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PUBLIC
NOTICE
Centralized Processing of
Returned BNC Mail
This month,
the Judiciary’s Bankruptcy Noticing Center (BNC)
contractor will begin accepting, processing and
securely disposing of notices that would otherwise
be returned to the bankruptcy courts by the United
States Postal Service (USPS). The service will
eliminate nearly all manual processing of returned
mail currently performed by court personnel and
will provide timely notification to debtors’
attorneys of returned notices.
Currently,
BNC returned mail goes either to the court or to
debtors’ attorneys. As a cost-savings and
efficiency measure, bankruptcy courts have been
strongly urged to have most returned mail sent to
the debtor’s attorney, which provides notice
that a better address for such recipient should be
provided to the court. This procedure is not
changing. What does change, however, is that those
pieces of mail that are currently directed for
return to the bankruptcy courts will now be
handled in one facility through the new
centralized return mail program.
Under the
terms of the revised contract, the BNC contractor
will have two business days from receipt to
process the returned mail, and the contractor’s
system will autogenerate a Notice of Returned Mail
email notification to the debtor’s attorney,
with a copy of the notice as a PDF attachment,
advising of the returned mail by the USPS. If no
attorney email address is available or if the
debtor is pro se, the Notice of Returned Mail will
be sent by U.S. mail to the attorney or pro se
debtor, as appropriate.
Thus,
beginning this month, debtors’ attorneys will
start to receive returned mail in bankruptcy cases
in two different ways: regular USPS mail for the
majority of items where the return address is the
debtor’s attorney, and email Notices of Returned
Mail for returned mail that would have been sent
back to the bankruptcy court.
A sample
Notice of Returned Mail is provided below.

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