For greater than two years, a giant picket register west Marin County has displayed a set of hand-painted numbers, dutifully modified every morning.
“Days And not using a Bolinas Put up Workplace,” the signal reads. The quantity Friday: 806.
The signal has been a captivating, if unhappy, reminder to the 1,200 or so residents of Bolinas of the lack of their beloved put up workplace, which was booted from its downtown constructing amid a spat between the U.S. Postal Service and its longtime landlord.
Late final month, although, Bolinas resident John Borg nailed a brand new message to the highest of the signal — the picket equal of a P.S. on a letter. It reads: “We Did It, Bolinas!!! New Put up Workplace Opening by Fall 2025.”
The put up workplace quickly will transfer again into the unadorned picket constructing on Brighton Avenue the place it had operated for six many years.
On April 17, the Postal Service signed a 10-year lease with landlord Gregg Welsh, of Ventura County, his legal professional, Patrick Morris, stated in an electronic mail.
For the agricultural denizens of ZIP Code 94924, the reopening is a serious victory — particularly given President Trump’s musings about privatizing the Postal Service, which misplaced $9.5 billion within the 2024 fiscal yr and is slicing 1000’s of jobs.
“For this to be permitted through the large federal cutbacks of the Trump administration, it’s actually considerably astonishing for lots of us,” stated Borg, 63, who helped lead a residents’ marketing campaign to reopen the power.
A gaggle of locals dressed like postal employees for a Bolinas Fourth of July parade. The city rallied collectively to name for the reopening of the put up workplace.
(Offered by John Borg)
“I feel the previous two years gave our city a style of what potential privatization of the Postal Service may imply for different underserved and rural locations all through the nation,” he stated. “That features diminished retail operations, delays and inconvenience, elevated costs … [and] extra concentrate on larger communities that may ship extra revenue.”
In Bolinas — a haven for poets, painters, writers and actors — residents obtained inventive of their push to reopen the put up workplace.
They picketed with placards studying, “Actual Mail Not E-mail!” They marched in native parades dressed as letter carriers, composed songs and wrote greater than 2,000 letters in hand-painted envelopes that they despatched to Postal Service officers.
And so they wrote scores of poems to be learn at aloud rallies. Like this one, with emphasis by the writer:
They’ve closed the Bolinas Put up Workplace down
Forgetting our remoted, distant little city.
The elders want their pensions and checks
And surprise what on earth will probably be subsequent.
Most individuals in Bolinas, a city abutting Level Reyes Nationwide Seashore, don’t get residence mail supply. Residents lengthy relied upon day by day journeys to the put up workplace for parcels, pension checks and mail-order prescriptions, to not point out an opportunity to atone for the native gossip.
For the reason that put up workplace closed, their mail has been delivered to the smaller city of Olema — a 40-minute round-trip drive by the forest on Freeway 1 — the place the put up workplace has repeatedly closed due to flooding. And generally it has been rerouted to close by Stinson Seashore.
The relocations have been extra than simply an inconvenience for the city’s aged residents, lots of whom can not drive. There may be little public transit, and 47% of the city’s residents are 65 and older. Residents have reported issues getting mail-order prescriptions, lab outcomes, healthcare protection updates, paychecks and different packages.

An indication reads “Save Bolinas Put up Workplace” in west Marin County.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Instances)
“It might appear to be a bit of factor, however it actually did affect our city drastically,” stated Borg, 63, a kind 1 diabetic who had his insulin delivered by the mail earlier than the closure. For the final two years, he has pushed two hours round-trip to San Rafael every month to select up his treatment at a pharmacy.
Rep. Jared Huffman, a San Rafael Democrat who lobbied former U.S. Postmaster Basic Louis DeJoy on behalf of Bolinas, referred to as it “nice information” that the put up workplace was reopening. However, he stated in an interview Friday, the method took too lengthy.
“They need to not have needed to expertise all of this and to climate all the paperwork and simply bulls— that has prevented them from having a put up workplace,” Huffman stated.
The Bolinas put up workplace shut down on March 3, 2023.
Bolinas residents despatched greater than 2,000 letters in hand-painted envelopes to Postal Service officers to name for the reopening of their put up workplace.
