Postal Services Commission

The Postal Services Commission, known as Postcomm, was a non-ministerial department of the Government of the United Kingdom charged with overseeing the quality and universal service of post in the United Kingdom. It was established in 2000 under the Postal Services Act 2000. Postcomm was merged into the communications regulator Ofcom on 1 October 2011.

Postal Services Commission (Welsh: Comisiwn Gwasanaethau Post)
Non-ministerial government department overview
Formed2000 (2000)
Dissolved2011
Superseding agency
JurisdictionUnited Kingdom
HeadquartersHercules House, 6 Hercules Road, London, SE1 7DB
Employees60
Annual budget£8 million (2009-2010)[1]
Non-ministerial government department executive
  • Tim Brown, Chief Executive
Websitewww.psc.gov.uk

Most of Postcomm's role involved regulating Royal Mail (for letter delivery and to guarantee a universal postal service) and its two subsidiaries, Post Office Ltd and Parcelforce. Postcomm was also charged with the licensing of the UK's postal operators. It was set up alongside a 'sister' organisation, Postwatch, an independent watchdog for postal services. Postwatch became part of Consumer Focus on 1 October 2008.

In May 2008, Postcomm called for the part-privatisation of Royal Mail to safeguard the universal service.[2] Following the Hooper Report into the future of the postal services industry, in October 2010, Business Secretary Vince Cable confirmed plans for the privatisation of up to 90% of the business and the possible mutualisation of the Post Office. Any purchasing business will be required to retain the universal service of collection and delivery of mail six days a week at affordable prices. Royal Mail staff are to be offered the remaining 10% shares with the Government to take on the group's pension liabilities.[3] The changes were enabled by the Postal Services Act 2011. As part of the plans, the roles fulfilled by Postcomm were absorbed into the communications regulator Ofcom from 1 October 2011.[4]

Statutory basis

The authority for Postcomm was found in the Postal Services Act 2000, s.1 and Sch.1.

1 The Postal Services Commission

(1) There shall be a body corporate to be known as the Postal Services Commission (in this Act referred to as "the Commission").

(2) The functions of the Commission shall be performed on behalf of the Crown.

(3) Schedule 1 (which makes further provision about the Commission) shall have effect.

(4) The body which, immediately before the coming into force of this subsection, was known as the Postal Services Commission and was designated in accordance with Article 22 of the Postal Services Directive as a national regulatory authority for the postal sector in the United Kingdom is hereby abolished.

gollark: With my actual x86-based computer, I mostly control it, except... lots of the firmware, the intel management engine, and the BIOS.
gollark: Mine does too, but it has an annoying screen complaining about the bootloader being unlocked on boot.
gollark: Android phones have the same issue (iOS too, more so, but I have an android one so I'll complain about it) - you can barely do anything to it unless you root it, and even that's a hassle and still has limitations.
gollark: Because *obviously* you can't be trusted to actually control the device you paid for.
gollark: Which I disagree with.

References

  1. Postal Services Commission Resource Accounts 2009-2010 (PDF), Postal Services Commission, 2010-06-30, archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-20, retrieved 2010-12-18
  2. "Call for sell-off of Royal Mail". BBC News. 14 May 2008.
  3. Staff writer (13 October 2010). "Royal Mail privatisation bill unveiled by Vince Cable". BBC News. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
  4. Tim Bradshaw (21 October 2010). "Ofcom to cut staff by a fifth". Financial Times. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
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