
Will mail get delivered on the Fourth of July? Do UPS and FedEx deliver on Independence Day?
Here's what to know about your regular mail delivery on July 4.
No, mail will not be delivered on Independence Day as it is a federal holiday.
According to the FedEx holiday service schedule, FedEx Express will have modified service on Thursday, July 3, while other services will remain open. But on Friday, July 4, most services will be closed. FedEx Custom Critical will still operate. Some FedEx Office locations will have modified hours on the holiday, but others will be closed; check with your local store for more information.

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Fox News
4 hours ago
- Fox News
Honoring The United Service Organizations
In celebration of Independence Day, we offer a tribute to our men and women in the armed services. The United Service Organizations (USO) supports military members and their families, from their deployment to their transition back to civilian life. Janice revisits a conversation with USO Northeast Regional President Rebecca Parkes to discuss the history of the USO, as well as the future of the organization and how they plan to evolve to meet the needs of new generations of service men and women. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit

Los Angeles Times
7 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Big Bear's famed bald eagles flew the coop after July 4 fireworks
Big Bear Lake's famed bald eagle couple has flown the coop, and naturalists are pointing to the city's July 4th fireworks celebration as the likely culprit. Jackie and Shadow and their lake-view aerie are the subjects of a 24-hour online webcam that has been monitoring the couple since 2018, when Shadow replaced Jackie's previous mate. The pair have attracted tens of thousands of viewers around the world as they have hatched and reared a combined five eaglets, including Sunny and Gizmo earlier this year. But on Friday night, the booms and blasts of celebratory fireworks appear to have frightened them away. 'Jackie and Shadow were not in the Roost Tree this morning,' wrote Sandy Steers, executive director of Friends of Big Bear Valley, Saturday. The observation was made on the group's Facebook page, where Steers chronicles the comings and goings of the internet-famous eagles and their babies (a third sibling also hatched March, but died later that month). 'And none of their usual vocals were heard from anywhere nearby.' Friends of Big Bear Valley had been issuing warnings ahead of Independence Day, saying it was opposed to a local fireworks that would result in 'devastation created for 30 minutes of instant gratification.' It had circulated a petition with 40,000 signatures and argued that fireworks could be especially hard on Sunny and Gizmo. The young siblings were last seen soaring together on June 27, around when the organization said that it was unclear if they 'are still in the area or if they have expanded their horizons and are off on their journeys away from the habitat.' Friends of Big Bear Valley runs the camera that's 145 feet up a Jeffrey pine tree overlooking Big Bear Lake. The group is typically cautious about identifying the couple's whereabouts in order to avoid attracting crowds to their habitat. It has also asked fans to not share or solicit location information and, in its online updates, uses non-identifiable tree names, such as 'Roost Tree' or 'Lookout Snag,' when describing their whereabouts. Ahead of the fireworks show, Visit Big Bear, a Facebook page affiliated with the city's Visitors Center and tourism industry, said it was confident the show would not harm the eagles' habitat. 'While fireworks may startle them, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has confirmed that the event is not expected to cause nest failure. As always, we've sited the fireworks barge away from the nest to reduce risk,' said a post to the tourism group's Facebook page. On Saturday, Steers posted a play-by-play of the two parents' daytime activities on July 4. Steers could not be directly reached for comment on Saturday. 'Jackie and Shadow were seen together on their favorite Roost Tree, chortling out their morning song and then working on waking up enough to start their day. When they headed out, one of them dropped by the Lookout Snag to check everything around the habitat before continuing to their next destination,' she wrote. By the mid-evening, Steers said 'either Jackie or Shadow was on the Twin Pines, hanging out and checking out the surrounding neighborhood. They even turned around to give a nice front view while they scanned around the other side of the neighborhood. And by a little after 8 p.m., Jackie and Shadow both chortled out an announcement that they were in the Roost Tree. They were settled in, near each other and ready for sleep by 8:30.' Booms started around 9 p.m., Steers said. At that point, 'one of the eagles was no longer visible on the Roost Tree and was seen by our security camera flying away from the Roost Tree. Jackie made a peal call (a call emitted as a warning about danger) and a couple other short calls from nearby.' Steers said the 'full show' began at 9:17 and, a minute late 'no eagles were visible.' Since then, the group has offered no updates. The eagles, for now, are gone, though they may come back at a later time. 'We will all be sending out hope for their speedy return,' Steers wrote.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Driver Coaching Scripts That Actually Improve CSA Scores
Most fleets don't have a safety problem—they have a communication problem. Unsafe driving, HOS violations, maintenance issues—those don't happen in a vacuum. They happen when expectations aren't clear, coaching is inconsistent, and drivers feel like they're being scolded, not supported. If you want to improve your CSA scores, it's not about throwing another training module at your team. It's about coaching with purpose. It's about having real conversations that drivers actually respond to—conversations rooted in clarity, accountability, and respect. You don't need a safety department the size of FedEx to make this work. You need leadership. You need systems. And most importantly, you need a script that doesn't just recite violations—but actually helps drivers fix them. Let's break down exactly what those coaching scripts look like, how to deliver them, and how they drive real results across your safety scores. Here's the problem: too many safety talks sound like this— 'You've got to stop speeding.''Your logs were off again.''This truck should've never gone out with that violation.' That's not coaching. That's criticism. When drivers feel