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John Nichols
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Thursday 8 December 2011
“The supposed financial crisis facing the US Postal Service is actually a fiscal fantasy, The USPS, which continues to provide vital services to 150 million households and business each day.”

The Postal Service Plots Its Own Demise

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There are many appropriate targets for Occupy Wall Street protests. But the OWS protesters hit a bull’s-eye when they invaded a National Press Club briefing where Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe—who likes to make like a corporate executive and refer to himself as “Chief Operating Officer of the US Postal Service”—was giving a speech about the need to close local post offices, layoff workers and, though this was unspoken, take the steps that will lead to the privatization of the one of the country’s greatest public assets.

“Stop closing post offices,” chanted the activists who occupied the press club. “Don’t privatize the post office. It’s a public service. It’s not a profit center for FedEx and UPS to rip off the people.”

Postmasters general do not usually become the targets of passionate opposition. But the protesters were chanting: “Hey, hey, ho, ho, Donahoe has got to go.”

And rightly so.

On Monday, Donahue laid out a plan that, if implemented, would destroy the postal service as most Americans know it.

And the destruction would come not out of necessity but to perpetuate an austerity lie.

The supposed financial crisis facing the US Postal Service is actually a fiscal fantasy, The USPS, which continues to provide vital services to 150 million households and business each day, which sustains rural communities and urban neighborhoods across he country as a Main Street mainstay, which employs hundreds of thousands of Americans and which has a history of being in the forefront of technological and societal progress, is not in trouble because of competition from the Internet or changing letter-writing patterns. It is in crisis because Congress forced the postal service to pay roughly $5.5 billion a year into a trust fund for future retiree pensions. The USPS inspector general says the postal service has overfunded pension obligations by $75 billion—something no other federal agency is required to do. In addition, the postal service has been slapped with other charges and obligations that make it appear to be headed for bankruptcy. Simply treating the USPS fairly when it comes to the prepayment of pensions would ease most of the burden facing the postal service.

But Congress is dithering, the for-profit mail services that want to carve up the USPS are salivating, and the postmaster general is surrendering—proposing to end next-day delivery of letters, postcards and other First Class mail.

That postmaster general surrender was signaled Monday by a brutal proposal for deep cost cutting that could:

1. So diminish and slow down first-class mail delivery that the changes will create an opening for private carriers; indeed, Americans are almost being pushed into the arms of UPS and FedEx.

2. Ultimately cause as many as 100,000 job losses is the biggest single blow to employment by any employer in the country, Postal service job cuts hit people of color, women and veterans hardest, as the USPS has a long history of hiring staffs that “look like America.” The proposed closing of more than 250 of 561 postal sorting centers is the equivalent of a wave of factory closings like nothing the country saw even in the depths of the recent recession.



3. Have a devastating impact on thousands of rural communities, where post offices are slated for closure. This is really a case of Washington abandoning rural areas and hard-hit urban neighborhoods at precisely the time they need the support of an engaged federal government.



4. So delay delivery that it would create a nine-day lag time for periodical. This would be devastating for the print press and for the public discourse. Weekly newspapers and magazines might not even arrive until after their next editions were published

.

5. Wreck havoc with absentee voting and military voting processes that are already a mess in many states. Hardest hit will be states that have gone to vote-by-mail systems, such as Oregon. At a time when Voter ID laws are making it harder to vast ballots at the polls, this makes absentee voting.

By every reasonable measure, the postal service is proposing suicide in the form of not-so-slow cuts. “The Postal Service plan will hasten the demise of the USPS,” American Postal Workers Union president Cliff Guffey said with regard to the agency’s announcement that it would seek an advisory opinion from the Postal Regulatory Commission on plans to eliminate next-day delivery of first-class mail and periodicals. “The USPS should be modernizing and striving to remain relevant in the digital age, not reducing service to the American people.”

Under what the postmaster general’s “cost-cutting plan,” the postal service would shutter almost half the nation’s mail-processing centers and shed tens of thousands of jobs—at a time when even the most optimistic observers say the country faces a steep climb to address widespread unemployment. The changes would make it impossible for the postal service to reconstitute itself in better times. As such, they an open invitation to private carriers to take over lucrative routes and services—while leaving the great mass of Americans with diminished and substandard services.

The cuts proposed by the postmaster general go way beyond cost-cutting. This is the sounding of the death knell for a postal service that traces its roots to the nation’s first days and that remains an essential service for isolated rural communities and neglected urban neighborhoods.

