Showing posts with label philatelic counters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label philatelic counters. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 October 2022

Philatelic Sales in London - 2022

Occasionally we receive emails from collectors - international and from the UK - who are visiting London, and who would like to buy their collectable stamps and other philatelic products from the Post Office at face value. 

There are no philatelic counters at Post Office branches as such, and many branches now carry no stocks - with few exceptions - of special stamps.  Even Crown Offices often have very small supplies sent to them, maybe one sheet of each certainly of the airmail values in a set.

The principal source for collectors is now Broadway Post Office.  The details below were provided in 2018 on the closure of Trafalgar Square PO. I understand that a full range of philatelic material is now available at this branch. The opening hours remain the same.

If you use the Post Office Ltd website branchfinder, and select 'Collectibles' as a category it will show many in central London.   In fact Aldwych was listed as a Philatelic Counter in a Philatelic Bulletin but they have no more stock than an ordinary branch.  

Not included in the results, even if you use its own postcode is The City of London PO at 12 Eastcheap, London, EC3M 1AJ but I am told that this has a limited philatelic service - for example they had all four country definitives not just in presentation packs but in sheets. 

This office is open Monday - Friday until-1800 with opening hours from 0830 (W/Th/F) to 0930 (Tues) and 0900 Monday. 

Update 27 October from Comments:

For Visitors to West London, Leeland Road Post Office in West Ealing stock collectable stamps in all values, I've purchased some stamps of all 2022 issues from here. 

 

NOTE: If you are making a comment about London or other branches' holdings of philatelic stocks it would be helpful to know where they are.  I realise that this might jeopardise your own purchases(!), but an approximate location (London, Dorset, Gwynedd, etc) would help others nearby to ask questions - and if you do leave a name or pseudonym instead of 'anonymous' it would help separate the comments.


Thursday, 1 November 2018

New Philatelic Counter in London from 2019! (Update on Trafalgar Square)

As mentioned in August, thanks to our reader C, the 'Trafalgar Square' Post Office in King William IV Street London will close during December (date to be announced.)


This means that there is no comprehensive stockist of Royal Mail collectable stamps in Post Offices in the central London.  I'm sure there is a comment here somewhere that Eastcheap (City of London) PO no longer has a dedicated philatelic counter (comments aren't searchable in the same way that the blog is).  However poor Trafalgar Square may have been on occasion, it was always better than nothing, which is what we will have now.

I have suggested to Royal Mail philatelic that they could perhaps have a retail unit at the Postal Museum: of course it wasn't designed with that in mind, so that would probably be difficult to achieve.   Does anybody have any other suggestions?  

UPDATE 28 November.
DF has sent me this further notice which indicates that the Philatelic services will be transferred to Broadway PO, SW1H 0AX, which is about a mile away.  




Sunday, 26 August 2018

Closure/relocation of Trafalgar Square Post Office

From a comment on another thread, but not specific to that subject:

Any one visiting Trafalgar Square post office from early September may want to be aware of its revised opening hours
 




UPDATE 26 SEPTEMBER 2018 - CLOSURE/RELOCATION ANNOUNCED.

As a consequence of the landlord’s extensive development plans and their subsequent impact on the branch, regrettably Trafalgar Square Post Office branch will close permanently at this location in December 2018. 

We are committed to re-establishing services locally and are working to find a long-term solution for the Trafalgar Square area. 

In the meantime there are several branches in the area which may provide suitable alternatives for customers.  Lower Regent Street Post Office is located just 0.5  miles from Trafalgar Square Post Office and a further four branches, New Oxford Street, Poland Street, Aldwych and Broadway Post Office are within a mile of the current branch.
 

Friday, 25 August 2017

List of Current Post Office Philatelic Counters

The August edition of Royal Mail's Philatelic Bulletin includes a list of what are described as Philatelic Post Office Counters.  Already we have had one correction, so this cannot be regarded as completely accurate.

