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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Apr. 11, 2008

Contact: Maureen Marion, Public Affairs
860.539.0649 (cell)

usps.com/news

Tax Night 2008: Post Offices ready to deliver tax dollars, not $pend them!

What are you doing this weekend?

If you number among those setting pencils to paper to finalize federal or state taxes, your local Post Offices is ready to help you meet that all important April 15th deadline.

There are 12 self-service Automated Postal Centers (APCs) located at these postal facilities in the Postal Service’s Albany District:

  • BRIDGEPORT area: (2 units: Stratford and Trumbull Postal Stores)
  • DANBURY
  • ENFIELD
  • FAIRFIELD
  • GLASTONBURY
  • GREENWICH area: (2 units: Greenwich Ave. Station and the Greenwich Postal Store)
  • HARTFORD
  • MANCHESTER
  • MILFORD
  • NEW CANAAN
  • NEW HAVEN
  • SOUTHBURY
  • STAMFORD
  • STRATFORD
  • WALLINGFORD
  • WILTON

Customers can weigh and mail letters and parcels and purchase stamps at the touch of a screen, using debit and credit cards.

Connecticut customers also will find extended hours in the Main Post Offices in Stamford until 8 PM, Hartford until 9 PM, New Haven until 10 PM, and at Bradley until midnight

Mail placed in a collection box must be deposited before the last collection time at the post office, APC or collection box to receive that date’s postmark. This includes Tax Night, postal officials note.

According the IRS, nearly 97 million individual tax forms had been received by last weekend. Approximately 45 percent were filed on paper. In total, the IRS expects 136 million individual tax forms this season.

Regional postal officials are ready.

"On our average day, the Postal Service processes 700 million pieces of mail. Approximately 100 million are cards and letters with postmarks. In fact, up to 55 percent of all First Class mail is financial in nature including tax-related documents," explained  Edward F. Phelan, Jr., the Postal Service’s District Manager for Connecticut.

The Postal Service’s Connecticut District serves more than 3.5 million postal customers over more than 5,000 square miles through 218 post offices and an additional 80 stations and branches.

A couple answers from the Postmaster….

I’m done with my taxes! Now, how can I mail them?

The IRS recognizes the First-Class Mail letter postmark as proof that a return has been mailed on time. Other approved mailing options include Express or Priority Mail.

Confirm the address for your taxes, postal officials say. Documents headed to a post office box can only be sent using US Mail. Use the labels provided with your tax forms when provided.

This feels a little heavy. It still goes to the IRS, right?

Be sure to use the proper postage— tax returns bearing insufficient postage will be returned. The Postal Service website, www.usps.com, offers a rate calculator to help you determine the right postage for your documents.

How can I be sure my tax form gets there?

The Postal Service provides several services to help document your tax mailings, such as:

  • Certificate of Mailing Service
    You’ll get a receipt as evidence that you mailed your tax return.
  • Certified Mail Service
    A Certified Mail receipt proves you mailed your tax return and gives you online access to verify the date and time of delivery.
  • Return Receipt
    This receipt verifies both mailing and delivery, returning a postcard to you signed by the person who received your package.

In addition, Delivery Confirmation service will verify the time, date, and ZIP Code to which your return is delivered. This information is accessible with Track & Confirm at www.usps.com. In addition, Delivery Confirmation service will verify the time, date, and ZIP Code to which your return is delivered. This information is easily accessible with the USPS Track & Confirm tool at www.usps.com.

How late is my Post Office open?

Every day, nearly one million Americans visit www.usps.com for information such as, listing the operating hours of the Post Office found in the Post Office Locator feature. Directions, nearby offices and changes, such as extended hours for Tax Night, are included.

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Please Note: For broadcast quality video and audio, photo stills and other media resources, visit the USPS Newsroom at www.usps.com/news.

An independent federal agency, the U.S. Postal Service is the only delivery service that visits every address in the nation — 146 million homes and businesses. It has 37,000 retail locations and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to pay for operating expenses, not tax dollars. The Postal Service has annual revenues of $75 billion and delivers nearly half the world’s mail.