Friday March 23 2018
In the fall of 2013,  we launched a campaign – you may remember it as the debut of our ten-foot inflatable piggy banks – to advocate for postal banking at Canada Post, as a way to diversify the postal service’s revenues, but also as an opportunity to address financial exclusion and marginalization, and extend services to people and places that the big banks have turned their backs on – small towns, the North, many inner city populations, and urban Indigenous communities.

We weren’t too surprised when the response was, by and large, “please explain to us what postal banking is and why it’s a solution.” We’ve been working with allies since then in our communities, with politicians, in the media, and online to educate people: Postal banking is highly successful all over the world, it’s become a major pillar of the long-term viability of many postal systems, and it’s helped more people get access to financial services – people whom the for-profit banks just aren’t interested in serving.

We are working closely on this with the Canadian Postmasters and Assistants’ Association. Postmasters will be key to making postal banking a success in rural areas.

For more resources and background on our campaign visit www.cupw.ca/postalbanking

We’re getting somewhere: it’s a live issue in federal Parliament. MP Niki Ashton sponsored a petition last year on postal banking, and NDP postal critic Irene Mathyssen has presented motion M-166, a private member’s motion to call on the federal government to study how to implement postal banking, to be debated starting Monday, March 26.

Please support the motion

(You can find the name of your MP at http://www.ourcommons.ca/ Parliamentarians/en/members and

We have many more challenges to overcome in order to get postal banking here, but it will be worth it to secure the long-term health of Canada Post and help address financial inequality. Our current step is to get the federal government to accept what a win-win idea it is and direct Canada Post to use postal banking to secure its viability for the long run.

In solidarity,

Mike Palecek
National CUPW President

Here is another very valid perspective from a U.S. speaker about the need for postal banking.  These are the same/similar points on why our society and communities that desperately need a postal bank(s) in the various neigbourhoods that will help Canadians who otherwise are turned away from the big money lenders and the exorbitant high fees  that be a deterrent from doing business with them. Especially the payday lenders.  On behalf of all Canadians, we will continue to strongly encourage our elected federal politicians to help all Canadians have the benefit of having another banking option that they can trust because of Canada’s Post’s existing vast far reaching network system.