Let’s see if we can keep all this straight.
The Rutherford College Town Hall, on Malcolm Boulevard in the heart of the small municipality, is in Rutherford College, right?
Where else would it be?
Well, according to the U.S. Postal Service, Town Hall’s address is 980 Malcolm Blvd., Connelly Springs, with a ZIP Code of 28612.
But, hold on there Pete, the Rutherford College Post Office is less than a quarter mile back up Malcolm Boulevard toward U.S. 70.
Is it in Rutherford College or Connelly Springs?
Yes and no for either way you want to answer that one.
Yes, it is within the town limits of Rutherford College. But, if we want to get technical here, no, because it too has a Connelly Springs physical address.
Confused yet?
Maybe this will clarify.
The Rutherford College Post Office, with a ZIP Code of 28671, has about 425 post office boxes rented, most of them to the tune of $39 for six months.
If you want to have a Rutherford College mailing address, you gotta rent a post office box. Put up a mailbox in front of your house, and the address will be Connelly Springs.
Unless, that is, you live on a street or two on the west side of town, and then you’ll have a Valdese mailing address.
Still confused, and likely to stay that way?
Well, the Rutherford College Town Council would like to clear things up and have called on our congressman, U.S. Rep. Tim Moore, to help.
Monday night, the council unanimously agreed to put their names on a letter to Moore asking his assistance in “establishing an official U.S. Postal Service mail route within our municipality jurisdiction.”
The council said not having a designated route for the municipality results in inconsistent delivery of mail and packages, and not just church newsletters and L.L. Bean catalogs.
Instead, they argue, the lack of a designated mail route can cause delays in the delivery of prescription medications, government and legal documents, and time-sensitive communications.
The letter to Moore also noted that the absence of a municipal USPS route has “created complications regarding standardized 911 addressing” and increasing response times for both EMS and fire services.
“It’s a little ridiculous,” said Mayor Yates Jensen. “We had a situation recently where a lady at our church (Abernethy Memorial) collapsed and there was some confusion about the address even though we’re basically in sight of the fire station.”
Moore took little time in responding to the plea from Rutherford College.
“I got pretty infuriated at first because I thought the USPS was trying to take away a service,” he said in a phone call from his office in Washington. “I made a call to the Postal Service immediately.”
By mid-afternoon on Wednesday, a letter bearing Moore’s signature had been sent to Postmaster General David Steiner stating, “I am writing to urge the creation of a designated postal route for Rutherford College and a formal recognition of Rutherford College as an acceptable mailing address.”
Moore’s letter made note of the potential delay in emergency services due to the address inconsistencies, saying, “When addresses cannot be properly verified, response times are delayed, and lives are put at risk.”
“We’ll keep pushing on this,” Moore told The Paper. “And we’ll get the White House involved if we need to.”
Shannon Raby, postmistress of the Rutherford College Post Office, said the building is small and has limited loading dock space, which could make difficult the transition to a facility that provides route service also.
“That’s the kind of decision that will be made by folks a whole lot higher up the food chain than me,” she said.




(1) comment
Here are a few more reference points to help the writer "get this straight." Not only is Rutherford College bracketed on the south, west, and north sides by Valdese, a full city block anchoring the center of Rutherford College is Valdese. The economic impact of Valdese Weavers and CVS Pharmacy on the south, Valdese Hospital and College Pines in the central "anchor" block and the medical offices they support, and the traffic flowing to and from Valdese's Lakeside Park and Lake Vista Estate development contribute mightily to R.C.'s economic benefit. Valdese provides fire and police support to the Valdese Hospital and College Pines Assisted living facility. Neither business has a local connection any longer. They are owned by multi-billion-dollar corporations; one in Chapel Hill and one in Texas. The answer I got 20 years ago when I asked why these two towns haven't merged, boiled down to ego, jurisdictional jealousy, and memories of "my parents who worked in Valdese textile mills donated part of their pay to create Valdese Hospital." The response was similar two years ago when one of my town council emails published by this paper raised the question, "why doesn't Valdese 'de-annex' that R.C. block and let the county or R.C. take responsibility for supporting those properties that are exempt from property taxes?" No doubt it will take a couple more generations to grow out of the shackles of historic, irrelevant status quo. Meanwhile, a simple solution for the USPS and everyone else would be to make everything west of the boundaries of Connelley Springs, zip code 28690. That zip code already serves twice as many residents as live in the Town of Valdese.
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