Canada Post officially opened the Albert Jackson Processing Centre, a leading-edge parcel sorting facility built to improve service for Canadians and businesses and fuel ecommerce in Canada for decades to come.

Bolstering Canada’s largest delivery network, this facility is Canada Post’s largest, fastest and greenest parcel sorting facility. It has doubled the company’s processing capacity in the Greater Toronto Area – where most of Canada’s parcels originate.

“The Albert Jackson Processing Centre is much more than a building – it is a generational investment in the future of our country,” said Doug Ettinger, president and CEO of Canada Post. “This facility will drive our network nationwide and help support the Canadian economy for decades to come. It will solidify Canada Post as our country’s ecommerce delivery leader.”

The new $470-million, zero-carbon facility, located at 1395 Tapscott Road in Scarborough, can process one million packages a day at full capacity, making it Canada’s new ecommerce hub.

“More than ever, Canada needs a strong Canada Post. As Canadians increasingly rely on ecommerce, the ability to effectively deliver goods to every community will be integral to our country’s future,” says the Jean-Yves Duclos, Minister of Public Services and Procurement, and the minister responsible for Canada Post. “With the opening of the Albert Jackson Processing Centre, Canada Post will have the capacity it needs to enable future ecommerce growth and the transformation of our retail economy.”

While the facility positions the company for future growth, its name serves as an important reminder of the past. Albert Jackson was the first Black letter carrier in Canada. He had to fight to overcome significant racial barriers in the workplace, including the right to work in the position he was hired for. Canada Post was honoured to have several members of the Jackson family, including one who currently works for the company, attend the grand opening ceremony.

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“This incredible new facility is creating jobs right here in Scarborough and celebrating and honouring the life and legacy of Toronto’s own Albert Jackson,” said Gary Anandasangaree, Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations and MP for Scarborough-Rouge Park. “Albert Jackson’s remarkable story reminds us of the importance of creating workplaces free of systematic racism, harassment and discrimination – and that racism, and anti-Black racism, has no place in our society.”

Jean-Yves Duclos, Minister of Public Services and Procurement, Gary Anandasangaree, Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations, Doug Ettinger, CEO and president, Canada Post, Jan Simpson, national president, Canadian Union of Postal Workers, Rick Williams, 1st national vice president, Association of Postal Officials of Canada, Councillor Jamaal Myers, Ward 23 Scarborough North and Albert Jackson family members (CNW Group/Canada Post)

About the facility:

  • It is able to sort more than 60,000 packages per hour – 50 per cent more than Canada Post’s Gateway facility in Mississauga, previously the company’s largest parcel plant.
  • The facility has the capacity to process more than one million packages a day.
  • A package can arrive, be processed and be ready for dispatch in less than four minutes.
  • The building is 585,000 square feet – roughly the size of six CFL football fields – and contains nearly eight kilometres of conveyors.
  • It is Canada Post’s first zero-carbon building and the largest industrial project in Canada with the Zero Carbon Building Standard designation.
  • Rooftop solar panels generate clean, renewable energy onsite.
  • Approximately 900 employees work at the facility.
  • The facility is an important piece of Canada Post’s transformation plan and will help the company deliver on its purpose: A Stronger Canada – Delivered.

Featured image: (Canada Post)

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