recceguy said:
There are thousands of people, in Canada alone, that don't have computer access or knowledge of use.
I really don't buy this argument at all, i grew up in Rural Ontario and in my small town of 900 people we had a library with 2 computers for free access to be used throughout the day, I haven't stepped foot in it since around 2007, so I imagine the offerings have improved. We also got a new Library a few years ago, so I guarantee they have.
Regardless, you can buy a functional desktop for low 300's or an android tablet for much less. At the end of the day it is 2016, anyone who at this point has decided to not adopt this "new" technology is leaving themselves behind. With three websites you have so much access to information, Google, Wikipedia and Facebook. Probably the next two influential would be YouTube and twitter (I don't personally use Twitter however). If people don't know, ask. I've helped my mom,dad and siblings, but surprisingly my grandparents on both sides of the family where more computer savy than my parents.
recceguy said:
If you want to tell the government something, through your elected officials and expect them to read your letter, it better be on paper and through the mail. Otherwise they don't much look at emails.
I agree with this is, and this is the one con for doing things online that you loose the "human touch".
recceguy said:
I can't send and receive packages over the internet. (You can order them like that, but they still need delivery, much of that by CanPost.) and so on.
I personally do not ship much, I receive from online retailers here or there, but the only time I've received something was when I needed my mom to ship my dress clothes after a move. I personally get a good service from Canada Post but again if they went on strike next week it wouldn't effect me other than my dollar shave club razors

. If I were to buy something online I would just pay the extra shipping to get someone else to deliver it. But again, I'm young, trying to pay of student loans/save money so unless something breaks (mouse/keyboard/laptop) I'm not buying anything.. Can Post does do a good job of shipping packages, especially because they have so many retail outlets from when they used to send a lot of letters. My original post did reference letters, as that is where my problem with Canada Post. I'm trying to understand how many letters people actually receive.
George Wallace said:
Not to mention, the Government and various other institutions such as Insurance Companies are still sending out cheques in the mail. My PDSP claim is submitted digitally, but the cheque is still sent in the mail.
I think this is an age thing again, you have existing mail out cheques set up so you'll get them. Case in point, my mom gets a hard copy GST rebate, I get the same cheque direct deposited. Likewise last year the government strictly said that they were not mailing out T4's unless it was required (i.e lack off access to system, or no longer employed). The only thing that my government job mailed me was a copy of my last pay cheque/summary of contract because your file is closed after you leave so they just mail it your address on file. Likewise, my credit card statements (RBC), phone bills (Koodo), pay stubs army (EMAA) are all sent electronically. RBC/Koodo all would charge me $1.50 a month if I wanted a paper copy mailed to me. To me that is a waste of money I'll just print a copy off at home if I REALLY need one.
George Wallace said:
As for electronic being free; that is a false claim. You are still paying for a service. Canada Post is trying to get into the electronic passage of info, mail, etc. business; and you can bet your last dollar that they intend to charge for it.
Good luck to Canada Post, you can use any email service for "free". Yes google is reading all of your emails, but it is "free". Everything we send at work (civvy side) that is external is sent through email, there is no reason to change that. Especially when how powerful tools such as mail merge are (you can send 1000 emails personalized emails to a matter of minutes based on a excel spreadsheet). Pretty neat stuff. I did see "E-Post" way back in the when, but for me another email type service to monitor? No thanks, I can barely monitor 3 emails as it is.