US Seeks Rate Increase for January 2024

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
U.S. Postal Service Proposes New Prices for 2024

  • New prices scheduled to take effect Jan. 21, 2024
  • Postal Service prices remain among the most affordable in the world
  • First-Class Forever stamp will be 68 cents

[VSC note: This is almost word-for-word the press release for the previous rate increase request six months ago, which the Postal Regulatory Commission granted without change.]

WASHINGTON, DC — Today [October 6, 2023], the United States Postal Service filed notice with the Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC) of mailing services price changes to take effect Jan. 21, 2024. The new rates include a 2-cent increase in the price of a First-Class Mail Forever stamp, from 66 cents to 68 cents.

The proposed adjustments, approved by the governors of the Postal Service, would raise mailing services product prices approximately 2 percent. If favorably reviewed by the commission, the price changes would include:

Product
Letters (1 oz.)
Letters (metered 1 oz.)
Domestic Postcards
International Postcards
International Letter (1 oz.)
Current Prices
66¢
63¢
51¢
$1.50
$1.50
Proposed Prices
68¢
64¢
53¢
$1.55
$1.55

There will be no change to the additional-ounce price, which remains at 24 cents. The Postal Service is also seeking price adjustments for Special Services products including Certified Mail, Post Office Box rental fees, money order fees and the cost to purchase insurance when mailing an item.

As inflationary pressures on operating expenses continue and the effects of a previously

defective pricing model are still being felt, these price adjustments are needed to provide the Postal Service with much needed revenue to achieve the financial stability sought by its Delivering for America 10-year plan. The prices of the Postal Service remain among the most affordable in the world.

The PRC will review the changes before they are scheduled to take effect. The complete Postal Service price filing, with prices for all products, can be found on the PRC website under the Daily Listings section at prc.gov/dockets/daily. The mailing services filing is Docket No. R2024-1. The price tables are also available on the Postal Service’s Postal Explorer website at pe.usps.com/PriceChange/Index.

APS Summer Seminar Going Online Only

There will be no in-person classes or events for the American Philatelic Society’s Summer Seminar 2024, if the proposed 2024 budget is passed by the APS board. That approval is likely. The Virtual Stamp Club has learned that APS executive director Scott English told staff members recently Summer Seminar doesn’t make enough money. It doesn’t lose money, its profit isn’t high enough.

The APS website describes Summer Seminar as “an exciting one-week, once-a-year learning opportunity each June for the APS community, and other collectors and hobbyists. It is appropriate for beginning to advanced collectors, and all courses are led by philatelic experts who are accomplished writers, exhibitors, expertizers, dealers, and specialized collectors.”

It also allowed collectors and others to get to know one another and socialize without the pressure of a stamp show.

“It doesn’t lose money, [but] it doesn’t make much money,” English told VSC.

Summer Seminar was online-only for the past three years because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2023 in-person edition was attended by 60 people, but similar seminars get “hundreds when it’s virtual only,” English said.

He believes the APS should focus on building its “online platform.”

“We’ve got to work on leveraging technology and reaching as many collectors as we can,” he said. “I love the traditions of the APS but we cannot let that be an obstacle to moving ahead.”

English said they are looking for other types of in-person programming. He feels it is difficult to produce a Summer Seminar that does both. Some past participants, however, think live streaming is possible for most of the courses. Both sides, however, agree that some of the courses do have a hands-on requirement.

In fact, English says that was a factor in choosing the subjects for the in-person events.

Members of the Mount Nittany Philatelic Society are worried that not having an in-person Summer Seminar will impact their SCOPEX show, which had been held the weekend before SS began. Summer Seminar brought serious philatelists to Bellefonte, Pa., where the APS is headquartered. SCOPEX will now be on its own.

Photographs, from top: Instructor Daniel Piazza, the chief philatelic curator of the Smithsonian National Postal Museum.

Instructors Diane DeBois and Robert Dalton Harrison show one of their favorite pieces of philatelic ephemera using in their course.

Dr. Justin Gordon discussing Holocaust Philately in an elective.

Stamp Day 2023 (Netherlands 2023)

[from PostNL press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Stamp Day 2023

“Dag van de Postzegel 2023”
Date of issue: 16 October 2023

Format: sheet with ten personal stamps in two different designs, with value 1 for post up to and including 20 grams for destinations within the Netherlands
Item number: 830063
Design: Sandra Smulders, Vormgoed, Gouda

Stamp Day is an annual international event. In most countries, the day is celebrated on the first Sunday after 9 October: the founding date of the Universal Postal Union (UPU). The UPU sets the rules for international postal traffic between member states.

The denomination on these stamps is ‘1’, the denomination for items weighing up to 20g destined for addresses within the Netherlands. The sheet of ten costs €10.10.

