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U.S. Postal Service Faces Bankruptcy, Plans Cuts To Slow Delivery Of First Class Mail

Postal Service Cuts

HOPE YEN   12/ 4/11 11:49 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Facing bankruptcy, the U.S. Postal Service is pushing ahead with unprecedented cuts to first-class mail next spring that will slow delivery and, for the first time in 40 years, eliminate the chance for stamped letters to arrive the next day.

The estimated $3 billion in reductions, to be announced in broader detail on Monday, are part of a wide-ranging effort by the cash-strapped Postal Service to quickly trim costs, seeing no immediate help from Congress.

The changes would provide short-term relief, but ultimately could prove counterproductive, pushing more of America's business onto the Internet. They could slow everything from check payments to Netflix's DVDs-by-mail, add costs to mail-order prescription drugs, and threaten the existence of newspapers and time-sensitive magazines delivered by postal carrier to far-flung suburban and rural communities.

That birthday card mailed first-class to Mom also could arrive a day or two late, if people don't plan ahead.

"It's a potentially major change, but I don't think consumers are focused on it and it won't register until the service goes away," said Jim Corridore, analyst with S&P Capital IQ, who tracks the shipping industry. "Over time, to the extent the customer service experience gets worse, it will only increase the shift away from mail to alternatives. There's almost nothing you can't do online that you can do by mail."

The cuts, now being finalized, would close roughly 250 of the nearly 500 mail processing centers across the country as early as next March. Because the consolidations typically would lengthen the distance mail travels from post office to processing center, the agency also would lower delivery standards for first-class mail that have been in place since 1971.

Currently, first-class mail is supposed to be delivered to homes and businesses within the continental U.S. in one day to three days. That will lengthen to two days to three days, meaning mailers no longer could expect next-day delivery in surrounding communities. Periodicals could take between two days and nine days.

About 42 percent of first-class mail is now delivered the following day. An additional 27 percent arrives in two days, about 31 percent in three days and less than 1 percent in four days to five days. Following the change next spring, about 51 percent of all first-class mail is expected to arrive in two days, with most of the remainder delivered in three days.

The consolidation of mail processing centers is in addition to the planned closing of about 3,700 local post offices. In all, roughly 100,000 postal employees could be cut as a result of the various closures, resulting in savings of up to $6.5 billion a year.

Expressing urgency to reduce costs, Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe said in an interview that the agency has to act while waiting for Congress to grant it authority to reduce delivery to five days a week, raise stamp prices and reduce health care and other labor costs.

The Postal Service, an independent agency of government, does not receive tax money, but is subject to congressional control on large aspects of its operations. The changes in first-class mail delivery can go into place without permission from Congress.

After five years in the red, the post office faces imminent default this month on a $5.5 billion annual payment to the Treasury for retiree health benefits. It is projected to have a record loss of $14.1 billion next year amid steady declines in first-class mail volume. Donahoe has said the agency must make cuts of $20 billion by 2015 to be profitable.

It already has announced a 1-cent increase in first-class mail to 45 cents beginning Jan. 22.

"We have a business model that is failing. You can't continue to run red ink and not make changes," Donahoe said. "We know our business, and we listen to our customers. Customers are looking for affordable and consistent mail service, and they do not want us to take tax money."

Separate bills that have passed House and Senate committees would give the Postal Service more authority and liquidity to stave off immediate bankruptcy. But prospects are somewhat dim for final congressional action on those bills anytime soon, especially if the measures are seen in an election year as promoting layoffs and cuts to neighborhood post offices.

Technically, the Postal Service must await an advisory opinion from the independent Postal Regulatory Commission before it can begin closing local post offices and processing centers. But such opinions are nonbinding, and Donahoe is making clear the agency will proceed with reductions once the opinion is released next March.

"The things I have control over here at the Postal Service, we have to do," he said, describing the cuts as a necessary business decision. "If we do nothing, we will have a death spiral."

The Postal Service initially announced in September it was studying the possibility of closing the processing centers and published a notice in the Federal Register seeking comments. Within 30 days, the plan elicited nearly 4,400 public comments, mostly in opposition.

Among them:

_Small-town mayors and legislators in states including Illinois, Missouri, Ohio and Pennsylvania cited the economic harm if postal offices were to close, eliminating jobs and reducing service. Small-business owners in many other states also were worried.