City of London - 12 Eastcheap, LONDON EC3M 1AJ

Trafalgar Square - 24-28 William IV St, LONDON WC3N 4DL

House of Commons - LONDON SW1A 0AA

The Galleries - Castle Gallery, BRISTOL BS1 3XX

CAMBRIDGE - 57-58 St Andrews Street CB2 3BZ

CHESTER ?    2 St John Street, Chester, CH1 1AA      §

COLCHESTER - 68-70 North Hill, CO1 1PX

CROYDON - 10 High Street CR9 1HT

EXETER - 28 Bedford Street EX1 1GJ

GRIMSBY - 67-71 Victoria Street DN31 1AA

HARROGATE - 11 Cambridge Road, HG1 1AA

PORTSMOUTH - Slindon Street PO1 1AB

SOUTHAMPTON - St John's Centre, Hedge End SO30 4QU (see comment)

STROUD - 16-17 Russell Street GL5 3AA

TROWBRIDGE - Temporary Unit, Lovemead Carpark, Duke Street, BA14 8EA
1a Roundstone Street, Trowbridge, BA14 8DA

YORK - 22 Lendal YO1 8DA


§ the postcode quoted in the Bulletin was for Chester HO, so it may be that Chester should be in the list.

Given the reports we have received about Trafalgar Square, I wonder whether we can trust this?  I'm sure some of the provincial offices now offer a much better service than that reportedly offered by what was once the flagship office in the heart of London's stamp district.  These comments were made on my post about country definitives:
- Earlier in the year I visited the Philatelic Counter at Trafalgar Square Post Office seeking a particular definitive. I was told that they had been instructed to issue 'labels' instead of definitive, and that once stocks had been used, they would not be restocked. They would in future only hold limited stock of new definitive issues. I was advised to contact Stamps and Collectibles who would supply the particular stamp.
- The "Collectors" counter at Trafalgar Square, London currently have all the regional issues - BUT - when I asked for some Welsh stamps I was told that they would not be re-stocking once current stock exhausted. I have to question the function of a "Collectors Counter" if it is not for selling items to collectors.
There must be some readers of this blog in some of the other areas: what is your experience of the stock and services of these offices? 

Wednesday, 29 July 2015

Post Offices under threat - and why stamps are missing from branches.

As many UK readers know, the Post Office network has changed enormously over the last 20 years.  Once the local Post Office was regarded as the retail arm and visible face of the General Post Office and then Royal Mail.  Somewhere where we could get stamps, and where the postmaster willingly kept back new stamp issues for his happy band of collectors, and took in first day covers to send to the nearest Head Postmaster (First Day Cover Duty) for cancellation with a special postmark and redelivery the next day.

I started drafting an article about the changes to the network some months ago: there always seemed to be something happening which affected the draft and the notes I had made.  Now sub-postmasters are being forced to give up their livelihood in favour of a new model with lower operating costs for the organisation.  

Tonight on BBC2 television is the first of three programmes entitled "Signed, Sealed and Delivered: Inside the Post Office".  Billed as

"An eye-opening look inside the Post Office - an iconic national institution undergoing the biggest shake-up in its nearly 400-year history as it battles to reinvent itself for the modern world."

I suggest you tune in at 9pm, set it up on series-record, or watch on the iPlayer.  I'm sorry that my recent absence prevented me from alerting you earlier.  This will only be available to viewers in the UK or those overseas who have access to UK television.


Post Office branches, along with the Royal Mail delivery service, were formerly part of the General Post Office. Post Office Counters Ltd was created as a wholly owned subsidiary of Royal Mail in 1986, becoming Post Office Ltd in 2001.

Most of us grew up with the concept of Head Post Offices, where there was a Head Postmaster in charge and the managers and admin and counter staff were all employees of the GPO.  The other type of Post Office was the sub-Post Office, managed by a self-employed Sub-Postmaster (SPM) sometimes employing other people or members of the family.  In the original arrangements the SPM received a fixed core tier payment. On top of the fixed core payment, SPMs were paid per transaction.

