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RCA - Rural Carrier Associate - USPS - De Pere, WI - Rural Carrier Associate US Postal Service Employee Review

1.0
Apr 10, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Independent Work once you have left the Post Office Building. There are a lot of unsupervised hours during the day, while the associate is delivery the letters and packages. The only way the PO supervisors and post master can track you is by the "pings" entries in the scanner, every time you scan and delivery a package. $17 hourly while training within the first 6 weeks (or 3-4 pay periods). ---After that, if you make it through your 90 working days probation---you are only paid by the route. That is a daily evaluated route time of 8 - 9.5 hours. So if it takes your 11-12 hours, because your still learning to be faster, too bad! Up front, there is a lot of TRAINING: 2-day orientation to the USPS, 1-day shadow day with a carrier on any route, 1-day LLV (Long-life Vehicle) Training and Certification, withing the first month---4-day Rural Carrier Academy. The academy is a LOT of sit and get classtime, you learn some of the INS and OUTS and the FORMS and how use the Scanner for Parcel Deliveries. It is exciting to be working in a new position; but VERY naive to think you will be getting proper training or straight answers to your questions, regarding how long it really takes to be up to speed on the job details and when you could make "full-time status"'Career Status. Many, Many continuous OPENINGS are posted on sites such as "INDEED" and non-career site with the USPS for your city and state. Very through Postal Exam, $5,000 spent training each new employee, Half the Employees are Career (full-time) and might be helpful; Half the Employees are non-career (part-time).

Cons

Will always be a PART-TIME job with unpredictable hours--not consistent paychecks. Seniority List for both Non-career (RCAs and CCAs) Employees lets you know the order people were hired in. For RCA to make full-time career it WILL TAKE AS LITTLE AS 4 YEARS TO AS MUCH AS 10 YEARS. For CCA to make full-time career it WILL TAKE AS LITTLE AS 1 YEARS TO AS MUCH AS 4 YEARS. ---IT all depends on the age of the work force in that local post office you are in. There many, many individuals hired that do not make the 90-day work cut. Even if you do RCA work less hours; CCA work more hours--and are paid hourly no matter how long a route takes, but your are also walking 4-10 miles daily or dismounting for apts. CASING (sorting the mail into their slots at PO) getting Parcels ordered in the right order, and Casing First class mail (letters and business mail) in the LLV on the street at the individual Mail Boxes....all takes time. Your career person has had years to learn it and get faster. The USPS local PO figures it will take you 1 full week by yourself to get the time down and do the same! It is no for every one. Many of the employees would never earn the salary they do in any other job setting--because many are not college educated and many supervisor do a poor job managing and do not know how to encourage or motivate. DO NOT WASTE YOUR TIME OR ENERGY APPLY, WORKING,HOPING FOR FULL-TIME EMPLOYMENT WITH THE USPS. THE IS A 30-50 PERCENT TURN-OVER WITHIN 6 MONTHS OR LESS ON NEW HIRES IN ALL POSITIONS ---THE MANAGEMENT WILL NOT TELL ALL OF THESE DETAILS. You as a new hire are expendable! IF you as a job seeker need reliable full-time paychecks and work - do not apply to these frequently posted RCA and CCA positions!!!! ---All part-time and not reliable employment - you will be disappointed. (NOTE other posts that make similar comments!) Work all Saturdays and Many "Amazon Sundays and Holidays" - delivery Parcels which people have ordered on line.

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5.0
Nov 25, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great pay, great oppurtunity for OT.

Cons

Long hours, unqualified management and poor home life balance.

4.0
Jun 16, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

First: In this economy? The pay. New carriers start out at $15,30/hr and (even though your orientation leader may so you're not guaranteed 40 hrs/week) you will get a monstrous amount of overtime. Once you're past your first couple of months and you understand how to carry mail properly you will often work from 8a-6p nearly every day. Also with a few cities, like mine, you will work on Sundays for Amazon. This usually adds an additional 5 hours to the paycheck. Myself and other CCA's in the station work between 51-64 hours a week. Secondly: You are your own boss for the most part. You will spend 1-2 hours a day in the office between receiving and casing your magazines and any left over letters that the machine didn't sort out. Once you've been in past the 90 day probationary period you are eligible to "hold down" an open route. If you are lucky enough to get a good long term hold (the regular is gone for injury or some other reason) you will learn how to case routes very quickly. Third: Fitness. There's a lot of people who want to lose weight out there. I weighed 235 lbs when I first started working for the post office and now I weight 180. I lost 50 lbs in the first 3 months alone. It's all exercise though. You can diet if you want, but remember you'll need energy to walk those long routes. Fourth: Coworkers. Yea, there are turds in every environment, but most of the career employees there are really pulling for you to succeed. Most carriers in my station are former military and a lot of them have been friends for decades. Being a CCA myself, I was worried about how well I'd fit in with some of the grizzled older carriers but they accepted me right away.

Cons

So where to begin. Well remember when I talked about working all that overtime in the Pros section? It's not optional. You will be expected to be at work every day of the week, including Sundays, unless you have a decent management staff. During the Christmas season I once worked for 53 days straight without an off day. We had new CCA's get hired and quit within weeks. Have a family? Tough luck. You will get to see them from 6:30pm till they go to sleep. Sundays you will likely get off work around 1-2pm. Management is mostly compromised of people who are former carriers or clerks, which is nice because they promote from withing, but the devastating caveat to this is that most of them are uneducated persons. A fair amount of carriers start when they're in their late teens and early twenties and come from jobs that were minimum wage or did not require them to have any kind of leadership training. The managers don't care about the welfare of the employees mental status until it's too late, and most of them tend to act like they were never carriers at all by expecting completely ridiculous things from the CCA's and some career carriers. It's not unusual for a carrier to be given a 2 hr "assist" in addition to whatever their main route is. While most carriers can get this done without much issue, for a new carrier or even an experience carrier on a bad weather day, it can become very stressful mentally. The threat of being fired is incredibly annoying as a CCA. If you call off sick, if you need to have a personal day, if you even need to pick your kids up from school because your wife got stuck late at the office, a manager will pull you aside and remind you of how expendable you are. The Paid Time Off (PTO) you accrue will come very quickly, and you'll soon realize you have 40 hours and would like a nice little vacation.. too bad you can't take it. As a CCA you're expected to work 360 days a year and then you get 5 days off as a reward and a massive paycheck AFTER your 5 days off. Now you can use that fat cash to...uhhh.. buy something I guess? Certainly would have been more useful if I got it before the 5 day period to use on my vacation. While the career carriers are really great to deal with usually, the fellow CCA's can become very competitive. Often times if you're given an assist and it's better than another CCA's assist who has "seniority" over you they will complain to other carriers and management that they should have gotten the "good" assist. This is one of the fatal flaws that new people with struggle with. No matter how much faster you are, no matter how much more accurate you are, no matter what, everyone gets promoted by time with the post office. This leads to a lot of carriers just doing the bare minimum and putting the excess on other CCA's or carriers. The final con (that I'll write about) is that the weather sucks. I know carriers who have been delivering mail for 20+ years and they still can't deal with the rain, the snow, or the heat. The heat is the biggest killer for carriers by far though. If you're in an area that suffers from hot, muggy summers, get ready to consume gallons of water every day, and sweat that out (often onto your customers mail). The worst is when it rains on a hot summer day and then evaporates right off your clothing. Makes you feel like a walking sauna.

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