A cover sheet or letter must be included containing the name and contact person, their phone number, the mailing address, and special instructions, if any. The original document must comply with the appropriate statutes, including signature requirements. The Commercial Division accepts facsimile filings for business entities. to give the employees enough time to complete the filing. Hours of operation are Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. The office is at 8585 Archives Avenue, Baton Rouge, LA 70809 and is located in the building behind the Louisiana State Archives. The customer may leave a mailing address or a telephone number for notification when processing is complete. Documents may be delivered for processing on a non-expedited basis. The forms furnished by the Secretary of State, and the publications which are compiled by the Secretary of State are available. All expedite fees are in addition to the required filing fee. Documents may be processed while the customer waits for a $50 priority expedite fee or processed in 24 hours for a $30 expedite fee. The Secretary of State offers customers the convenience of walk-in service. If you want to do business in Louisiana, visit geauxBIZ to get started! You can also use geauxBIZ to produce a list of possible federal, state and local licenses and permits required for your business, to reserve your new business name, and to complete your new business filing. geauxBIZ can help you find resources to help plan, make key financial decisions, and complete legal activities necessary to start your business. The Louisiana Secretary of State, Louisiana Department of Revenue, and Louisiana Workforce Commission are working to make it easy for you to manage your Louisiana business filings and tax account registrations from one location―the Louisiana geauxBIZ portal. Please visit our website as directed below: The Commercial Division offers online document filings for all original filings, several amendments and annual report filings for all entity types. To better serve the public, provides online filings forms for downloading accepts filings by regular mail, express mail and fax expedited filings online certificate validation and a range of payment methods. We now send our mail from Kansas or another zip code, but that does not prevent the mail we receive from being delayed.The Secretary of State is aware that many transactions in the business and financial world are time sensitive. I did try to use the Brookside Station, but it was out of stamps and it was indicated they had been out for a while, so I did not go back. Who knows if other mail I have sent from there was received in a timely way (including my absentee ballot for the Presidential election)? If it is Covid related, maybe the patrons should be informed of delays. We support the postal system and the employees but we are not sure of what is going on at Waldo. While these are not reasons for alarm, it indicates a problem. Other minor concerns are that we are receiving Christmas cards-postmarked 12/15/20 and mid-December and Christmas catalogs this week, the third week in January. The check which I sent as payment in August, arrived at the destination mid-September. After several phone calls, I ended up making an electronic payment. One example is that I sent a payment for a bill from Waldo the beginning of August and the recipient never received it. I have a suspicion that mail not being processed in a timely way at Waldo. While we respect and are on first name basis with our local post people who deliver, I do not think whatever is happening is their responsibility. I am writing with concern about our local Waldo post office in the 64113 zip code. Seriously? This is the type of image the USPS wants to present to the public at their service center locations? Fortunately, the young woman behind the counter was of normal appearance, and asked to help me. I thought perhaps an assylum was missing a patient. As I waited in line to mail packages, there were 2 employees, man and woman, at the counter helping customers, but the young man was downright frightening in his appearance - very unprofessional, bordering on mentally disturbed: three rings through his nose like a farm animal big pink ear gauges pierced in both ear lobes and spike hair pulled back in some sort of bun atop his head, plus tats up and down his forearms, exposed by his short sleeve postal service uniform. I've been around the world, and seen a lot of places, people, and things that were down right odd or bizzare, but I never thought I'd see one as a postal service employee in my quiet, midwestern hometown of Lee's Summit, Missouri 64064-9998.
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