Preparing and Labeling Low Volume
Pallets
June 2007
PS-327 (705.8.5.3)
This CSR
discusses the preparation and labeling of low volume pallets.
Scanning pallet
labels enables mailers and the Postal Service to track mail when it
is received at our processing facilities. Sacked and trayed mail not
presented on pallets may prove more difficult to track because there
is no pallet label to scan.
The Domestic Mail
Manual (DMM) states that pallets may contain a minimum of 100 pounds
of nonletter-size mail or 12 linear feet of letter trays if it is a
BMC or ASF pallet entered at the destination BMC or ASF; an ADC
pallet entered at the destination ADC; an SCF pallet entered at the
destination SCF; or the only pallet entered at an individual
destination BMC or ASF, ADC, or SCF facility.
When a mailer is
transporting less than 12 linear feet of trays or fewer than 100
pounds of sacks within a mailing to a destination BMC/ASF, ADC, or
SCF, the mailer may place this mail on a low volume BMC/ASF, ADC, or
SCF pallet respectively provided the mailer prints and attaches an
appropriate barcoded pallet label to each such pallet. This
provision also applies to the last Mixed BMC or Mixed ADC pallet
within a mailing if it contains less than the minimum required
volume as long as all more finely presorted pallets have been
prepared.
This variance
from the minimum volumes stated in the DMM will facilitate efficient
tracking of the mail.
(Signed)
Sharon Daniel Manager
Mailing Standards
United States Postal Service Washington DC 20260-3436
|