Thanks for the laugh.
Originally Posted by: Yunqi 
Thanks for the responses and information. I just watched some YouTube videos about the job. There is a lot of good stuff on YouTube.
It appears to me that the CCA position is basically a full-time job most places. I even saw a USPS advertisement, from a few years ago, for the position which said "full-time".
Likely not an add from the USPS. But from some firm telling you they can help you get a job. Or you missed the part where the ad said "leads to a FT job".
Originally Posted by: Yunqi 
One video from 2018 said that as a CCA he usually worked Amazon Sunday. Where I live, Amazon has a lot of their own trucks delivering packages, so I wonder if Amazon Sunday still exists in 2021?
You would have to ask the local USPS employees if they are still working Sundays. I don't have a local Amazon hub, yet. And not all areas have Sunday delivery. If you have an Amazon hub, you would have had Sunday USPS delivery.
Originally Posted by: Yunqi 
The same video explained why CCA's usually work 10 hour days. He said that the regular carriers stop after 8 hours, then a CCA will finish the routes which are behind schedule. The reasoning was that the USPS would rather pay the "lower paid" CCA overtime, than the regular carrier OT. The regular carriers obviously earn more per hour. Is that correct?
There is usually enough employees on vacation, sick calls or injured that the full time employees that want to work OT will be working OT. With people having to sit out from "covid exposures", many people are working 10 hour days.
Originally Posted by: Yunqi 
I had previously received a Conditional Offer for a Rural Carrier Associate position further from my house. Besides driving my own car, it seemed as if the hours were random. Everything I've read about the CCA position indicates 50+ hours a week.
Each office will be different. A couple of years ago my office had enough CCAs and every full time employee was working, that the CCAs were getting less than 30 hours for 3 weeks.
I wonder if the person that put that video up would say the same things today, 1-3 years later?