Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Deepak Chopra Announces He'll Leave Canada Post In The Spring Of 2018

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Aug, 2017 12:29 PM
    OTTAWA — The head of Canada's postal service has announced he plans to step down next spring, nearly three years before his contract was set to expire.
     
    Canada Post says Deepak Chopra has advised the Crown corporation's board of directors that he intends leave his position on March 31, 2018.
     
    Chopra's signalled departure comes as the federal Liberal government ruminates about whether to restore door-to-door mail delivery to tens of thousands of homes.
     
    The former Pitney Bowes Canada executive joined the agency in 2011 as it faced a dramatic shift in revenue streams, from declining mail volumes to a growing parcel delivery business.
     
    The previous Conservative government had renewed his contract prior to the 2015 election, effective Feb. 2016, despite criticisms of Canada Post's cost-cutting moves, including the phase-out of door-to-door delivery.
     
     
    The move to community mailboxes became a hot topic during the 2015 campaign, with the Liberals winning power under a platform that included a promise to review the home delivery decision.
     
    Once in office, the Liberals placed a moratorium on any future conversions of home delivery to community mailboxes.
     
    A spokesperson for Public Services and Procurement Minister Judy Foote, who has been on leave from her cabinet post, said a decision on the future of home delivery was expected some time before the end of 2017.
     
    The president of the union representing postal workers said he hopes Chopra's departure signals an end to cost-cutting at Canada Post and a renewed commitment by the postal agency to maintain the services Canadians want.
     
     
    Chopra leaves "a legacy of failed cuts," said Canadian Union of Postal Workers national president Mike Palecek.
     
    "So, hopefully this will be a new chapter for Canada Post."
     
    Chopra was among dozens of people appointed to plum patronage posts in the dying days of Stephen Harper's Conservative government who were asked, once the Liberals took power, to voluntarily step down.
     
    Chopra, who was reportedly paid an estimated $500,000 annually, declined to do so.
     
    In a statement, Canada Post said Chopra has left an enduring legacy that has positioned the corporation as the country's leader in e-commerce delivery in the face of declining mail deliveries, noting that the agency delivered two billion fewer pieces of mail last year than at its peak in 2006.
     
     
    The agency said Chopra had also co-operated with the government as it reviewed the mandate of Canada Post.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario To Test Giving Seniors Retirement Home Stays To Ease Hospital Overcrowding

    Ontario To Test Giving Seniors Retirement Home Stays To Ease Hospital Overcrowding
    TORONTO — Offering recuperating seniors free stays in retirement homes is one of the measures the Ontario government will be testing as it tries to tackle the issue of overcrowded hospitals.

    Ontario To Test Giving Seniors Retirement Home Stays To Ease Hospital Overcrowding

    Two Thirds Of Electricity In Canada Now Comes From Renewable Energy

    Two Thirds Of Electricity In Canada Now Comes From Renewable Energy
    OTTAWA — Two-thirds of Canada's electricity supply now comes from renewable sources such as hydro and wind power, the National Energy Board said in a report released Tuesday.

    Two Thirds Of Electricity In Canada Now Comes From Renewable Energy

    Three Former Wives Thwart Indian Man's Fourth Attempt At Marriage

    The three women approached police two days ago and alleged that 30-year-old Danish married for the first time in 2013 and made an obscene MMS of his wife.

    Three Former Wives Thwart Indian Man's Fourth Attempt At Marriage

    Harjit Sajjan To Reveal Military Spending 'Hole' In Set-up For New Defence Policy

    Harjit Sajjan To Reveal Military Spending 'Hole' In Set-up For New Defence Policy
    OTTAWA — Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan is expected to set the stage Wednesday for the Liberals' much-anticipated defence policy by casting a glaring light on what senior defence sources say is a massive "hole" in military spending.

    Harjit Sajjan To Reveal Military Spending 'Hole' In Set-up For New Defence Policy

    Five Things To Know About The Controversy Around Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan

    Five Things To Know About The Controversy Around Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan
    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan was again defending himself in the Commons on Tuesday, repeating his apology for claiming to have been the architect of Operation Medusa

    Five Things To Know About The Controversy Around Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan

    Canadian Military Grappling With Years Of Underfunding, Harjit Sajjan Acknowledges

    Canadian Military Grappling With Years Of Underfunding, Harjit Sajjan Acknowledges
    The comments to defence industry representations and experts came as the Liberal government prepares to unveil its new defence policy, which Sajjan promised would begin to fix some of the problems.

    Canadian Military Grappling With Years Of Underfunding, Harjit Sajjan Acknowledges