Israel Postal Company

Coordinates: 31°47′18″N 35°12′4″E / 31.78833°N 35.20111°E / 31.78833; 35.20111

Israel Postal Company
דואר ישראל
Public
Industry Postal Services, courier, banking
Founded Ministry of Transport, Postal, Telegraph and Radio (1948-1987)
Israel Postal Authority (1987-2006)
Israel Post (2006-present)
Headquarters Central Post Office Building, Jaffa Road 217, Jerusalem, Israel
Area served
Israel
Products Letter post, parcel service, EMS, delivery, freight forwarding, third-party logistics, deposit accounts
Revenue 1,750,000,000
Owner Government of Israel (80%)
Other (20%)[1]
Number of employees
5,000
Subsidiaries Bank Hado'ar (Post Bank)
Website www.israelpost.co.il
Ford F-1 truck used by Israel Postal Company in 1948-1949, now at Eretz Israel Museum, Philatelic Building
Jerusalem Central Post Office, Jaffa Road, Jerusalem

Israel Postal Company (Hebrew: דואר ישראל, translit. Do'ar Yisra'el), known as Israel Post,[2] and formerly the Israel Postal Authority, is a government-owned corporation that handles postal services in Israel.

The Israel Postal Company has 5,000 employees,[1] among them 1,650 mail delivery staff and 2,000 postal clerks manning 700 post office branches around the country. It has a network of 4,262 mail boxes and 1,000 mail trucks. Some 2.5 million postal items are sorted every day.[3]

History

The Israel Postal Company has its roots in the postal system from the British Mandate period (1920-1948). In 1948, after the establishment of the State of Israel, the Ministry of Transportation was placed in charge of postal services. In 1951, the Ministry of Postal Services was established, which later became the Ministry of Communications. In keeping with the British model, the service included delivery of letters, parcels, and telegrams, as well as telephone services. The Israeli Postal Bank opened in 1951.[4]

In 1986, the Israel Postal Authority was created. In 2002, in the wake of operating losses, political scandals and new developments in the sphere of communications, it was decided that major reforms were needed. A new government company, the Israel Postal Company Ltd., was founded and went into operation in March 2006.[4] Postal services in Israel have historically operated at a loss. In 2002, the operating deficit was NIS 150 million; in 2003, it was NIS 200 million. Since 2007, the financial situation has improved, and the company is now making a small profit.[4] In October 2014 the Postal Company announced they would be laying off 1,200 employees and dropping mail delivery to 2 days per week.[1] Additionally several branches will close, while those branches which remained we see extended hours with reduced wait time.[1] In March 2015 they added the ability to make appointments online or via an app, in another effort to reduce wait time.[5]

On June 2013 the company signed an agreement deploying the latest version of Escher’s Group Riposte retail software, a peer-to-peer network technology.[6]

Israel Philatelic Service

Mailboxes used by the Israel Postal Service, Eretz Israel Museum, Philatelic Pavilion
Automated package pick-up in Tel Aviv

In April 1948, the British discontinued all postal services. On Friday, May 14, 1948, Israel declared independence. On Sunday morning, less than 48 hours later, the new state issued its first stamps.[7] There was virtually no paper for printing stamps and no appropriate printing presses or perforating machines. Even the name of the country had not yet been finalized. Nevertheless, Doar Ivri ("Hebrew Post") stamps appeared immediately after the declaration of independence, and went on sale at postal branches throughout the country.[2]

The Israel Philatelic Service is located on HaDoar ("Post Office") Street in Jaffa.[7]

Letters to God

Every year, the Israel Postal Company receives thousands of letters from all over the world addressed to God. Rather than consign them to bins of undeliverable mail, the letters are collected at the Givat Shaul central mail facility. Once a year, they are taken to the Old City and placed between the stones of the Western Wall in a festive ceremony.[8] The post office also receives letters addressed to Jesus Christ, the Virgin Mary and King David, but only those addressed to God are sent to the Western Wall.[9]

See also

References

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