In May 2007, the Government embarked on the Network Change, or Post Office Closure Programme, which resulted in Post Office Ltd (POL) closing nearly 2,500 post offices, including 500 branches, which were replaced with Outreach services.   The Closure Programme was necessary to help get the Post Office network on a more stable footing as it was making heavy losses.

Many of the offices which closed were not far from others, and the closure programme was designed to ensure that essential services were still available within an area.  Many part-time offices were closed.   And when the programme was completed we thought that was the end of it.  But it was only the start.

Post Office Ltd was still losing money, with some branches not generating enough profit (not income) to cover the costs of the SPM salary and associated PO Ltd overheads.

The next step was Network Transformation, a programme designed to "address the economics and lack of flexibility of the traditional sub post office operating model".   Back in 2012, the Government stressed that any conversion to the 'Locals' model would be voluntary - in evidence to parliament's Business, Innovation and Skills Committee*, Post Office Ltd said that "any move to the new Post Office Local model is entirely voluntary on the part of the subpostmaster. They will only move to the new operating model if the economics stack up for them and we will only introduce the new model where there is a robust business plan and where we are sure it can be successful and sustainable.   Any subpostmaster who wants to stay on their current contract terms—if that works best for them—can do so."   [* full link now added - plenty of good reading there!]

However, times change.  PO Ltd still needed to save money, but the Government of the day committed £1.34bn for the Post Office network to make sure there was no programme of Post Office closures and to update branches; in November 2013 the Government announced a further £640m investment in the Post Office network, from 2015 to 2018.

At the end of March 2014, there were 350 Crown Post Office branches that are run by Post Office Limited employees (now only 322). The remainder of the network was made up of 11,346 branches that are run on an agency contract basis.   The Crown Offices were where the Philatelic Counters were located: with many of the Crown Office closed and their functions transferred to a branch of a national retail chain (eg Lloyds Chemists, WHSmith) philatelic counters were closed and philatelic awareness, experience and knowledge was lost.

Central to the modernisation funded by the Government was the introduction of two new-style Post Offices.

1.     Main style Post Office branches which offer a modern environment and in many cases extended opening hours. These branches have a dedicated Post Office counter offering customers a full range of products and services, during standard hours. In most cases there will also Post Office service provision at the retail position, providing access to a wide range of services including Post Office Card Account withdrawals and everyday banking services during extended shop hours.

2.     Local style Post Office branches provide a wide range of services from the retail till and are open for all the hours that the shop housing it is open.

According to the Post Office "September 2014 saw the 3,000th branch transformed and more than 82,000 extra opening hours for customers.  This is not a closure programme and we are committed to maintaining our current network at around 11,500."

Most SPMs are members of the National Federation of SubPostmasters which says it is "committed to protecting and promoting the interests of subpostmasters".  The NFSP is the only organisation recognised by Post Office Ltd to represent subpostmasters on matters surrounding pay and contracts.  However, many SPMs are now saying that the NFSP has acquiesced to the changes now being forced on postmasters without consulting the members.  Their 'Protect our Post Office' campaign has not reversed the Network Transformation.

On the other hand, the Communications Workers Union (the Trade Union representing Post Office, Royal Mail, Parcelforce, BT and other workers in the communications industries) is becoming increasingly vocal and agitated over the changes to the Post Office network.  Back in 2011, they expressed concerns such as:

- passport, DVLA, currency on demand and Post Office financial services being excluded from Locals entirely, means reduced services.  Locals would also lack a dedicated service area and it is difficult to see how financial or government services could be expanded at Locals branches - two key areas being targeted for increased revenues.
(Also excluded from sale under the Locals model are special stamp issues, even where customers exist. And this is not just presentation packs, FDCs, etc, but the basic stamps in sheets.  Where is Royal Mail's retail network now?)
 - It reduces quality of service, with variable levels of staff training and knowledge, leading for instance to customers with parcels being turned away at a number of Locals outlets.