"It's kind of a lifeline," said William C. Snodgrass, who owns a USave Pharmacy in North Platte, Neb., referring to next-day first-class delivery. His store mails hundreds of prescriptions a week to residents in mostly rural areas of the state that lack local pharmacies. If first-class delivery were lengthened to three days and Saturday mail service also were suspended, a resident might not get a shipment mailed on Wednesday until the following week.

"A lot of people in these communities are 65 or 70 years old, and transportation is an issue for them," said Snodgrass, who hasn't decided whether he will have to switch to a private carrier such as UPS for one-day delivery. That would mean passing along higher shipping costs to customers. "It's impossible for many of my customers to drive 100 miles, especially in the winter, to get the medications they need."

_ESPN The Magazine and Crain Communications, which prints some 27 trade and consumer publications, said delays to first-class delivery could ruin the value of their news. Their magazines are typically printed at week's end with mail arrival timed for weekend sports events or the Monday start of the work week. Newspapers, already struggling in the Internet age, also could suffer.

"No one wants to receive Tuesday's issue, containing news of Monday's events, on Wednesday," said Paul Boyle, a senior vice president of the Newspaper Association of America, which represents nearly 2,000 newspapers in the U.S. and Canada. "Especially in rural areas where there might not be broadband access for Internet news, it will hurt the ability of newspapers to reach customers who pretty much rely on the printed newspaper to stay connected to their communities."

_AT&T, which mails approximately 55 million customer billing statements each month, wants assurances that the Postal Service will widely publicize and educate the public about changes to avoid confusion over delivery that might lead to delinquent payments. The company is also concerned that after extensive cuts the Postal Service might realize it cannot meet a relaxed standard of two-to-three day delivery.

Other companies standing to lose include Netflix, which offers monthly pricing plans for unlimited DVDs by mail, sent one disc or two at a time. Longer delivery times would mean fewer opportunities to receive discs each month, effectively a price increase. Netflix in recent months has been vigorously promoting its video streaming service as an alternative.

"DVD by mail may not last forever, but we want it to last as long as possible," Netflix CEO Reed Hastings said this year.

Maine Sen. Susan Collins, the top Republican on the Senate committee that oversees the post office, believes the agency is taking the wrong approach. She says service cuts will only push more consumers to online bill payment or private carriers such as UPS or FedEx, leading to lower revenue in the future.

"Time and time again in the face of more red ink, the Postal Service puts forward ideas that could well accelerate its death spiral," she said, urging passage of a bill that would refund nearly $7 billion the Postal Service overpaid into a federal retirement fund, encourage a restructuring of health benefits and reduce the agency's annual payments into a retiree health account.

That measure would postpone a move to five-day-a-week mail delivery for at least two years and require additional layers of review before the agency closed postal branches and mail processing centers.

"The solution to the Postal Service's financial crisis is not easy but must involve tackling more significant expenses that do not drive customers," Collins said.

In the event of a shutdown due to bankruptcy, private companies such as FedEx and UPS could handle a small portion of the material the post office moves, but they do not go everywhere. No business has shown interest in delivering letters everywhere in the country for a set rate of 44 cents or 45 cents for a first-class letter.

Ruth Goldway, chair of the Postal Regulatory Commission, said the planned cuts could test the limits of the Postal Service's legal obligation to serve all Americans, regardless of geography, at uniform price and quality. "It will have substantial cost savings, but it really does have the potential to change what the postal service is and its role in providing fast and efficient delivery of mail," she said.

___

Online:

