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The National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) is an American labor union, representing non-rural letter carriers employed by the United States Postal Service. It was founded in 1889. The NALC has 2,500 local branches representing letter carriers in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and Guam.
According to the union, the tentative agreement offers a 1.3% annual raise for career letter carriers, and a 2.3% increase for noncareer letter carriers, as they do not get cost of living ...
Brian L. Renfroe is the 19th National President of the National Association of Letter Carriers, AFL-CIO, the union representing 285,000 active and retired city letter carriers employed by the United States Postal Service. He is the youngest national president in the union's history and its first from the Deep South.
On March 17, 1970, in New York City, members of National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) Branch 36 met in Manhattan and voted to strike. Picketing began just after midnight, on March 18. This was a mass action where rank and file leaders emerged like Manhattan letter carrier Vincent Sombrotto , who would go on to be elected first branch ...
Postal leaders and the letter carrier union were incensed when a federal judge in San Francisco last month sentenced a man who held a gun to a postal carrier’s head to just 30 days behind bars. DeJoy called it “unacceptable.” The leader of the letter carriers union called it “absolutely ludicrous.”
The National Association of Letter Carriers union leads the Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive in some 10,000 communities nationwide each year. In St. Joseph County, the food will go to the nonprofit ...
The pro-union pols are willing “to address the unique challenges facing the Postal Service and our members,” Letter Carriers union president Brian L. Renfroe said in a statement.
Post Office workers did form unions. The National Association of Letter Carriers started in 1889 and grew quickly. It had 52 branches with 4,600 members in 1890, and 335 branches by 1892. It focused on forcing postmasters to honor federal law mandating an 8-hour day for federal employees.