Posted on 03/07/2009 6:39:07 AM PST by KeyLargo
Posted on Sat, Mar. 07, 2009 Post office bought S.C. mansion so postmaster could transfer By ADAM BEAM abeam@thestate.com
The U.S. Postal Service is helping a former Lexington postmaster sell his $1.1 million home on Lake Wateree.
Ronald Hopson was transferred from Lexington to Carollton, Texas, last year just before the Postal Service instituted a hiring and promotion freeze.
As part of the Postal Services employee relocation program, a relocation company paid Hopson for the appraised value of his home, which sits on five acres on Lake Wateree near Winnsboro in Fairfield County.
That company, Cartus, will then sell the home typically for less than the appraised value. The Postal Service will pay Cartus the difference, plus administrative and other fees.
Its unclear what Cartus paid Hopson for the home.
The Postal Service usually ends up paying between 14 percent and 20 percent of a homes value, according to Greg Frey, a Postal Service spokesman.
That could range from $168,000 to $240,000.
We dont buy houses, Frey said We enable our employees who qualify to serve the company to move. If that means there is some way we can help ... thats what we do.
The Postal Service has been hard hit by the economy, especially with the decline in direct-mail advertising, Frey said. The board of governors is considering cutting back mail delivery in an effort to save money.
All of the Postal Services revenue comes from postage, Frey said.
Efforts to reach Alison Sedney, Cartus communications director, were unsuccessful Friday.
Efforts to reach Hopson were unsuccessful.
Hopson earns $92,000 a year in his new job as a branch supervisor, Frey said. Frey said he could not say how much Hopson earned while he was working in Lexington, because the law only requires that the Postal Service release an employees current salary.
Hopson bought the land, which was vacant, in 2007 for $150,000, according to Fairfield County Assessor Wendell Irby.
The county has appraised the house, which has six bedrooms and an indoor pool and spa, at $1,161,940, Irby said.
While Cartus paid Hopson for the house, technically Hopson still owns it. The deed will not transfer until the house is sold to a new owner.
Frey said not all homes are eligible for the relocation program. In February, in response to lowering home values because of the mortgage crisis, the Postal Service lowered the cap for the program to $1 million.
Under the new policy, Hopsons Lake Wateree home would no longer be eligible.
The Postal Service is an independent government agency, meaning it is run by a board of governors appointed by the president, but receives no taxpayer money.
The Postal Service has 665,000 employees and nearly 33,000 post offices across the country.
Reach Beam at (803) 771-8405.
The U.S. Postal Service purchased this $1.2 million home from an employee so he could relocate. The 8,400-square-foot, six-bedroom home is on Lake Wateree.
- Jeff Blake/jblake@thestate.com
The house is bigger than the post office.
Well, he ‘was’ post master.
"Now I gotta hire an illegal to mow my lawn."
In 2007 he bought it for $150,000 and now it’s worth over a million?

Typical post office crap. I hate to be called a racists, and many will take this as a racist comment, but the post office, the VA, any and all government offices are prmarily staffed by minorities. When the crash comes they’ll be the last ones holding jobs.
Surging U.S. Unemployment Rate Pressures Obama for More Action
“Government payrolls increased by 9,000 after a gain of 31,000 the prior month, one of the few areas still hiring. Another 26,000 jobs were added by education and health-care providers.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601068&sid=aZ9LFchMDv3M&refer=home
Just more of the "Bash Corporations" movement we've seen lately.
Geeze...i want to work for the Feds...when my property drops...and I have to move...nobody pays me the diff!!!
How on earth does someone that only makes $92 thou. pay for a mill $ house. There’s something wrong with that equation.
Sometimes, the Marine Corps will pay if there is a hardship or a position that is hard to fill. For instance, few people want to move to the Washington DC area (traffic, schools, and cost of living), so it is normal to pay for a move from NC to DC (but not the other way around).
I'm guessing maybe family money, perhaps on the wife's side.
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