Postal Service: https://www.usps.com

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WASHINGTON — Facing bankruptcy, the U.S. Postal Service is pushing ahead with unprecedented cuts to first-class mail next spring that will slow delivery and, for the first time in 40 years, elim...
WASHINGTON — Facing bankruptcy, the U.S. Postal Service is pushing ahead with unprecedented cuts to first-class mail next spring that will slow delivery and, for the first time in 40 years, elim...
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Shiggity
I'm better than you because I have a micro-bio
01:23 AM on 01/20/2012
This won't push business onto the Internet, it'll do the opposite. eStores ship their products via USPS. The Internet businesses need the USPS to fulfill their physical goods.
10:53 PM on 01/19/2012
The mandate placed upon the postal service to pay approximately $5.5 BILLION dollars a year to prefund retiree health benefits is the driving force behind the postal service's current financial state. This burden was placed upon the postal service by congress in 2006. Declining mail volume has added to the burden but not enough to create the problem the postal service has today. The media for some reason or other only makes vague references to this fact between 2006 and 2011 without this prefunding requirement the postal service would have posted profits 4 out of 5 years with enough to left over to cover the losses posted fiscal year 2011. Another thing vaguely addressed is the fact that the postal service has surplus funds in two separate retirement funds that the postal service representatives have been actively pursuing congress to release so the postal service can use its own money to pay down its own debt. Congress caused this problem in '06. What hangs in the balance? Universal service to the american people, over 600,000 postal jobs (over 1 million jobs counting mailing related businesses).
07:48 PM on 12/20/2011
Sent a letter that was short about 3 cents (accidental) post office wastes time stamping saying insufficient funds, and sending back to me... they just wasted more than 3 cents.. no wonder they are bankrupt
Shiggity
I'm better than you because I have a micro-bio
01:24 AM on 01/20/2012
You're right, they should have destroyed it
03:32 PM on 12/12/2011
The USPS provides a personal, confidential, affordable service to the masses. For many, including the elderly, the USPS is the only way to pay bills and/or get correspondence from family/friends. My husband has been a USPS employee for 20 years. He works hard, has a college degree & takes his job seriously. He walks 10 miles a day regardless of the weather. He is NOT being paid big wages or big benefits! Due to cutbacks, layoffs & injuries, the USPS is struggling to do more with less. Delivering the mail is a daily, relentless grind. Truckloads of mail come in daily that must be delivered daily. It doesn't matter if they are shorthanded--the mail must be delivered! It is a stressful job and there are many injured workers due to mandating "healthy" employees to work forced overtime to fill in the personnel voids which, in turn, results in even more injuries. Better service would result if the USPS were allowed to hire more employees--not part-time minimum-wage employees w/no incentive to do a good job b/c they know they are merely temporary, not more management to delegate--but actual trained employees that can efficiently perform their job duties. If the government would quit siphoning off money from the USPS to use in other areas of government, reduce top-heavy management, hire more "worker" employees and eliminate Saturday delivery, the USPS would once again be a shining example of an American success story!
07:58 AM on 12/11/2011
Sure, we all hear about the huge union/pension overheads of the USPS contributing to their ongoing "plight" .. but a large part of the USPS' continuing "shortfall" is that its rates are too low (compared to other 1st tier countries) ... a case in point:

Mail a letter in Canada to a Canadian address will cost you C$ . 59; letter from Canada to the USA C$1.03 ... send a letter to Europe .. C$1.75 vs. our rates of 44 cents; 80 cents; 98 cents respectively.

We don't hear of the Canadian PO continually crying "poor mouth" partly because they charge rates that more accurately reflect the real cost of delivering the mail !!

And - YES, Canada did away with Saturday deliveries LONG ago -- and the country still is in business.

How about our over-paid postmaster general meet with his Canadian counterpart and have a serious talk about survival!

***************************************************************************************

By the way, mentioned last week on the net .. there are 28 individuals employed by the USPS who are each making in excess of $200,000/yr ... yep, you heard right ... they make more than some governors!

The capper ...The USPS postmaster general makes more than President Obama !

And the USPS wonders why they are always in the red????

Is it any wonder?
11:15 PM on 12/10/2011
With internet sales at record breaking highs thi must be an out right lie. Who stole the money?
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crws
Grew tired of seeing "your micro-bio is empty"
07:50 PM on 12/08/2011
Petition:
Establish a moratorium on Postal Service facility & office closures, pending review of actual savings vs estimates

http://wh.gov/DWt

This deals with the USPS and exaggerated "fuzzy" math the USPS
PMG and VP's like to spread using the media to sell the financial
benefit closing facilities across the nation will have.
The actual costs are disguised from the general public in a maze of
accounting that the USPS fails to openly disclose.
At particular issue are extended lease obligations the USPS has for many of
these facilities with terms that extend years into the future, which the USPS
is obligated to pay if the landlord insists the full length of the contract
be honored.
Listings of Leased facilities can be found at:
http://about.usps.com/who-we-are/foia/leased-facilities/report.htm

