The present invention relates to the field of article handling and more particularly to a system and method for redirecting articles with advanced payment or guarantee of payment from the article's recipient. The articles may include postal articles and for purposes of explanation, the present invention will be discussed with application to mail handling. However, it should be understood that the instant method may be applied to other articles as envisioned by one skilled in the art.
Mail redirection, commonly known as forwarding, entails the redirecting of post to an addressee's new address. A common initiation of this process is the handwriting of a new address across the address face of a mail piece. The mail piece is then redeposited into the mail stream for a second delivery to the hand written address. New postage is normally not affixed to the mail piece, nor is the mail piece normally opened. These steps are depicted in
A postal delivery service will typically perform the second delivery as a courtesy despite the lack of postage and accordingly, lack of payment. When taken on a large scale, such second deliveries provide a financial burden postal delivery services which may equate into overall higher postage costs, degradation of services, and the like. In response, several postal services have initiated a fee for such second deliveries or forwarding or redirection. However, this solution carries with it additional burdens including the detection of a redirected mail piece and the collection of funds for the redirection.
An advantage of the present invention is to facilitate the redirection of articles, such as mail pieces, facilitate collection of fees due for such redirecting, and alleviate the burden on unnecessary deliveries and mail handling.
These and other advantages are effected by a system and method for redirecting mail, wherein an incoming mail piece is automatically scanned and the picked up data used to determine if the mail piece is a redirected one. If the mail piece is for redirection, an automatic determination is made as to whether the addressee has an account to cover the costs of such redirection. If the account is determined to exist, the mail piece is routed according to its new delivery address and the account automatically and appropriately debited. If no account exists, the addressee is notified of a redirected mail piece awaiting attention and offered the opportunity to establish such an account. After a preset time, if no account is established, the mail piece is destroyed. The aforementioned is also effected via automatic means.
The advantages are further effected by a method of forwarding post, comprising the steps of determining if a current post destination address is expired, if said destination address is expired, determining if an addressee of said post maintains a forwarding service, and if said forwarding service is maintained, forwarding said post to an addressee destination address.
The advantages are still further effected by an apparatus for forwarding post, comprising: means for determining if a current post destination address is expired, means for determining if an addressee of said post maintains a forwarding service if said destination address is expired, and means for forwarding said post to an addressee destination address if said forwarding service is maintained.
The novel features and method steps believed characteristic of the invention are set out in the claims below. The invention itself, however, as well as other features and advantages thereof, are best understood by reference to the detailed description, which follows, when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The Revenue Protection for Redirections involves the following steps: Each envelope that has been sorted via automatic equipment has a barcoded Tag Id (TID) that when scanned upon re-entry into the network (as an Ad Hoc Forward) is detected as an expired TID. Most automated worldwide posts include the use of a TIED. This flags the envelope as an exception that can be either specially image processed or displayed to an operator to confirm it is an ad hoc Forward. (
If the database of Fee Paid Redirection confirms that the subject addressee and “new address” are not authorized for Redirection, then the Ad Hoc Forward is used to record the name and addressee of the non-fee paid party and accordingly used to notify the moved party by special postal authority letter that the post will continue to forward such ad hoc mail pieces for X days and cease thereafter if no official forwarding service is requested. (
The failure of a new address party to acknowledge a request to set up a Paid Forwarding Account can be used to establish by the post a legal policy of with withholding service and destroying mail pieces. (
A further enhancement of this technique allows the initial video coding of the ad hoc address to be loaded into a special directory to facilitate any future video coding by providing a special restricted directory for Interactive Video Coding processing to recover and confirm said address and addressee when further mail pieces are encountered. Such a video coding process will require the addition of a specific addressee entry step because the name will normally not be part of the ad hoc inscription.
The present invention claims priority to provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/520,658, filed Nov. 18, 2003, which is herein incorporated by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/12915 | 11/15/2004 | WO | 5/17/2006 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60520658 | Nov 2003 | US |