Aug. 13, 2024

USPS Maui Postmaster Installation Event a ‘Family Affair’

Mother-and-Son Postmasters, Third-Generation USPS Employee Featured

Maui Postmaster Installation Event
Caption: (From left) Veach, Moore, Boydstun, Cariazo, Harris, Almeida, Boteilho & Sobieraj

MAUI – The U.S Postal Service’s Hawaii leadership team visited the Valley Isle last week to recognize and officially install seven Maui County postmasters.

The installation event was a unique family affair, featuring mother and son postmasters Michelle Almeida and Chris Harris, and Danielle Boteilho, a third-generation USPS employee following in the footsteps of her grandmother.

USPS Hawaii District Manager Eileen Veach and Manager of Post Office Operations Ty Sobieraj congratulated and administered the official oaths of office to Almeida (Kihei postmaster), Boteilho (Makawao), David Boydstun (Lahaina), Jun Cariazo (Kula), Harris (Puunene), Brandyann Moore (Kaunakakai), and Marlene Nagata (Paia).

“This event is a celebration of family heritage, and of our commitment to the shared values that bind the community together,” said Veach. “These postmasters carry on the legacy of the postal leaders who came before them and lay the groundwork for those who will follow.”

The simultaneous postmaster positions held by Almeida and Harris mirror their experience in 2010 when their tours of military duty in Afghanistan overlapped.

My mother’s dedication and passion for her postal and military careers have been a tremendous source of inspiration for me, and motivated me to follow in her footsteps,” said Harris. “Her postal career has shown me the value of service and that working hard can make a real difference!

“It’s a unique and rewarding experience to work at adjacent post offices and to be able to collaborate with my mother on projects that benefit our customers and employees.”

Almeida notes that she was initially surprised when Harris opted for a postal career. “I was on active military duty and didn’t even know that Chris was applying,” she said. “It surprised me because he had seen the amount of effort and sacrifice that is required of a rewarding management career with the post office.

“I’m very proud of Chris. He took on job assignments all across the state in order to demonstrate his strengths and abilities, and to successfully earn his own standing.

“Throughout my career I’ve talked about my ‘postal ohana’ at my post office, on Maui, and in Hawaii. Serving as postmasters with Chris on the same island seems like a natural extension of that ohana.”

Boteilho’s family has served in leadership positions at Maui post offices across three generations. Her grandfather Edward Boteilho served as a USPS employee for 41 years, including eight years as Haiku postmaster and ten years as Kahului postmaster. Her grandmother Anita Boteilho was a USPS employee for 28 years, including serving as Paia postmaster for nine years and Makawao postmaster for four. Her father Gregory Boteilho Sr. served as a USPS employee for 41 years and retired as a supervisor at the Kihei Post Office.

“My family was elated when they learned that I was named the postmaster of Makawao,” said Boteilho. “I’m very honored to continue my family’s legacy of postal service. I take pride in the fact that I’m serving as postmaster in the same office that was once overseen by my grandma. That is very special to me.

My family is proof that with hard work and dedication a postal career can lead to high levels of personal and professional success!”

Note to media: High-resolution versions of the group shot above, as well as of Almeida & Harris and Boteilho and her grandmother Anita, are available upon request. Please submit your requests to duke.gonzales@usps.gov

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