- it is likely to push postmasters out because it removes the 'core tier payment' which they rely on while placing greater costs onto their business by mandating extended opening hours.



Self-employed Sub-Postmasters can cope with many types of transactions, including the sale of foreign currency, processing of road tax payments, payment of pensions and benefits.  But the government would like to see more financial services and insurance products processed through the network, and single-person branches do not have the flexibility for this, nor the ability to undertake personal financial transactions and investments in a private situation.   Despite PO Ltd having money to contribute to the physical changes to a retail shop to accommodate the new PO Local set-up, some branches have no space to expand: they operate within the physical constraints of the building they are in.

In these circumstances POLtd is seeking alternative retail premises in the immediate area (eg the same village), giving notice to the SPM that his contract will be terminated when a suitable alternative location for the PO is found and agreement reached with a new operator.  In a village near here apart from the PO there are three other shops and a pub.  None of the shops could easily accommodate the PO and its associated delivery office with two rural van rounds, two being very restricted in size (one is a butchers, the other a newsagent carrying a few other lines).  The pub has only recently reopened after a long period of closure, and as we all know, rural pubs are also under threat.   On top of that the current SPM also operates a Post Office Outreach service at 5 other villages - in village halls and churches - where existing branches have closed!  Any new operator ought to be expected to continue this service.

The SPM has been careful since he arrived not to expand his operation to take on lines which would compete with the operation of the other shops (he sells a few sweets, some postal stationery and greetings cards).  It is to be hoped that the other shopkeepers take note of this arrangement and decline to take on the Post Office, otherwise POLtd will dump the present postmaster out of a job.


Friday, 1 May 2015

Post Office Philatelic Sales in London - update

Five years ago, in response to requests from visitors to London about philatelic sales from Post Offices, I posted details of Trafalgar Square and Eastcheap (City of London) POs.

Trafalgar Square has changed several times over the years and their service is not what it once was.

Now we have news that Eastcheap's best asset has gone, so I don't know how good their service will be now.  This comment was posted today on the original thread.

"I was appalled this week to confirm that the City of London Post Office in Eastcheap has got rid of its greatest asset, namely Peade whose philatelic knowledge was only surpassed by his excellent service and helpfulness. 

It was not his choice to leave and it is beyond belief that the Post Office have acted like this. They say that they are unable to comment on individual employees so let me tell them that they will rue this day. Peade built up the Philatelic Counter from an also ran to the best in Britain and I shall miss him tremendously.

John Bulger"


UPDATE 2 June 2015
I have received more information about the Eastcheap branch.  Apparently Peade retired after 40 years' service, so there was no ulterior motive from Post Office Ltd.  And the person who has taken over his position has said that "he would like to emulate his colleague's reputation", so for visitors to London, make yourselves known at Eastcheap and encourage the new man in his endeavours.

UPDATE 28 August 2017
See latest situation on Philatelic Counters, and specifically comment about Eastcheap.

Thursday, 19 July 2012

Where to get the London 2012 Olympic Gold Medal stamps?

A list of the Post Offices which will be selling the Olympic Games Gold Medal stamps is now on the Stamp Magazine website for download.


Monday, 13 June 2011

Philatelic supplies increasingly centralised, and not just here.

As they issue more and more stamps, and produce more varieties of them, postal authorities seem to be putting the clock back in stamp collecting, by making collectors work harder to find the stamps they want. 

The number of 'philatelic outlets' in British post offices has halved in 12 years, whilst what they stock has also been reduced.  Where once you could expect them to match the Philatelic Bureau, providing stamps for 12 months from the date of issue, the situation is now much different and we were even told about one designated philatelic office which returned on the day of issue all the 2011 Country definitives.  And we're not alone in the UK.

