Arkansas Congressman Introduces Bill To Prohibit USPS From Closing Rural Post Offices

that do not have an alternative post office within eight miles accessible by public roads. …

From the office of Rep. Rick Crawford, R-Jonesboro

Washington, Nov 9 – JONESBORO – After listening to the concern of citizens in Northeast Arkansas, Congressman Rick Crawford introduced H.R. 3370, Protecting Our Rural Post Offices Act of 2011. H.R. 3370 prohibits the Postal Service from closing rural post offices that do not have an alternative post office within eight miles accessible by public roads. The Postal Service recently announced plans to close 3,652 post offices across the country, many of them in rural areas.

Congressman Crawford will be at the Sedgwick, Arkansas Post Office on Wednesday, November 9th at 2:40PM to introduce his legislation. The media is invited to attend.

“The 1st Congressional District stands to lose 100 post offices,” said Crawford. “The Protecting Our Rural Post Offices Act will make sure rural Americans keep access to postal services. Americans living in rural communities rely on their post office for medicine deliveries, social security benefits and countless other reasons. Access to postal services should not be limited to only urban areas.”

H.R. 3370: Protecting Our Rural Post Offices Act of 2011 Facts
• In July 2011, the USPS announced it was considering the closure of 3,652 retail postal facilities1.

o At the end of FY2010, there were 35,633 retail postal facilities in the United States1.

• While the USPS is a self-serving entity, the U.S Congress requires the USPS to serve the public as a whole:

o “The Postal Service shall provide a maximum degree of effective and regular postal services to rural areas, communities, and small towns where post offices are not self-sustaining. No small post office shall be closed solely for operating at a deficit, it being the specific intent of the Congress that effective postal services be insured to residents of both urban and rural communities” (39 U.S.C. 101(b))1.

• Despite laws put in place to protect rural post offices, rural communities have been overwhelmingly targeted for closings.

o In Arkansas 211 post offices have been targeted for closure2.

 100 of which fall in the 1st District2.

• If you were to spread post office closures evenly amongst every Congressional District, you would need to close roughly 8 per district to reach the USPS’ goal of 3,652 offices.

o There is nothing fair about the USPS’s current method for closing post offices and rural Americans are being burdened with the majority of these closures.

• H.R. 3370 would prevent the USPS from closing any post office that does not have an alternate post office within 8 miles as measured by year-round roads.

o Rural roads are rarely straight from town to town and while a post office may be within a 10 mile distance as the crow flies, by no means does that mean that the post office is within 10 miles
driving. This legislation would only use the actual driving distance between post offices to determine whether a post office is eligible for closing.

• The USPS ran an estimated deficit of nearly $10 billion in FY2010 and there is a clear need for serious reform to cut costs to avoid a taxpayer bailout3.

o This legislation does not hinder the USPS’s ability to address its unsustainable labor costs and can be seen as a companion to postal reform legislation that ensure that reform does not come
solely on the backs of rural Americans.

o The real source of the USPS’ long term debt is soaring labor costs that make up 80% of their total costs3. This must be addressed.

 If the USPS were to close all of the proposed 3,653 post offices it would only result in a savings of $200 million per year1. This will do little to rectify the USPS’s astronomical deficit
which was approximately $10.8 billion in FY2011.

o As revenue continues to decline, there is a clear need to downsize the USPS. H.R. 3370 will ensure that the USPS takes a balanced and fair approach to cutting costs.

1. Kosar, Kevin R., Analyst in American National Government for the Congressional Research Service. “The U.S. Postal Service: Common Questions About Post Office Closures.” August 4, 2011. http://www.crs.gov/pages/Reports.aspx?PRODCODE=R41950&Source=search
2. Prov: Cathy Pagano, United States Postal Service, Arkansas Study List
3. Kosar, Kevin R., Analyst in American National Government for the Congressional Research Service. “The U.S. Postal Service’s Financial Condition: Overview and Issues for Congress.” August 4,2011. http://www.crs.gov/pages/Reports.aspx?PRODCODE=R41024&Source=search

5 thoughts on “Arkansas Congressman Introduces Bill To Prohibit USPS From Closing Rural Post Offices

  1. Let’s get 1789 passed so that it is fiscally realistic to keep these rural offices open. Without a severe cut in spending we simply cannot afford to keep them open unless tax dollars will be paying for them. 1789 is a bill that would lead the post office back in the black. Write your local representatives and ask them to support this company saving bill.

  2. i hope that “labor figure ” includes the money paid out to worthless management from donahoe on down. not only did they pay out bonus money each year and every year while claiming $20 billion dollar losses, this bonus money is then added into their base salary EVERY YEAR AFTER THAT. face it, no ethical company would behave like the united states postal service. they get away with it because the office of the inspector general, the postal regulatory commisssion, and congress are either as corrupt or asleep at the wheel. by the way, tell your family, friends, neighbors and anyone else who will listen about the “bonus-gate” scandal at the united states postal service. the post office went to court to keep the bonus money figures a secret and this MUST NOT BE ALLOWED TO STAND. THE PUBLIC MUST KNOW THE TRUTH.

  3. Just another Republican Congressman showing off for his constituents. His bill won’t pass but he’ll look good while beating up on postal employees in general.
    This isn’t real reform and it isn’t even about saving post offices – just disingenuous posturing for the folks back home.

  4. ” The real source of the USPS’ long term debt is soaring labor costs that make up 80% of their total costs3. This must be addressed. ”

    We are a service-based industry. It is ‘people’ getting the job done so of course labor costs are going to be a large expense.

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