Likely loss of High Barnet post office another blow for High Street and has angered loyal customers

13 Nov 2024
Written by Nick Jones

High Barnet is likely to lose its crown post office. It is one of 115 branches on a list for possible closure which has been announced by the Post Office’s new chairman Nigel Railton as part of what he says will have to be a radical shake-up of the business.

The loss of the post office would be another serious blow to Barnet High Street which has struggled in recent years to attract new shops and retail businesses.

Immediately after the announcement there was shock and disbelief among customers arriving at the post office to mail letters or use counter services such as Post Office banking.

Dan Tomlinson, MP for Chipping Barnet, said he was contacting the Post Office urgently for more information.

“Post offices are key to our local community. I will continue to campaign for the protection of these vital services.”

He has urged his constituents to sign a petition which has been launched in collaboration with High Barnet Labour councillors Emma Whysall and Paul Edwards. 

https://chng.it/KXJ9MDMFQY

In recent years the Post Office has stocked a wide range of stationery and other business supplies to boost trade.

Closure would mean the loss of nine jobs.  Staff said they had been fearing the worst and were waiting to hear more details from their branch representative for the Communication Workers Union.

Hampstead and Golders Green post offices are also on the list facing the axe.

If the High Barnet closure goes ahead – and the franchise is not taken over by another High Street retailer – among other post offices nearby are those in Regents Park Road, Finchley; Mill Hill Broadway; Holders Hill Road; Darkes Lane, Potters Bar; and Shenley Road, Borehamwood.

Barnet Post Office – which was rebuilt in 1905 – has a distinguished history having been a regular stopping off point for mail coaches heading out of London for Scotland and the north.

In more recent years it has regained importance following the closure of several High Street banks and the development of the Post Office’s banking services.

Customer Alex was shocked by the news because he relied on the Post Office counter service following the closure of the Halifax building society.

“Now that we have lost the Halifax, I do my banking at the Post Office.

“If it closes, this will cause me real difficulties and the same goes for a lot of regular customers.”

Pensioner John McGonigal was very disappointed with the announcement. He thought it would be a real blow for pensioners.

Mary agreed that losing the Post Office would be a pain in the neck.

“Pensioners rely on its services because we cannot do everything online like the youngsters.

“We just can’t keep up to date with all the technology so it will be the elderly who will be penalised yet again.”

Richard Bridges, just heading inside to get stamps for some letters, hoped the decision could be reconsidered because a post office in the High Street provided “a vital service”.

The current building, which bears the ER motif of King Edward VII, was designed by Jasper Wagner.

Set in the wall, just above the pavement, between the front door and the letter box, is one of the original boundary stones of the ancient parish of Chipping Barnet.

Until the 1930s Barnet was one of the best-known coaching towns on the outskirts of London.

When the mail coach for Scotland left St Martins-le-Grand one of the first stops on the Great North Road was Barnet post office where it picked up mail

Categories: News

5 thoughts on “Likely loss of High Barnet post office another blow for High Street and has angered loyal customers

  1. Very sad to hear but not really surprising. 40 year of markets know best neo liberalism has done so much damage to the country. Really need a change of direction. The gap between ourselves and other countries I visit around Europe has become embarrassing.

  2. Please sign the petition started by the local councillors against the closure

    https://chng.it/KXJ9MDMFQY

  3. What one doesn’t always appreciate with threatened closures like this of High Barnet’s post office and others in the network, is the impact that on other businesses nearby and the attractive of the area from that perspective. And, we won’t fully know the extent of that impact – how negative it will be – until the facility is closed and some time in the future. The U.K. government should act and intervene on these closures. I hope our new Chipping Barnet MP will be pushing that line in communications with the authorities that be. A sad for the high street.

  4. Society operates, as you put it, ‘like everything’s a business that can be shut down’, because we, as an electorate, have opted for governments that view capitalism as the central building block of society for many decades.

    The Tory / Lib Dem coalition privatised the Post Office. From that point, it became beholden to the markets. Hence, if it is loss-making, cuts need to be made.

    House builders are also private companies – Margaret Thatcher all but put an end to social housing on a broad scale many years ago, handing the responsibility over to profit-making organisations.

    To summarise, you reap what you sow. There is no conspiracy on the part of ‘the ruling classes’. Indeed, who are ‘they’?

    I would also be keen to know what specific factual evidence exists to support the assertion that new housing developments ‘prioritise immigrants’.

  5. At some point people are going to wake up and realise that the ruling class utterly despise us. They won’t stop until everything we’ve built as a society over the last few centuries is gone.

    What we need is a new citizens first political system that doesn’t operate like everything’s a business that can be shut down whenever they feel like it. And how about withdrawing funding from things we don’t need, like new housing developments on green belt land that appears to prioritise providing new homes for immigrants rather than locals, and instead put it into saving vital institutions like the Post Office?

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