From News Nation:
“Slower
mail, fewer office hours part of Postal Service plans”
A 10-year
strategy aimed at bringing financial stability to the United States Postal
Service, with plans to slow mail delivery standards and cut hours at some post
offices, was announced Tuesday. Details of the long-awaited plan include a
proposal to consolidate underused post offices, hinted at a potential postage
rate increase and detailed investments in new delivery vehicles, among other
things. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy and postal executives stressed the need
to cut costs and modernize the agency’s operations as its workload increasingly
shifts from handling letters to hauling more and more packages. “This is about
the long-term viability of the organization under the two missions that we have
that are legislated, that is deliver to every house six days a week and be
self-sustaining,” DeJoy said. He announced the plans during a webinar with
other postal service officials. DeJoy said the biggest change would be a
relaxing of the current first-class letter delivery standard of
one-to-three-days to a one-to-five-day benchmark. Postal leadership said the
longer timeframe would apply only to mail going to the farthest reaches of its
network and that 70% of first-class mail will still be delivered within a
three-day standard.
Other
changes from the “Delivering for America” plan include: USPS officials say
their proposed changes will close a $160 billion budget shortfall over the next
10 years. The agency will “consolidate low-traffic stations and branches of
city Post Offices” and trim hours and services at retail locations to “meet
customer demand.” The plan calls for a “more rational pricing approach”
which will likely mean increases, though specific increases were not mentioned.
The USPS has worked under pricing restrictions, and the plan suggests those
caps have hurt the agency’s ability to stay in the black. A number of
flat material sorting machines will be replaced with packaging processing
units. USPS will invest in at least 50,000 new delivery vehicles with
the promise that they will prove more environmentally friendly than their
predecessors. New digital tools will improve the ability to track coming
deliveries and provide the agency with better data to streamline efficiency.
The agency is “evaluating the addition of approximately 45 annex facilities
to be placed near processing centers in key locations.” DeJoy called the
plan a “very positive vision” that would help prevent the need for future
government bailouts.
Democrats have
repeatedly called for DeJoy to be removed from his post as delivery times have
lagged across the country. Late last month, President Joe Biden named three
nominees to the agency’s governing board, which if approved, would give
Democrats and Democratic appointees a majority on the panel and the ability to
oust DeJoy through a vote. Currently, all six of the board’s members were
appointed by former President Donald Trump. The White House didn’t immediately
return an email seeking comment. DeJoy, a major GOP donor who took over the
agency last June, has come under heavy criticism for a series of operational
changes that slowed mail before the 2020 elections. The policy shifts fueled
fears that DeJoy was attempting to sabotage the agency on the behalf of
then-President Donald Trump, a vocal critic of mail-in voting, before it
handled unprecedented numbers of mail-in ballots. DeJoy has strongly disputed
that claim and eventually suspended some of his changes following intense
public pushback and a crush of legal challenges.
US Postal
Service could see change with Biden administration Despite the concerns, the agency said it
processed and delivered at least 135 million ballots during the general
election and that 99.7% of ballots were delivered to election officials within
five days. Mark Dimondstein, president of the American Postal Workers
Union, said the plan included some positive elements but urged the agency to
prioritize on-time deliveries and other service standards. “Any
proposals that would either slow the mail, reduce access to post offices, or
further pursue the failed strategy of plant consolidation will need to be
addressed,” he said in a statement. “The APWU will proactively engage with
USPS’s managers, the Postal Regulatory Commission, leaders in Congress and the
public to address these issues.”
^ I would like
to see DeJoy removed as Postmaster General. Only then can we modernize the USPS
to make it profitable and efficient. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/us-news/slower-mail-fewer-office-hours-part-of-postal-service-plans/
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