Malik Jones walks along a snow-covered street with a U.S. Postal Service truck in the background as a winter storm passes though the area Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026, in Prairie Village, Kan. Photo credit: Charlie Riedel / AP.
Malik Jones walks along a snow-covered street with a U.S. Postal Service truck in the background as a winter storm passes though the area Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026, in Prairie Village, Kan. Photo credit: Charlie Riedel / AP.

Some Baltimore residents say their mail hasnโ€™t arrived on time or at all.

โ€œI haven’t had any mail delivery for two days. I don’t think I’ll get any today,โ€ said Susan Gillett, an Otterbein resident.

The region remains under a Cold Weather Advisory. Winter Storm Fern dropped 11.3 inches of snow, according to the National Weather Service. While crews have cleared major roads, some residential streets remain unplowed, making it difficult for carriers to reach mailboxes.

Read more at WYPR.

2 replies on “Snow storm disrupts mail service for Baltimore residents”

  1. Post office at 21218 has delivered nothing since the storm to a house that usually gets mail daily. This is on 33rd St, which has been cleared since Sunday (a snow emergency route). The sidewalks on the entire block have been clear since Monday noon. My front is cleared all the way out to the black pavement of the road. Itโ€™s just lousy service by USPS, which once took pride in reliability.

  2. Not sure how, but weโ€™ve wrecked what was once a crown jewel of government run and solid middle class career. Iโ€™m not sure how or when the rot began to creep into the USPS but it certainly accelerated under the first Trump term. Now the entire USPS is adrift and on life support. Just shameful what weโ€™ve allowed to happen to this historic part of our national fabric.

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