has bought a 90-day supply
of gloves made of Nitrile, a high-grade plastic, for use by
postal workers sorting the mail.
The
agency also is in the process of obtaining advanced face masks
for workers that can screen out 95 percent of bacteria including
anthrax spores, officials said.
Some
federal mailroom workers already have received protective
masks.
Ken
Vaughan, president of Neoterik, a maker of breathing masks,
said his company provided masks last week to the mail room
of a federal department, which he would not name. The masks
can cost as much as $300 each.
Postal
officials also said the agency has started using a vacuum
cleaning system on its machines instead of blowers
and switched to anti-bacterial cleaning solutions.
Mail
delivery is not being restricted, Willhite said, but she added:
I think were having a little bit of a shakedown
cruise in moving mail from Brentwood to the other facilities.
Brentwood,
Washingtons main mail sorting and distribution center,
was closed Sunday because of anthrax contamination, and its
work is being done at facilities in suburban Maryland.
Anthrax
didnt seem to worry Washington-area residents who bustled
in and out of neighborhood post offices Wednesday.
Look,
we have to go on with our lives, you know? said Julia
Delisboa, who stopped in the post office of the wealthy Palisades
district of Washington. I dont know why, but Im
really not scared yet. It doesnt seem like a widespread
thing.
At
the Ross Veterinary Hospital one door down from the Cleveland
Park station, an office manager who identified herself only
as Liz said she hadnt thought twice about using the
post office next door.
I
dont think anybodys worried about their little
neighborhood post office, she said.
The
Postal Service is part of the government but normally is expected
to pay its own way from postage and related charges.
Even
before the Sept. 11 terror attacks, the agency was looking
at a potential loss of $1.6 billion this year and has requested
permission to raise rates to compensate. Mail volume has fallen
since the attacks, which is causing further declines in income.
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