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U.S. Postal Service Cuts Starting In May

Postoffice

HOPE YEN   02/23/12 03:31 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON — With no financial relief in sight, the U.S. Postal Service is pushing ahead with planned cuts to more than 260 mail processing centers around the nation, part of a billion-dollar cost-cutting effort that will slow delivery of first-class mail.

In a statement Thursday, the cash-strapped agency said it had completed a review of closings to mail processing centers it had proposed last fall. Based on community input and other factors, the post office said, it will move forward with consolidations involving virtually all of the 252 facilities on the list, as well as up to 12 new locations, beginning in mid-May.

Of the 264 facilities, roughly 41 won't be closed or consolidated right away as the post office conducts additional reviews.

The consolidations are expected to result in a loss of roughly 35,000 jobs, which the post office hopes to achieve mainly through attrition. The agency described the move as a necessary cost-saving measure because of declining mail volume as people and businesses continue switching to the Internet in place of letters and paper bills.

The 12 locations added to the list include those in Owensboro, Ky.; Washington, Pa.; Cardiss Collins (Chicago), Ill.; Gaylord, Mich.; Staten Island, New York; Mankato, Minn.; Champaign, Ill.; Atlanta, Ga.; Corpus Christi, Texas; Fort Worth, Texas; Mid-Florida, Fla.; and Butte, Mont.

"The steps we are taking now will put the Postal Service on a strong financial footing for decades to come," the agency said in a statement.

The estimated $3 billion in reductions are part of a wide-ranging effort by the Postal Service to quickly trim costs, seeing no immediate help from Congress. It is seeking to close or consolidate more than half of its nearly 500 mail processing centers.

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, for the first time in 40 years, will eliminate the chance for stamped letters to arrive the next day.

Last week, the Postal Service warned it will lose as much as $18.2 billion a year by 2015 unless Congress grants it new leeway to eliminate Saturday delivery and raise the price of a postage stamp by as much as 5 cents.

It is asking Congress for permission to make service cuts and reduce annual payments of about $5.5 billion to prefund retiree health benefits. At the request of Congress, the cash-strapped agency agreed to wait until mid-May to begin closures so lawmakers would have time to stabilize its finances first.

But in recent weeks, the Senate and House have stalled as lawmakers differ widely on costs, the level of financial oversight and the prospect of widespread postal closures.

The Postal Service, an independent agency of government, is subject to congressional control on major aspects of its operations. Earlier this month, the Postal Service said its quarterly loss ballooned to $3.3 billion amid declining mail volume and said it could run out of money by October.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who is pushing for legislative changes that would stop or delay mass closings of mail processing centers, described the proposed closings as counterproductive. He and 26 other senators recently signed a letter to congressional sponsors of postal legislation seeking to prevent cuts to first-class mail delivery.

"At a time when the Postal Service is competing against the instantaneous delivery of information from email and the Internet, slowing down mail delivery service will result in less business and less revenue, and will bring about a death spiral for this institution," Sanders said.

___

Online:

Mail processing centers proposed for consolidation or closure: http://bit.ly/z7zZ2L

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WASHINGTON — With no financial relief in sight, the U.S. Postal Service is pushing ahead with planned cuts to more than 260 mail processing centers around the nation, part of a billion-dollar co...
WASHINGTON — With no financial relief in sight, the U.S. Postal Service is pushing ahead with planned cuts to more than 260 mail processing centers around the nation, part of a billion-dollar co...
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02:17 PM on 03/21/2012
I wish the post office would invest in Packstations like you find in Germany and Austria. This allows package delivery to a kiosk-locker when you aren't home, avoiding the hassle of waiting in line at the post office during ever-decreasing open hours. I think it's the dreaded line at the post office that causes everyone to avoid it, reducing their business.

The kiosks at the post office work, but in my experience, many customers (who are infrequent mailers) do not know how to use them, or they don't cover essential services such as international mailing.
02:46 PM on 03/14/2012
Expand services.... not a smart business move to cut services. The local PO could provide many services in all sizes of communities across the nation.
05:20 PM on 02/25/2012
It is really hard to see where reducing service will encourage and increase in revenue. Would anyone buy a car that got less miles a gallon even if it cost less because in the long run it would cost more the more you drove it. Our first class postage is nearly the cheapest in the world. I believe only Japan and Isreal less. In the 1960's stamps were three cents, soda was a nickle and gas was under .30. Now stamps are .44,soda about $1.50 and gas is around $3.50. It would be better to raise postage rather than reduce services and stop the sweet heart deals for advertising mail where upper Management is either getting kickbacks or promises of future good paying jobs when they retire.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spikedawg71
No use for leaders, I don't need to be led
02:40 AM on 02/25/2012
All I ever get from them is a couple bills and junk mail, junk mail, and a ton of junk mail. It really would bother me none to see them gone, I never use them, haven't for years.
10:27 PM on 02/24/2012
Snail mail is less and less relevant. The cost of fuel drives up the price of all distribution related companies including (especially) the Post Office. Distribution is their entire business. Advertisers are getting a better bang for their buck on the internet and this will only grow. When you have less advertisers delivering junk mail, and still have to deliver the same route anyway - somethings gotta give. The Post Office is bleeding money. Bout time they treated it like a business and downsized. Perhaps privatization could reduce the inevitable government inefficiencies and waste inherent in all government run entities, but the future of residential snailmail looks a lot smaller overall.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
delbridgebaird
05:59 PM on 02/24/2012
We could close a couple of military bases in countries that Republican presidential hopefuls would have to look up on a map to locate. That might help.
06:00 PM on 02/24/2012
What?
05:15 PM on 02/24/2012
Take your "BS Meter" and use it in the White House so you can really get use out of it!
05:50 PM on 02/24/2012
And yet, that isn't the point. But whatever.
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08:47 PM on 02/24/2012
I'd say that meter is fixed on your coordinates wherever you are.
04:04 PM on 02/24/2012
People, before you claim that you know someone who works for the USPS who told you what the REAL problem is, or you make claim that you have relatives who work there or that YOU worked there for nearly forty years, or that your mail carrier told you such and such, please understand that the BS meter is fairly accurate at detecting what is in fact, BS. Also, don't make up scenarios about how you went to your local post office and it took you two hours of standing in line, then a clerk insulted you and told you to "get lost!" Again, the BS meter detects these stories quickly. Oh, and please don't tell us that you know how mail carriers and clerks and such make hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, because your relative told you they were pulling in that kind of money. Your relative is either non-existent or they're BS-ing YOU! And YOU'RE falling for it!