attacked, they shut down. When they feel like they're just being written up, they focus on staying off your radar—not actually fixing behavior. Good coaching does three things: Acknowledges the issue Breaks down the root cause Offers a clear plan to correct and prevent it If your safety scores aren't where they should be, look at your conversations first. Because coaching—done right—is the fastest way to close the gap between performance and expectation. Before we dive into the actual scripts, let's get something straight. Every coaching conversation should follow this basic framework: Connect – Open the conversation without judgment. Build trust first. Observe – Bring up the issue clearly and factually. Ask – Give the driver space to explain. Don't assume. Educate – Tie the behavior to its consequences (CSA, downtime, legal exposure). Commit – End with a clear, mutual action step. Think of it as the COACH model—Connect, Observe, Ask, Clarify, Help. Now let's look at how to apply this in real conversations that actually improve behavior and move the needle on your CSA profile. The Situation: Your driver was cited for speeding in a 55 mph zone during a roadside inspection. The Wrong Way: 'You can't be speeding like that. That violation hit our CSA score hard. It's unacceptable.' The Right Way: 'Hey [Driver Name], I wanted to check in about that inspection last week. I saw the officer clocked you at 68 in a 55. Before we jump in, how's everything going on that route? Anything unusual happened that day?' [Let them talk. Then continue.] 'Thanks for sharing that. Look, I know you've been solid on most runs, and I appreciate that. But this violation puts points on our Unsafe Driving BASIC—and it stays there for two years. That impacts our insurance, our ability to land new freight, and our inspections moving forward.' 'I want to make sure we're both on the same page. Can you walk me through what happened in that moment? Was it signage, time pressure, something else?' 'Going forward, let's make a habit of setting that cruise at 5 under the limit in known inspection zones. I'll get you a map of hot spots we've seen violations pop up in. Let's knock this down together.' Why It Works: You're not lecturing—you're collaborating. You show awareness of the issue, open the door to feedback, and tie the behavior directly to operational outcomes. The Situation: Your driver had several logbook errors flagged—missing location entries and off-duty gaps. The Wrong Way: 'You've got to clean up your logs. This is basic stuff. I can't keep getting dinged for this.' The Right Way: 'Hey [Driver Name], I noticed a few things on your logs from last week—some missing location data and an off-duty segment that didn't match up. I wanted to see if we could take five minutes to look at it together.' [Open the logbook together and review.] 'I know the ELDs can be a pain, and they're not always intuitive. But this stuff impacts our HOS score—and that's one of the first things DOT checks during an inspection.' 'What's been your process lately when changing duty status or taking breaks? Are you using the app on your phone or the tablet in the cab?' 'Let's set a quick routine. Before you go off-duty, take 10 seconds to double-check your status and log a location. I'll send out a cheat sheet today just as a reminder. It's small stuff—but it adds up fast.' Why It Works: You're teaching, not blaming. You ask about their process, offer support, and introduce a repeatable habit. That's how you reduce violations over time. The Situation: A roadside inspection took your truck out of service for a worn tire and a faulty light. The Wrong Way: 'This should've been caught on your pre-trip. Are you even doing your inspections?' The Right Way: 'Hey [Driver Name], I wanted to circle back to the roadside inspection from last Thursday. We got hit with two violations—tread depth and a marker light. Can we talk through your pre-trip that morning?' [Let them explain.] 'I know you've got a lot on your plate, and we're all trying to get rolling early, but these issues put us out of service. That costs time, money, and hurts our Maintenance BASIC.' 'Let's do this: starting this week, I want you to snap a photo of your tires during your pre-trip and text it in. Same thing if you find a light issue. That way, we have a visual record—and we can catch things before DOT does.' 'I'm not coming down on you. I just want to make sure we're both doing everything we can to keep those trucks rolling clean.' Why It Works: You reinforce expectations without accusation. You introduce a simple accountability system that benefits everyone. And you keep it team-oriented. The Situation: A backing accident at a customer yard. No injuries, minor damage, but still DOT reportable. The Wrong Way: 'You've got to be more careful. This kind of stuff is unacceptable.' The Right Way: 'Hey [Driver Name], I appreciate you reporting the incident last night. First off, are you okay? I know even small accidents can shake you up.' [Let them speak. Acknowledge.] 'Thanks for walking me through that. Backing at that location has been tight for years—I've seen other drivers struggle there too.' 'Still, every crash puts a mark on our record. It hits our Crash Indicator score and can trigger more inspections—even if it wasn't entirely your fault.' 'Let's work together on a checklist for tight docks. Maybe we set a policy—if the space is blindside or below a certain width, you call dispatch and we walk it out together over the phone before backing.' 'The goal isn't to point fingers. The goal is to protect you, the truck, and our record. You with me?' Why It Works: You focus on the driver's well-being, acknowledge the challenge, then co-create a solution. That's real leadership. Be consistent. Don't wait for violations to coach—have monthly performance check-ins. Track trends. If multiple drivers are making the same mistake, your process is broken—not the driver. Document the conversation. Not for punishment—but for improvement tracking and legal protection. Follow up. Check back in after two weeks. 'Hey, how's that new log process working for you?' When drivers know you're invested in their success—not just their mistakes—you build a safety culture that lasts. Your CSA score isn't just a number—it's a reflection of your leadership. And leadership shows up in how you coach your drivers when things go wrong. Don't lead with blame. Lead with purpose. Use every violation as an opportunity to teach, support, and strengthen your team. Because when coaching is done right, it doesn't just fix prevents them. The post Driver Coaching Scripts That Actually Improve CSA Scores appeared first on FreightWaves.