'Gutting the Ponsonby community': Locals say post office should stay open
By
Aisha Campbell
, RNZ intern
Ponsonby Post Office is shutting shop next month.
Photo:
Screenshot / Google Maps
Ponsonby's post office is shutting shop next month despite push back from the local community.
A sign on the storefront, which is at the College Hill end of Ponsonby Road, said the closure will take place on 4 July but the post boxes are "staying put".
Ponsonby local and author John Harris said New Zealand Post's
decision to close the store
is "ill-considered" and it should "try harder" to cater for the people who use the shop's services.
"They've got to be mindful of the vital role that post shops like this one play in glueing the community together," Harris said.
"If you go down to the post shop you'll see it's buzzing with activity; people popping in to post parcels or to get forms filled out and so forth ... they've got to think about the effect on small communities and this is like gutting the Ponsonby community."
Viv Rosenberg, a spokesperson for the Ponsonby Business Association, said the group is saddened by the decision to close the shop.
''Our local post office has been part of the fabric of our community in Three Lamps for several years and we regard the team there as part of our Ponsonby family. We are working alongside others to try and keep it open."
In 2018, NZ Post announced its plan to
close its remaining 79 standalone post offices
but did not give a timeframe on when the final store would be shut.
The NZ Post website said "store closures are given very careful consideration".
"[Reasons for closure] can include a decline in customer numbers or services which significantly affect the economic viability of the store," NZ Post said.
Harris emailed NZ Post CEO David Walsh expressing his disapproval of the decision to close the shop and requesting it be reconsidered.
He said a response by the NZ Post general manager consumer stated the closure followed a close look at customer data and that there were other stores serving the Ponsonby community, which was an unsustainable way for the business to operate.
"Herne Bay, Hardinge Street and Wellesley Street are either a challenging walk or you hop in the car and add to the grid," Harris said.
"They're only thinking about the sustainability of the New Zealand Post itself not the community."
RNZ has approached NZ Post for comment.
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