Editorial Inkdrops: The Little Post Office That Could
3/23/2006
Rarely is a community so fond of an eyesore. But there is
something about the Hawleyville Post Office that people just
don't want to let go of, even though the place looks tired and
run down and is a little too cool in the winter, a little too hot
in the summer, and a little too cramped all the time.
In a time when modernization is synonymous with dehumanization,
especially at the US Postal Service, the Hawleyville Post Office
is a throwback to a time before "going postal" became the
archetype for anger and frustration brought to the point of
violence. Through the efforts of its genial postmaster, Mark
Favale, this homely little post office has built for itself a
reputation for friendliness, service, and thoughtful
consideration of the needs of its patrons. It has the best
selection of stamps of any post office in the area, and if you
have questions or need assistance with mailing a special package,
there is no better place to get help. People feel welcome and
respected there, and they have rewarded the little post office
with their loyalty.
One such loyal patron, Maureen Colbert-Wilhelm, tried to organize
a "fix-up-the-post-office day" last year and discovered that it
is not so easy to do a good deed these days. There was the
inevitable red tape and "going through channels" and various
other impediments that arise when dealing with a huge bureaucracy
and its landlord, which in this case happened to be the
Housatonic Railroad. Protracted talks between the USPS and the
railroad over the future of the facility led Ms Colbert-Wilhelm
to fear that her goodwill gesture may have raised the awareness
of the poor condition of the post office building to the point
where postal service bureaucrats would conclude that it would be
best to simply close the facility altogether.
Fortunately, what is obvious to its loyal patrons is also obvious
to the USPS: the Hawleyville Post Office is a going concern, and
as such it won't be going out of business anytime soon. This
week, a representative for the postal service said that the
little postal facility may need to move into better
accommodations, but "there will never be a time when Hawleyville
will be without a post office." He added the decision was "only
good business." (The little neighborhood post office grossed
$737,000 last year.)
Now that the USPS has acknowledged the commercial value of the
Hawleyville Post Office, we wish it would also embrace its value
as a model of courtesy, competence, and extra consideration for
postal facilities everywhere.