According to Linn's Stamp News in 2003 the USPS had 336 cities where formal philatelic centres were located.  Now it is estimated that no more than 25 are still operating, and two offices which previously supplied a specialist mail order service (including plate number blocks or coil strips, and different formats not specifically identified by the USPS's 'Stamp Fulfilment Services' have) been closed leaving specialist dealers and collectors no source for their needs.


Some collectors in the UK complain that their post offices do not receive every stamp issue, something denied by Royal Mail.  In the US this is definitely true.  The recently issued 'Forever' Purple Heart stamp was designed to avoid the perennial stamp being reprinted every year with a new value.  Yet some offices were sent 44c stamps instead in order to use up existing stocks before the NVI stamp was distributed!

And this follows weeks after the USPS's Stamp Services Division issued a document which included the statement entitled "Stamp Availability is Critical to Customer Satisfaction".  This included the direction that "postmasters must have all commemoratives on sale for 90 days from the date of issue" - no matter that some postmasters don't even receive stocks until a couple of weeks after the date of issue if then!

Is it any wonder that people are stopping their collections when adding to them is made more difficult and more costly?   Philatelic Bureaux are more efficient, but only in supplying what they want to supply.  We hear that Royal Mail (ie the Bureau) is being "plagued with numerous enquiries from collectors wanting particular source code numbers and letters" on Machin definitives.  Well, there's a surprise!  No word on the official (or unofficial) response of the Bureau's Customer Service Operatives.

Table of Philatelic Counters according to the January 1999 and June 2011 British Philatelic Bulletins.


Jan 1999June 2011
BathTrowbridge Wilts
Belfast-
Birmingham-
Brighton-
BristolBristol
CambridgeCambridge
Canterbury-
Cardiff-
ChesterChester
ColchesterColchester
Coventry-
CroydonCroydon
DurhamDurham
EdinburghEdinburgh
ExeterExeter
Gatwick Airport-
GlasgowGlasgow
GloucesterStroud
GrimbsyGrimsby
Guildford-
HarrogateHarrogate
Leeds-
Leicester-
Liverpool-
London, Lombard StLondon, Eastcheap
London, Trafalgar SqLondon, Trafalgar Sq
Manchester-
Newcastle upon Tyne-
NorwichNorwich
NottinghamNottingham
Oxford-
PlymouthPlymouth
PortsmouthPortsmouth
SouthamptonNewport, Isle of Wight
Southend-on-SeaSouthend-on-Sea
StevenageStevenage
Stratford-on-Avon-
TruroTruro
Windsor-
YorkYork

Friday, 26 February 2010

Post Office Philatelic Sales in London

Occasionally we receive emails from overseas collectors who are visiting London, and who would like to buy their collectable stamps and other philatelic products from the Post Office at face value.

The old 'Philatelic Counters' are long gone, of course, being replaced by Post Shops - which sold a lot more non-Post Office products (greetings cards, souvenirs) than just stamps. There are two POs remaining in central London which cater for collectors.

Trafalgar Square PO has recently been reorganised following the installation of Post and Go machines and a 'take-a-ticket' queueing system. The system allows for speedy processing of customers for different products (special delivery especially is a fast-tracked system). But there is nothing on the menu for philatelic products, and their dedicated Post Shop counter (previously at the east entrance) has gone.

So this is the system.
- The philatelic products are on counter position C.
- There is no need to take a ticket.
- If the person at 'C' is serving, wait near the counter until the customer has gone, and then approach the counter for your philatelic products.

Trafalgar Square PO is at 24/28 William IV Street, London, WC2N 4DL - it is open 0830-1830 Monday - Friday (Tuesday opening 0915), and 0900-1730 on Saturday.


The other office is The City of London PO at 12 Eastcheap, London, EC3M 1AJ

This office is open Monday - Friday, 0900-1800. Not open on Saturday.
They aim to carry most stamps of the last 12 months in stock, and if they are not in stock will try to get them and then to telephone the customer. So if you are visiting and are in London for a week or so, then they should be able to get anything on the stock list.


According to Royal Mail's list the only other Greater London PO with philatelic services is at Croydon.