Please join me in requiring the USPS to prove it's claims of cost
benefit by disclosing final financial impact of prior implementation.
07:53 PM on 12/07/2011
Instead of issuing military grade weapons to the police, they could have saved the Postal Service. My little Postal Kiosk here in Hawaii is the closest one to me within a 50 mile range, so I hope that one is safe.
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IndependentRule
There are two many Parties in Washington..
07:29 PM on 12/07/2011
Well if you Are forced to pay big pensions and higher nonskilled workers at big wages, It makes sense that you cannot pay bills with the coming of the Internet. I hope the government is not considering a bailout. Although I'm sure the unions are putting pressure for such bailout.
02:31 AM on 12/11/2011
big pensions ? are you kidding ? do some research. I'll receive approx. $44.00 x the number of years worked for my monthly pension. for 30 years that equates to approx. $1320. per month or $15,840 per year. is that a big pension ?
02:42 AM on 12/11/2011
oh, BTW, learn to spell. "HIRE" and we are highly skilled and competent workers.
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IndependentRule
There are two many Parties in Washington..
11:24 AM on 12/11/2011
I guess you will find out when you are on the street looking for another "highly skilled" job in the mail industry..I will assure you spelling will not be important in your next job.
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noraking09
10:32 AM on 12/07/2011
The postal service is the only remaining private communication. Legally speaking, it's actually still pretty hard to look in people's mail. And it's a logistical impossibility to look at it all. As opposed to electronic communications, which are all recorded and/or monitored. So the end of the post office means the end of any American's access to truly private communication. I'm left wondering if that isn't the main purpose here.
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crws
Grew tired of seeing "your micro-bio is empty"
07:50 PM on 12/08/2011
I hope you're not the only one.....
because it's true.
It's astounding how most really don't comprehend that fact,
must be the enamored "Facebook newlywed" effect.
Shiggity
I'm better than you because I have a micro-bio
01:29 AM on 01/20/2012
The "enamored" effect?
08:08 AM on 12/07/2011
Maybe they sould stop the expensive TV corporate image advertising. When I was in marketing for private sector companies, they would NEVER waste money on advertising if profit is in question. Of course, private sector companies are actually responsible and don't want to go into the red.
06:55 AM on 12/07/2011
lets continue to hand billions of tax dollars to unscrupulous construction companies in the middle east and elswhere that have g.o.p officials in their pockets but allow the usps to flounder , wake up people you can live without rebuilding the midle east, you wont like the consequenses of losing the postal service .vote democrat, at least stop some of pain that is being inflicted upon the majority by a few the so called 1 % & their greedy followers.
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Neil Evansan
ForwardFocus is the Journey
05:50 AM on 12/07/2011
I'm curious .....
..... if Congressional & Senate people remember they receive, as part of their overly-broad array of benefits, FREE POSTAGE to "communicate" with their constituency "back home." Ending that little "perk" would save MANY millions every year!
..... if my eBay customers will like paying 100 to 200% more for shipping costs via UPS or FedEx, with zero% better service?
..... if Ben Franklin would be polite or profane when talking with Congressional leaders about how they are ruining institutions (and Freedoms) that helped make America what America used to be?
03:25 AM on 12/07/2011
This site explains what is happening to the PO better than any I've seen:

http://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:x5zptPqaljQJ:www.mpwu.com/pocrisis.pdf+post+office+what%27s+the+real+story%3F&hl=en&gl=us&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEESj4e7lOEQGN0G5oMUDluzF2sJUIPWWQcE2lKC-_SCuPTxRgiZwZ4dlzc-fsfUKaKj-wMk1F1uCuYarvQOUiaAuzgqu0kOJzUxPctt6elmw9YyZWXQgazveS9OFxLfvjhG_VW0dx&sig=AHIEtbQUQWkuvcRowtMiBEPxNHWeLD4puQ
12:38 AM on 12/07/2011
I miss America, circa 1999!
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IndependentRule
There are two many Parties in Washington..
07:30 PM on 12/07/2011
I miss America from what I've read about circa 1950s. Of course with a few exceptions.Not the least being dental care.lol
Shiggity
I'm better than you because I have a micro-bio
01:29 AM on 01/20/2012
The woman's place is in the kitchen! Now go on to Korea, son, you've been drafted! We'll write you a letter sometime that'll take days to reach you and probably won't get there, as we try to stay up on the war effort by watching one of three channels of propaganda on a tiny B&W TV and reading out-of-date newspapers.