For generations, the blue mailbox on the corner of Bomberry Street and Clubhouse Drive was a meeting place where neighbors caught up while walking the dog or pushing the baby stroller.
Then, one day this summer, it vanished.
For generations, the blue mailbox on the corner of Bomberry Street and Clubhouse Drive was a meeting place where neighbors caught up while walking the dog or pushing the baby stroller.
Then, one day this summer, it vanished.
Postal officials determined that the mailbox, along with 17 others in Lakewood, was not being used enough and should be removed.
To residents, it was like losing a trusted neighbor.
"It was more than just a convenient place to drop off your mail," said Larry Benarth, who lives a few houses from the corner. "It was a gathering point."
The people of Clubhouse Drive decided to fight for their mailbox -- and they're not alone.
Across the nation, the U.S. Postal Service's familiar blue boxes have been disappearing from neighborhood street corners as more people look to the Internet to stay in touch and pay their bills.
The post office has reduced 42,000 boxes to scrap metal since 1999. About 295,050 boxes remained standing as of 2005.
The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks accelerated the removals. Officials took out scores of boxes around landmarks like the U.S. Capitol out of concern that explosive devices could be placed inside them.
But in most of the areas that have had boxes removed, the issue was less about homeland security than lack of use.
Several communities in Northern and Central California have been particularly hard-hit. San Leandro's postmaster announced in May that she planned to remove 30 of the city's 103 collection boxes, mostly from smaller neighborhoods. More than a third of the boxes in Salinas were removed after a routine collection survey. San Jose has lost more than a third of its boxes since 2000.
In Lakewood, the boxes simply became too expensive to maintain for so little business, Post Officer-In-Charge Steve Ham said.
Not only do mail collectors have to make fruitless trips to underused boxes, but they must also deal with graffiti and random objects dropped inside, he said.
"Our guys find soda pop dumped into them, liquor bottles, firecrackers, animal feces, cherry bombs," Ham said. "We're constantly having maintenance go around and clean graffiti."
Collections surveys found that removing the boxes in Lakewood would result in fewer than 25 pieces of mail a day having to be posted elsewhere.
"We're not just going to leave them sitting out there if we're not picking up any mail from them," Ham said.