Questions over USPS policy throw Mat-Su cluster mailbox holders into limbo

Nov. 25—PALMER — Confusion over a U.S. Postal Service policy in Palmer is leaving some residents without mail delivery and raising questions about the longstanding use of rented neighborhood mailboxes in the Mat-Su area.

At issue is mail delivery to the locked, metal mailbox tower systems known as cluster box units installed on streets in or near neighborhoods. An alternative to the traditional non-locking mailbox, the towers deter mail theft and are less likely to be knocked over by wayward cars and snowplows.

Used by thousands of Alaskans, the boxes are placed in designated road pull-offs, often next to traditional-style mailboxes mounted on individual posts.

In some cities, including Anchorage, many cluster boxes are owned and managed by the U.S. Postal Service. Others are managed by a patchwork of owners including homeowners associations, subdivision developers and small groups of residents.

But Mat-Su is home to yet a different kind of neighborhood mailbox system: cluster boxes leased to users slot-by-slot by private businesses. At least 4,000 individual mail slots housed in about 250 towers are owned by a pair of Mat-Su businesses, which rent them out to residents through annual contracts — a practice the business owners say has been allowed by local post office officials for decades.

Matanuska Mailboxes, owned by Ashley Vance, began leasing cluster boxes to Mat-Su residents in 2006. Mailboxes-R-Us, owned by Scott Lapiene, began operations in 2009 as Alaska post office officials looked to shift Mat-Su residents from a rural route address system to the now ubiquitous street and house numbers.

But Vance and Lapiene say they now have concerns that a limited delivery stop ordered by the new Palmer postmaster, Matthew Carey, could eventually shut down the entire system, eliminating about 250 rented towers used by roughly 4,000 customers. They say the controversy already affects at least 100 Palmer-area residents, many of whom are in the process of getting cluster boxes set up.

Carey told the Anchorage Daily News he could not comment on the situation and referred all questions to a Postal Service spokesperson.

Fine before, illegal now?

The issues seemed to start this fall after Carey took over as the postmaster in Palmer in late summer and started telling members of the public that the rented cluster boxes violate Postal Service policy, according to residents, builders and mailbox company owners interviewed for this story.

Lawyers with the Postal Service say renting out cluster boxes is legal, said James Boxrud, a U.S. Postal Service spokesperson based in Colorado.