From MSN:
“USPS is hanging on by a thread”
The U.S. mail service predates
the U.S. Constitution itself, which expressly empowers Congress "[t]o
establish Post Offices and Post Roads." The first post office sprung up in
the colonies in 1639, when Massachusetts enacted legislation ordering that overseas
letters pass through Fairbanks Tavern in Boston. Decades later, the King of
England approved the office of postmaster general for America, a position held
by Benjamin Franklin, who in 1753 initiated efforts to establish an
intra-colony postal system. In 1775, the first Continental Congress appointed a
committee to establish a postal system, resolving that "the present
critical situation of the colonies renders it highly desirable that ways and
means should be devised for the speedy and secure conveyance of Intelligence
from one end of the Continent to the other." In 1792, President George Washington signed
into law the first Postal Service Act, which established the first postage
rates and post roads and created the United States Post Office Department as
part of the federal government. In 1829, the postmaster general was made a
member of the president's Cabinet. Free delivery began in 1863.
Zip codes were added in 1963 to
make sorting and delivery easier. In 1970, Congress passed the Postal Reorganization
Act, which transformed the Post Office Department into a government-owned
corporation called the U.S. Postal Service. It is directed by a board of nine
governors, including the postmaster general, each of whom is appointed by the
president with the advice and consent of the Senate. As private competitors
entered the mail delivery market, Express Mail was introduced in 1977. In 1982,
Congress halted direct subsidies to the USPS, although rate funding remains for
nonprofit organizations and small publishers. Congress gave the USPS a monopoly on domestic
letter delivery under a group of statutes known as the Private Express
Statutes. In the words of the U.S. Supreme Court, "[t]he postal monopoly .
. . prevents private competitors from offering service on low-cost routes at
prices below those of the Postal Service, while leaving the Service with
high-cost routes and insufficient means to fulfill its mandate of providing
uniform rates and service to patrons in all areas, including those that are
remote or less populated." The agency is required by law to deliver mail
to every address in the country six days a week and it is not allowed to hire
private companies for assistance. In other words, the USPS exists
to make sure every American has access to basic mail service. It's that simple.
According to the Government
Accountability Office, "USPS's overall financial condition is
deteriorating and unsustainable." Its expenses outpace its revenues. At
the end of fiscal year 2018, it had $143 billion in total unfunded liabilities
and debt. Due to the coronavirus, mail volume is down by a third from last
year. In addition, the agency is financially hamstrung by legislation passed in
2006 that requires it to set aside $5.5 billion per year in prepaid health
benefits for retired employees. The current postmaster general, Megan Brennan,
told the House Oversight and Reform Committee on April 9 that the postal
service could run out of money by September, "threatening our ability to
operate." The board has asked for $75 billion in the next coronavirus
bill. Yet President Trump has threatened to veto any COVID-19 legislation that
includes bailout funding for the USPS, even though it is considered an
"essential service" during a pandemic. Among other things, the postal
service delivers prescription drugs to people who desperately need them,
medical supplies and protective gear to first responders and hospital
personnel, materials for conducting the 2020 Census and, most vitally for the
sustainability of American democracy, mail-in ballots come November.
Why is Trump taking this
draconian stance?: Well, the president
has claimed - inaccurately, according to his own task force - that Amazon has
pulled a "scam" on the postal service, costing it "massive
amounts of money." And he believes the USPS is partly to blame.
"Should be charging MUCH MORE!," he maintains. President Trump is
absolutely correct that the U.S. Postal Service needs restructuring and a
viable business model. It is a creature of Congress and Congress might need to step
in again with revised legislation. (For that very reason, the USPS is not on
equal footing with private mail delivery companies like Federal Express. It
cannot be expected to compete as one.) But now is not the time to play hardball
with an agency as central to what "makes America great." Nearly three
months have passed since the United States confirmed its first COVID-19 case on
Jan. 21. Much of the economy has since been shut down due to the grave dangers
of infection. Upwards of 600,000 federal postal workers continue working each
day to deliver mail during the pandemic, with hundreds already testing positive
for the virus. America's greatness stems
in part from its noble traditions. Since the founding of the republic, those
traditions have included a federal postal service whose mission is to serve the
American public - not generate revenue. America's greatness also depends
on the ability of each eligible voter to participate in democracy on Nov. 4.
The lethal coronavirus has made the USPS a key to making that happen. The
president of all people should be its champion right now.
^ I have had issues with the USPS
throughout the years and I am the first to admit that the USPS needs a serious
over-haul from the top-down to make it in the 2nd decade of the 21st
Century, but I also realize the importance the USPS plays around the country.
Even with FedEx and UPS taking a lot of deliveries around the country and the
world the USPS continues to deliver letters and packages to areas that are
under-served by other delivery services. Trump and Congress need to work to
make sure the USPS has the funding it needs to continue while at the same time
creating and implementing a restructuring plan to fix the old issues and modernize
the USPS. If the United States Post Office fails then the United States of
American itself fails. ^
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/usps-is-hanging-on-by-a-thread/ar-BB1306Zv
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