A local woman says the Post Office refuses to deliver her mail after she moved her curbside mailbox.
Kelley McMillan said it was there for decades and needed repairs.
"My mailman parks on the street, he walks the whole neighborhood and delivers mail to everybody's house, except mine. I just want to be a part of that too," said McMillan, who hasn't received her mail in over a week.
She said her old mailbox was falling apart and had a light on it that didn't work in ten years. So McMillan and her husband took it down and replaced it with a house box.
"Just price wise, doing it this way or doing it that way, was much more inexpensive and I wanted to join all my neighbors," she continued.
But little did McMillan know, she was going against postal rules and regulations.
"They give me one month to put my mailbox back on the street. Then I can go pick up my mail once a week until I replace my mailbox on the street," Mcmillan said.
James Wigdel, spokesperson for the U.S. Postal Service, said a mailbox must be at a home for at least 90 days for it to be considered established delivery.
"Postal policy says if you have an established mode of delivery and you want to change it, to contact the postal service. The postal service will look into it, they'll do an investigation and decide if it warrants changing the mode of delivery," said Wigdel.
He said if that location changes, the Post Office can refuse delivery.
As for McMillan, she must now pick up her mail.
"I'm not going to go pick up my mail when he passes me twice a day. I'm not going to go pay for a Post Office box either," said McMillan. But Wigdel said that may be her only option.
"We will provide curbside delivery service to her free of charge, but if she chooses not to, then the other option would be perhaps a P.O. Box, but beyond that, I'm not sure what the options would be," said Wigdel.
Mcmillan said she will stand her ground for as long as she can.
The Post Office said if she doesn't pick up her mail, it will return it to sender, after 11 days.