Now, you may in fact know someone who works at the USPS, but many of these issues are not openly discussed on the workroom floor, thus the average employee does NOT know everything about these issues and what is being done behind the scenes to the business model. The USPS will survive; it's not going anywhere. Change comes to every business eventually, and this is merely what is happening. But please, don't make the BS meter blow a gasket to get an "A" in Creative Writing 101.
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jrp1947
made you show yourself if you respond, got ya!
03:00 PM on 02/24/2012
This a serious management issue in my opinion. It is obvious to me that managment does not know the first things about their jobs and are sorely overpaid. If a postal carrier ran their route like the managers are apparently running the post office they would be fired on the spot. I have had numerous relatives work in the post office and they all say the management does not know it's job from the postmasters up to the top slot nationally. You cna change the man at the top but if you don't take his whole managment team out nothing CHANGES! Increases in rates, reduced delivery, and other cost cutting measures are not going to change anything until we havea total management chnages from the bottom up.
03:57 PM on 02/24/2012
It always amazes me when people claim they know "someone high up in the USPS," or "I have many relatives and/or friends that work for the USPS and they told me such and such..." or "I talked with my mail carrier and he hates the USPS..." and so on and so forth. Anyway, many people at their jobs tend to dislike management. Management represents authority, something most people find difficult to accept. The problem is NOT management in this case, so the alleged relatives that are telling you this are wrong. By a mile.

Did they tell you about the pre-funded health care requirement by Congress, and if so, do you understand it? How about who sets stamp prices and regulates Sat. delivery? Did they talk about all of this? I doubt it. These are but some of the issues. Management, the unions, etc., are NOT the issues.
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02:47 PM on 02/24/2012
Hmm, the USPS employees must have some pretty impotent union leadership to get this kind of treatment from the Obama Administration. Wonder how many of their hard earned public service dollars were paid to retain union Presidents Rolando and Trumka and all that union infrastructure and executive staff last year?
04:11 PM on 02/24/2012
The Obama Admin. SUPPORTS the USPS. Every business undergoes change and that is what is happening with the USPS. It isn't going anywhere.
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buckeye3118
Less Government, More Freedom
02:18 PM on 02/24/2012
Speaking from nearly 4 decades of working for the USPS, they need to start at the top with the overpaid, underworked management. Most of those in management would have difficulty supervising the overnight shift at a fast food drive-thru.
02:39 PM on 02/24/2012
And in what capacity did you work? To what union did you belong? Just curious.
02:46 PM on 02/24/2012
Still waiting.
jgrant129
aut viam inveniam aut faciam
03:11 PM on 02/24/2012
By George, you might be on to something.... The bloated UNION might have something to do with the failure of the USPS.
01:50 PM on 02/24/2012
Postal services are not ran by the goverment if it was they would just give them some more money
05:07 PM on 02/24/2012
O)k, where does the $3.3 bil. loss the last quarter come from, wherte does the P.O get the cash. Just curious
06:01 PM on 02/24/2012
Where do they get the cash? From the stamps you buy to mail your letters and packages. That's where. No tax payer money is used. Ever.
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WILLIEMOJORISIN
USN 1978-1984 God willin and the crick don't rise.
01:39 PM on 02/24/2012
This is a direct fallout from politicians (on both sides) sending our jobs eleswhere,the middle class tax base is all but lost.
02:48 PM on 02/24/2012
Agreed!
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tuhloola
The facts have a well-known liberal bias
01:31 PM on 02/24/2012
Just absolutely amazes me, how some people still think the USPS operates on taxpayer money ! Were they BORN ignorant, or is it a choice ?
02:41 PM on 02/24/2012
I too am always amazed that many still believe this too. And some just like to post nonsense whether or not they believe it. You know, the old "My mail carrier told me such and such," or "I know someone who works high up at the post office and they told me such and such." Many posters are liars and many are just ignorant of the facts.
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tuhloola
The facts have a well-known liberal bias
04:31 PM on 02/24/2012
Sad, isn't it !!!!
03:50 PM on 02/24/2012
Yes, it amazes me too. And yet, it seems many still believe this.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Llib Noswad
aka: Bill, Conservative
01:30 PM on 02/24/2012
Maybe it's time to go back to the Pony Express.
02:41 PM on 02/24/2012
Oh yes, that's a good idea. Not.