Postal plot: How SA Post Office plans to monopolise deliveries under 1kg

In recent months, the South African Post Office has been fighting to gain a stranglehold on courier deliveries weighing less than 1kg. Of course, the devastating consequences – were the Post Office to be successful – are plain to see. Most online shoppers don’t trust the postal service to safely (and efficiently) deliver packages, with 80% saying they wouldn’t use SAPO’s services. While it may not morally sound, what the Post Office is doing is not illegal. In an earlier piece published on BizNews, freelance journalist Ivo Vegter remarked that the law enabling the Post Office to have a monopoly on items weighing less than 1kg “causes genuine harm to South Africa.” Below, MyBroadband reports on the latest development in the ongoing legal battle, with SAPO adamant to gain full control. The Post Office is reportedly looking for private companies to come onboard and assist them with their plan to “digitise, modernise, and deliver e-commerce services.” But courier companies are fighting back, with the article below reporting that “Postnet and the South African Express Parcel Association (Saepa) are fighting this ruling, arguing that the SA Post Office’s interpretation of the law is wrong.” This article was first published on MyBroadband. – Jarryd Neves

SA Post Office’s plan to block all courier deliveries under 1kg

By MyBroadband

South Africa Post Office CEO Nomkhita Mona said by law, they are the only institution that is allowed to deliver packages between 0 and 1 kilogram.

She added that legislators created this law to subsidise services that the Post Office cannot deliver profitably.

The fight over the delivery of packages under 1kg started in 2018 when the SA Post Office lodged a complaint against Postnet for delivering packages under 1kg.

The Post Office argued that the Postal Services Act 124 of 1998 gives it the sole right to offer “reserved postal services”.

Reserved postal services include all letters, postcards, printed matter, small parcels, and other postal articles of a mass up to and including one kilogram.

In 2019, the Complaints and Compliance Commission (CCC) of the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) ruled that Postnet had contravened the Postal Services Act by transporting and delivering packages under one kilogram.

“No one is permitted to transport or deliver reserved postage as set out in the Schedules to the Act, unless licensed to do so in terms of the Act,” the CCC said.

Reserved Postal Services

1. The reserved postal services include –
(a) all letters, postcards, printed matter, small parcels and other postal articles subject to the mass or size limitations set;
(b) issuing of postage stamps; and
(c) the provision of roadside collection and address boxes.

3. The reserved postal services include all items described in items 1 (a) and 2 of a mass up to and including one kilogram or size which enables it to fit into a rectangular box with the following dimensions:

length 458 mm, width 324 mm, thickness 100 mm Cylinders having a maximum length of 458 mm and 100 mm thickness or a mass of up to one kilogram are regarded as letters.

The regulator sent Postnet a cease-and-desist order in October 2019 for violating the Postal Services Act 124 of 1998.

The SA Post Office also confirmed that the law, and therefore the ruling, applies to all courier companies operating in South Africa.

This case shook the South African courier industry as it essentially prohibits private companies from delivering packages under one kilogram.

Postnet and the South African Express Parcel Association (Saepa) are fighting this ruling, arguing that the SA Post Office’s interpretation of the law is wrong.

Postnet obtained interim relief against Icasa’s desist order from the Gauteng High Court, pending the outcome of its main challenge.

Nortons director Anton Roets, representing Postnet and Saepa, said the Post Office argues that the Act gives them a monopoly over couriering of articles under 1 kilogram.

Postnet and Saepa, in turn, said the Act only gives the Post Office a monopoly over postal services and not courier services.

He said that apart from the interpretation of the Act’s wording, South Africa’s constitution also supports their position.

Speaking to Carte Blanche, Mona reiterated that, by law, only the Post Office has the mandate to distribute any parcel between zero and one kilogram.

She said this law was “put together” to help the SA Post Office to subsidise services on which it will not make money. “It is about how do we serve the communities,” said Mona.

However, the Post Office does not have the capability to take over the services that courier companies currently offer.

The institution is technically insolvent, and the public does not trust it to deliver packages on time and in good order.

The Post Office is now looking to partner with companies to achieve its plan to digitise, modernise, and deliver e-commerce services.

It has recently sent out a request for interest, inviting private courier companies to partner with the SA Post Office to deliver packages under 1 kilogram.

Whether private companies will be keen to partner with the Post Office, which has a poor performance and financial reputation, remains to be seen.

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