City postal zones Numbered postal zones were first used in
Toronto in 1925. Mail to a Toronto address in zone 5 would be addressed in this format: 37 Bloor Street West Toronto 5, Ontario As of 1943, Toronto was divided into 14 zones, numbered from 1 to 15, except that 7 and 11 were unused, and there was a 2B zone. Postal zones were implemented in
Montreal in 1944. By the early 1960s, other cities in Canada had been divided into postal zones, including
Quebec,
Ottawa,
Winnipeg, and
Vancouver as well as Toronto and Montreal. For example, an address in Vancouver would be addressed as: 804 Robson Street Vancouver 1, B.C. In the late 1960s, however, the Post Office began implementing a three-digit zone number scheme in major cities to replace existing one- and two-digit zone numbers, starting in Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver. For example, an address in Metropolitan Toronto would be addressed as: 1253 Bay Street Toronto 185, Ontario Toronto's renumbering took effect 1 May 1969, accompanied by an advertising campaign under the slogan "Your number is up". However, with impending plans for a national postal code system, then–Postmaster General
Eric Kierans announced that the Post Office would begin cancelling the new three-digit city zone system. Companies had changed their mail addressing at their own expense, only to find that the new zoning would prove to be short-lived.
Planning As the largest Canadian cities grew in the 1950s and 1960s, the volume of mail passing through the country's postal system also grew, to billions of items by the 1950s and tens of billions of items by the mid-1960s. Consequently, it became progressively more difficult for employees who handsorted mail to memorize and keep track of all the individual letter-carrier routes within each city. New technology that allowed mail to be delivered faster also contributed to the pressure for these employees to sort the mail properly. A report
tabled in the
House of Commons in 1969 dealt with the expected impact of "environmental change" on the Post Office operations over the following 25 years. A key recommendation was the "establishment of a task force to determine the nature of the automation and mechanization the Post Office should adopt, which might include design of a postal code". In December 1969, Communications Minister
Eric Kierans announced that a six-character postal code would be introduced, superseding the three-digit zone system. He later tabled a report in February 1970, entitled "A Canadian Public Address Postal Coding System", submitted by the firm of Samson, Belair, Simpson, Riddell Inc.
Implementation Canada was one of the last Western countries to implement a nationwide postal code system. The introduction of the postal code began with a test in
Ottawa on 1 April 1971. Coding of Ottawa was followed by a provincial-level rollout of the system in
Manitoba, and the system was gradually implemented in the rest of the country from 1972 to 1974, although the nationwide use of the code by the end of 1974 was only 38.2 per cent. The introduction of such a code system allowed Canada Post to easily speed up and simplify the flow of mail in the country, with sorting machines being able to handle 26,640 objects an hour. The
Canadian Union of Postal Workers objected to the automated sorting system, mainly because the wages for those who ran the new automated machines were much lower than for those who had hand-sorted mail. The unions ended up staging job action and public information campaigns, with the message that they did not want people or businesses to use postal codes on their mail. The union declared 20 March 1975 to be National "Boycott the Postal Code" Day, also demanding a reduction in the work week from 40 to 30 hours. The boycott was called off in February 1976 after a new collective agreement was signed with the CUPW. One 1975 advertisement in the Toronto magazine
Byliner generated controversy by showing a man writing a postal code on the bottom of a
thonged woman with the following ditty: "We're not 'stringing' you along, Use postal codes – you'll 'thing' our 'thong', Don't be cheeky – you've all got 'em Please include them on the bottom." The advertisement was denounced as "sexist garbage" in the
House of Commons by
NDP MP
John Rodriguez, prompting an apology from
Postmaster General Bryce Mackasey. ==Components of a postal code==