(John Borg)
Welsh, whose household belief owns the constructing, acquired it about 50 years in the past. The Postal Service already was a tenant. Based on an announcement supplied final yr by Welsh by his legal professional, Patrick Morris, the Postal Service for years violated its lease, which required it to keep up and restore the flooring at its personal expense.
The company found asbestos within the flooring tiles in 1998, based on the assertion, however basically saved it hidden from the owner for greater than twenty years and didn’t put up warning indicators. Welsh and the Postal Service fought over who ought to pay for asbestos abatement and the restore of worn and damaged flooring tiles.
The Postal Service lease, based on Welsh’s assertion, led to January 2022, however USPS continued to occupy the constructing, sans lease, as a “tenant at sufferance.” In February 2023, Welsh demanded the put up workplace vacate the constructing inside a month.
Morris, the legal professional, stated in an electronic mail final week that, though the events have signed a brand new lease, the Postal Service has not instructed Welsh when it expects to maneuver again into the constructing.
Morris stated that, though many of the flooring seems to have been changed and “an asbestos clearance was supplied,” the Postal Service has not supplied his consumer particulars concerning the work.
Kristina Uppal, a Bay Space-based spokeswoman for USPS, instructed The Instances in an electronic mail that she couldn’t present particulars about lease negotiations however that postal companies are anticipated to renew in Bolinas “early fall 2025 in spite of everything vital building is accomplished.”
On March 13, then-Postmaster DeJoy wrote in a letter to a number of members of Congress that the Postal Service would eradicate 10,000 positions inside 30 days by a voluntary early retirement program and that it had eradicated about 30,000 positions since 2021. The letter stated he had signed an settlement with the Basic Providers Administration and members of billionaire Elon Musk’s White Home advisory group, the Division of Authorities Effectivity, to determine additional price financial savings.
DeJoy resigned March 24.
On Friday, the Postal Service’s Board of Governors introduced its choice of David Steiner, a board member for FedEx, a direct USPS competitor, to be the subsequent postmaster basic. Critics, together with the Nationwide Assn. of Letter Carriers, the union representing some 295,000 mail carriers, stated they feared his choice would hasten privatization of the impartial company.
Huffman stated that, through the battle over the Bolinas put up workplace, he discovered the Postal Service — a onetime Cupboard-level division that has operated as an impartial company for half a century — to be unresponsive and, at instances, “deeply unaccountable.”
However privatizing it, he stated, “would make it even worse.”
Bolinas had had a put up workplace since 1863.
After the put up workplace closed, there was no viable industrial actual property on the town to which it might be relocated. And a 1971 water meter moratorium — put into place as a result of Bolinas has a restricted water provide — has successfully prohibited new improvement for the final 54 years.
At one level, residents drafted an in depth proposal for a short lived facility — a cell workplace trailer on a parking zone subsequent to the fireplace station — and supplied to boost $50,000 for its set up. They despatched the plan to a supportive Huffman, who shipped it to DeJoy, to no avail.
Kent Khtikian, a 39-year Bolinas resident, stated his pals’ and neighbors’ hopes for a brand new put up workplace dimmed after Trump returned to the White Home partially as a result of they stay in ultra-liberal Marin County, the place 81% of voters solid their ballots for Kamala Harris within the November presidential election in contrast with 17% who selected Trump.
John Borg hangs an indication on Friday exterior the soon-to-reopen put up workplace in Bolinas, Calif.
(Chris Borg)
“It’s actually a reduction to have the put up workplace again,” stated Khtikian, a retired legal professional who helped with the residents’ marketing campaign. “Whereas there are actually a lot larger issues on the earth, it’s an instance of what might be accomplished by individuals not giving up and never being discouraged and believing of their capacity to be efficient.”
Enzo Resta, a longtime resident and founding father of the Bolinas Movie Pageant, in contrast the Bolinas put up workplace to an Italian piazza — a spot of serendipitous run-ins and “the poetry of neighborhood engagement.”
“It’s fairly stunning to see all walks of life, all demographics, all age teams, all private pursuits, all cultural pursuits be unified in coming collectively to say: This a part of our neighborhood issues,” Resta stated.
As of Friday, there’s a brand new hand-painted signal on the town.
Affixed to the outside wall of the still-closed put up workplace, it reads: “Coming Fall 2025 Bolinas Put up Workplace 94924. Hooray!”