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Australia Post will hire 600 casual workers while hundreds of posties will ditch their bikes and jump behind the wheels of vans to try and keep up with the exceptional demand on deliveries as the population retreats indoors during the coronavirus pandemic.


The reliance on having goods provided through the letterbox has placed huge strain on the national postal service with nearly two million parcels delivered each day since Easter, 90 per cent more than the same time last year.

Australia Post has also repurposed and opened 15 new processing facilities as it cops heavy criticism from consumers for slow deliveries, acting chief operating officer Rod Barnes said.


“With our business adapting to the challenges the current pandemic presents, our normal practice of delivery has been impacted,” he said in a statement today.

“We are experiencing significant delivery delays due to limited flights, hygiene and social distancing requirements in our network to preserve the community’s safety, and an increase in parcel volumes as more people shop online.

“For the last four weeks, we have been operating our processing and delivery services seven days a week, with our dedicated staff working on rotation over the 24-hour period, each day.”


Australia Post is struggling to keep up with the demand.


On top of the hiring push, the postal service company has “refocused” 700 posties and StarTrack drivers to increase the number of vans on the road.


“We have chartered an additional eight freighter flights, increasing this to 17 dedicated air freighter flights per day,” Mr Barnes said.


“These flights provide some relief and have improved our Express Post priority service deliveries across major capital cities by the next business day.”

Hundreds of posties have jumped off their bikes and into vans to keep up with delivery numbers.




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