“The so-called Postmaster General is going to announce details that will lead to the end of the United States Postal Service and universal postal delivery in this country,” said Congressman Peter DeFazio, D-Oregon, who highlighted the damage the postal service will do to the broader economy.

“This would be an incredible blow to our economy. With real unemployment at 16 percent we cannot afford another 100,000 people laid off,” explained DeFazio. “I’ve already heard from small business owners that rely on USPS and are concerned that the plan would kill their businesses. Some rural Oregonians would have to drive 15 to 20 miles to access their mail. Subscribers of small rural weekly newspapers would have to wait 7-9 days for their papers to be delivered. This is a short-sighted proposal that fails to address the serious long-term issues facing USPS.“ 


This story originally appeared in The Nation.
Copyright © The Nation – distributed by Agence Global.
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ABOUT John Nichols

John Nichols, a pioneering political blogger, has written the Beat since 1999. His posts have been circulated internationally, quoted in numerous books and mentioned in debates on the floor of Congress. 

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14 comments on "The Postal Service Plots Its Own Demise"

Warman

March 18, 2012 4:20pm

First class mail is the enduring Jewel of the United States Postal Service. Save overnight Metropolitan Delivery Standards !

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I don't even know what to say, this made thgins so much easier!

Laura Morris

December 09, 2011 5:05pm

Congress can surely be faulted for creating this mess and then refusing to do anything about it, but this shouldn't be attributed to Donahoe. There may be some more creative solutions than Donahoe has come up with, but his hands are tied up pretty tight at this point. He has been supporting the unions in running lots of ads trying to explain this to the public--because he can't legally do it, but the unions can. The vast majority of people in this country have no clue that the USPS is no longer run by "the government" and love to take pot shots at it at every opportunity. This is what happens when you turn over a government function to be run like a private sector business but turn it into a failure by requiring that it still meet government requirements. How successful do you think FedEx would be if they had to deliver to every mailbox for less than 50 cents?

MIDNIGHT_RIDER

December 09, 2011 7:56am

This might be a stretch and unpopular with many of my neighbours. But USPS could save a lot of money, I feel by opening and delivering mail five days a week say Tue-Sat or Mon-Fri. Also, eliminate rural mail carriers and make more PO Boxes readily available by (a) making rentals more affordable and the same across the board for ALL post offices regardless of their size and (b) go back to where each community had their own small post office located inside a another place of business, like a general store. USPS has too much fat and has become too big for their own good.

13-xxx

December 09, 2011 2:18am

Why not create drop-off points in each neighborhood where you can mail a letter in a small protected shelter secuered with video cameras and recieve your original mail in your own privet mail box like at the post office ? This would reduce both the workload of the mailman and save millions on maintaing a fleet of vehicles ...? Renting standard mail boxes for only let's say $25 a year with regular deliveries monday through friday and rental spaces for local & national newspapers , should put the USPS back on foot ...

alfarmgirl

December 08, 2011 4:24pm

Shame, shame & the demise of the Post Office is coming from within.

Ogblofeld

December 08, 2011 4:03pm

How ironic the rare fiscally solvent government programs (Post Office and Social Security) or the ones in most trouble. And I'm not even for Social Security, but it is financially successful and I'm definitely not for the government/corporate tag team from the top rope rape of the programs.

Lisa Johnson

December 08, 2011 2:49pm

How would Congress be able to get around the Constitution requirement for the federal government to provide for a uniform postal service for the entire country? Many people do not understand or know that the Postal Service is provided for in the Constitution its self.

Perhaps that's moot since so many of our rights, as enumerated in the Bill of Rights has already been shredded.

Then again, it also doesn't mean the our federal legislators really care or understand what they are doing or that the Constitution and its allied documents provide the framework for what will and will not be done by the Federal Government.

G.E.R.R.Y.

December 08, 2011 2:27pm

"...Congress forced the postal service to pay roughly $5.5 billion a year into a trust fund for future retiree pensions. The USPS inspector general says the postal service has overfunded pension obligations by $75 billion"

Gee, do you think that maybe the pension fund has been set up for some friendly corporate raider to feast on, A friendly corporate raider is one WHO FUNDS THE RIGHT POLITICAL CANDIDATES.

JustSomeGuy

December 09, 2011 4:45am

Indeed, you have hit the nail on the head. This overreach of pension funding was set up in the 11th hour of the Bush Administration. One does not have to think very long about it to understand that this was done to set up a ripe plum for picking by some corporate giant who has an inroad into politics.

We cannot allow this. We must make this the "bridge too far" of corporate raiding!

oldhat

December 08, 2011 4:58pm

it buys USA DEBT