WASHINGTON – The four authors of Senate postal reform legislation Tuesday released a letter they sent to the Postmaster General asking him to delay the closing of post offices and mail processing facilities until reform legislation is signed into law.
In a letter to Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe, the four Senators asked that he extend the moratorium on closings that is due to expire May 15 until Congress has passed a final bill to prevent the wholesale closing of regional mail facilities and local post offices and save the iconic institution that delivers over 500 million pieces of mail a day and sustains over 8 million jobs.
Last week, the Senate overwhelmingly passed the 21st Century Postal Service Act (S. 1789), authored by Sens. Joe Lieberman, ID-Conn., Susan Collins, R-Maine, Tom Carper, D-Del., and Scott Brown, R-Mass. The House has not yet passed a bill. The four Senators have also written to House Leaders asking them to act swiftly so the two chambers can reconcile their bills and send final reform legislation to the President to sign.
Following is a copy of the Senators’ letter to the Postmaster General:
April 30, 2012
The Honorable Patrick R. Donahoe
Postmaster General
475 L’Enfant Plaza, SW
Washington, DC 20260
Dear Mr. Donohoe:
Last week, the Senate passed S. 1789, the 21st Century Postal Service Act, bipartisan legislation to help restore the Postal Service to sound financial footing, and we look forward to working with the House of Representatives and the Postal Service to enact final legislation in the coming months. We are writing to ask that, in the interim, you follow the intent of the Senate with respect to the closures of post offices and processing facilities and that you extend the current moratorium to cover closures that would not be permitted under S. 1789 until Congress has an opportunity to finalize legislation in the near future.
S. 1789 is a balanced, responsible bill that helps relieve some of the immediate financial pressures on the Postal Service by restructuring its payments into the Retiree Health Benefits fund and refunding its overpayments to the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) — and directs that the FERS refund be used to right-size the postal workforce through the provision of retirement incentives for 100,000 postal workers. S. 1789 also recognizes that the Postal Service, facing a sharp decline in first class mail and a world that has increasingly turned to electronic communications, needs innovative thinking and new sources of revenue. The bill therefore provides for increased flexibility to offer nonpostal products, a Chief Innovation Officer, and the establishment of a blue-ribbon commission to develop a new strategic blueprint for the Postal Service to enable it to be more relevant and solvent in a digital age. Importantly, S. 1789 also recognizes the need for further cost savings, authorizing you to make thoughtful reductions in infrastructure that will not adversely affect service. In fact, the analysis you have provided indicates that this legislation, when implemented, could save the Postal Service more than $19 billion per year.
You have announced your intent to close hundreds of post offices and processing facilities beginning May 15th. However, as last weeks’s debate demonstrated, there is considerable concern in the Senate that this approach will unnecessarily degrade the infrastructure which is one of the Postal Service’s most important assets. The legislation thus permits the Postal Service to realign its delivery network and modify its service standards while still ensuring that the USPS maintains the necessary retail and processing facilities to continue to provide adequate postal services and not chase away its customers. The legislation that is ultimately enacted by Congress could bar some of the planned closures or make many of them financially unnecessary. For that reason, the Senate adopted an amendment to S. 1789 that expressed the Sense of the Senate that the Postal Service should not close post offices and processing facilities before the 21st Century Postal Service Act is enacted. We believe an attempt to proceed with the planned closures – to “get in under the wire” while legislation to the contrary is being considered – would be counterproductive and would violate the clear intent of the Senate.
We therefore urge you to extend the current moratorium to delay the closure or consolidation of post offices and mail processing facilities that would be kept open were S. 1789 to be enacted into law, while we work together with our House colleagues to enact comprehensive postal legislation as quickly as possible.
We look forward to discussing this matter further with you.
Sincerely,
Joseph I. Lieberman
Chairman
Susan M. Collins
Ranking Member
Thomas R. Carper
Chairman
Subcommittee on Federal Financial Management, Government Information, Federal Services and International Security
Scott P. Brown
Ranking Member
Subcommittee on Federal Financial Management, Government Information, Federal Services and International Security
If you hire another Innovation officer make sure he or she has never worked in postal management, and the last thing we need is a commitee of postal management flunkies, who lost their said positions to decide what the future is after they have screwed it up!
Having worked for the USPS for over 30 years, I think the attempts to save the Postal Service are simply prolonging the inevitable. Mail volume has dropped to an all time low and will only continue to decline. The management style employed by the Postal Service only serves to hasten our demise, with layers of supervisors and management who more often than not are simply not capable of performing the jobs they hold. They are put into their positions in order to fill quotas in the name of diversity regardless of their capabilities. This has left us with people who can’t or won’t make decisions and who won’t do their jobs by making the work force actually work! The USPS is a dinosaur in need of a place to die.