The sheet was designed by graphic designer Sandra Smulders from Gouda using the 1923 Artist Series stamps as inspiration. Those were the first modern stamps after architect Karel de Bazel’s 1913 Jubilee stamps. The 1923 Artist Series comprises four stamps in three designs, created by architect Michel de Klerk, typographer Sjoerd de Roos and graphic designer Nicolaas van de Vecht. Their designs were selected from the 90 entries to the Dutch Numerical Stamp Competition launched by the Staatsbedrijf der Posterijen en Telegrafie [‘Dutch State Post and Telegraph Company’] in 1920. All Dutch artists were allowed to enter the competition.

The idea behind the competition was that a competition involving many artists would produce a better result than if one designated artist designed the stamps. However, the philatelic press was not very receptive. Later, the stamps received greater appreciation. For example, art historian Paul Hefting wrote in an article in De Gids in 1993 that the design of the 1923 Artist Series is defined by a mixture of austere and ornate ornamental forms. The atmosphere expressed by these stamps is said to be of a “modern religious propriety” and of a “great seriousness that beauty then entailed”.

Each of the ten stamps featured on the Stamp Day 2023 sheet contains a half diamond: a triangle composed of 25 stacked rectangles with rounded corners. The image area of each half-diamond stamp joins the image area of the adjacent stamp where possible, separated by the fixed frame, to create the illusion of a complete diamond shape. The diamond motif is taken from the 4-cent stamp in the 1923 Artist Series. The numbers and letters in the title Stamp Day 2023 are placed in and against the rectangles on the new stamps. The background colour on the stamps and the selvage changes from green to blue, from top to bottom. Behind the diamond shape on the stamps is a line drawing of an apple and an apple tree changing from white to green. The drawing of the apple also returns in a different form on the left and right hand sides of the sheet edge.

Smulders has produced designs for Stamp Day since 2020. In preparation for this new assignment, she visited the National Archives in The Hague, which manages the largest, most important collection of postage values in the Netherlands. “At the time, it hadn’t been decided which historical stamps would inspire the new design,” Smulders says. “But I already knew that the 1923 Artist Series was a candidate. Seeing the original drawing for the 4-cent stamp from this series in the archives absolutely delighted me. It was a strong graphic design – especially for its era.”

Smulders says the original drawings for the 1923 stamps, which she was able to access, have much more detail than the stamps themselves, because printing technology then was fairly limited.

“When I was sketching, I noticed that the words ‘postzegel’ (stamp) and ‘Nederland’ (Netherlands) contain the same amount of letters,” she says. “This meant I could imitate the 1923 stamp by placing the letters of the new title in the diamond in the same way.”

“Graphically, I created two different designs, with a half diamond pointing up or down,” Smulders says. “But by applying slightly different gradients everywhere, I ensured that no two stamps are the same.”

The apple and apple tree designs come from the 1923 1- and 2-cent stamps, with elements from the 2½-cent issue.

In addition to the past three years’ Stamp Day stamps, Smulders also designed for PostNL the 2022 World Animal Day, the Back to the 20th Century and Trains & Journeys (2019) stamp series, the 2018 Children’s Welfare Stamps, the stamp series celebrating 50 years of the Daily Fable (2018) and the 25 years of Fokke & Sukke (2018) stamp series.

The validity period for these Stamp Day stamps is indefinite.

Technical Details:
Stamp size: 40 x 30mm (wxh)
Sheet size: 122 x 170mm (wxh)
Paper: normal with phosphor print
Glue: gummed
Printing technique: Offset
Printing colours: Cyan, magenta, yellow, black
Edition: 5,000 sheets
Format: Sheet containing 10 personalised stamps in 2 different : designs
Denomination: denomination 1 for post weighing up to 20g with : destinations within the Netherlands
Design: Sandra Smulders, Vormgoed, Gouda
Printing company: Koninklijke Joh. Enschedé B.V., Haarlem
Item number: 830063

Note: PostNL does not sell directly to collectors in North America. Its website refers to a company called Nordfirm, which says it sells Dutch new issues at face value. The Virtual Stamp Club has no connection to this company.

Paul Gaugin (Bosnia-Herzegovina 2023)

Poste Srpske issued a miniature sheet on September 29 to mark the 175th anniversary of the birth of artist Paul Gaugin. The Bosnia-Herzegovina postal agency also produced an official first day cover (shown below). The denomination of each stamp is 3.50 BAM (“Bosnian Mark”), or about US $1.88. Collectors can place orders on Poste Srpske’s website [direct link to this issue]. In the upper right you will see a small flag and the letters “Sprsi.” Click on that, and the other choice on the dropdown menu is a British flag and “English.”