Posted on 04/08/2019 3:37:52 AM PDT by Kaslin
With Tax Day quickly approaching, taxpayers can find a long and growing list of how Uncle Sam is spending/wasting their hard-earned money. The United States Postal Service (USPS) claims to not be on that list, despite a recent watchdog report showing that the agency reaps more than $3.6 billion each year in indirect taxpayer subsidies.
And every year, the organization that describes itself as using zero tax dollars accumulates larger losses. The USPS most recently reported a $1.5 billion net loss for the first quarter of fiscal year 2019, driven by declining mail revenues and soaring delivery costs.
According to a recent report by the inspector general (IG), transportation costs have risen by 18 percent over the past ten years, despite mail volume declining 26 percent and service standards being relaxed. Unless the USPS can get a grip on cost drivers (pun intended) and enact fundamental reforms, taxpayers across the country will have to pay more for the agencys shortcomings.
According to the IG, some of the surge in transportation costs is beyond the agencys control. Rising fuel costs and rising trucker contract wages have, after all, gripped many industries. But the USPSs mail mix, which has included more heavy packages over the past decade, is likely to blame for at least 15 percent of the increase in transportation costs since 2008. This heavier toll on USPS infrastructure may be worth it, if package prices can recoup the infrastructure and labor costs that go into delivery.
But thanks to requirements set by the Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC), the USPS only need assume that competitive products such as packages make up 8.8 percent of total delivery wear-and-tear costs. Thats setting the bar quite low, at a time when the USPS is making all sorts of investments into package-centric technologies.
Less than 10 percent of depreciation costs for portable scanners are attributed to competitive items such as packages, despite the USPSs purchase of these devices specifically to facilitate package deliveries. In all, competitive products comprise 45 percent of USPS's volume by weight, but less than a quarter of all wear-and-tear costs are attributed to this service line. In other words, the price is not right, and net costs are soaring as a result.
The problem of cost control, though, extends far beyond package pricing. The USPS increasingly contracts out middle-mile deliveries (i.e. the trip from a mail processing center to a Post Office) to truckers, who often erroneously bill the USPS for services not rendered. The IG has estimated that hundreds of thousands of chargeable irregularities take place per year, yet facilities often fail to try to get their money back from contractors who deliver late or use unacceptable equipment.
In its recent report, the Taxpayers Protection Alliance (TPA) estimates that this failure to hold contractors accountable costs the USPS at least $1 billion per year, or roughly a quarter of what the agency spends on highway contacts per year. Though the USPS hasnt seriously tried to address this issue in particular, the agency has tried to optimize contractor routes to save money. This effort is not going well; a January 30, 2019 IG report found that, there were no nationwide cost savings from the HCR Optimization Initiative in FY 2017.
But strangely enough, contractor shenanigans and mail mix arent even the largest cost contributors to burgeoning transportation costs. According to the IG, an astounding 39 percent of the cost increase is unexplained. Whether this is the USPS further underestimating package costs or something else, we may never know. But its difficult for anyone else other than the USPS to play around with the numbers, since so much of the underlying information isnt available to the public. For example, the percentage of parcels that go through the middle-mile (as opposed to just being dropped off by an e-commerce company to a Post Office for delivery) remains redacted.
By bringing this information into the public eye, the agency can let independent researchers systematically examine the USPSs issues. The USPS must also work with the PRC to get package prices to reflect actual costs, and thoroughly monitor contractor costs. Only then can the USPS actually take itself off the list of agencies jockeying for funds on Tax Day.
Another DS money launderer?
They charge to lay away and pick up at the store, but give away daily free delivery!
Is it any wonder they are losing money?
Never understood how it is that the message receptacle you must provide at your expense to receive messages known as a mailbox. Is prohibited under penalty of law for it being used as a receptacle for any messages delivered in it by persons other than USPS carriers despite having the receptacle owners consent when the person or carrier delivering that message can face a penalty for doing so..
the po should have been dumped ages ago!!!!!!!!!
UPS and FedXcan step in and do the job right almost w/o notice!
DO IT NOW TRUMP.45!
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Hell, just give the mail to Jehovah’s Witness.
They’re at every house every day, anyway.
hmmm.....Letter volume dropping, heavy package volume rising?
Trump is right, the taxpayers are subsidizing Jeff Bezos and Amazon.
Re
the po should have been dumped ages ago!!!!!!!!!
UPS and FedXcan step in and do the job right almost w/o notice!
***************************
GubMint can/coulda/shoulda save the yearly PO bailout$$$$$$ ...more than enough $ to build The Wall, etc.
++++++++++++++++++++++
Arrn: POTUS TRUMP.45!
+++++++++++++++++++++++
(M. Friedman)
You heard right. And it’s only funny because it’s so true.
Not only what you said, but there is supposed to be a 25,000 $ fine for intentionally damaging mailboxes, but when they catch kids smashing them they slap their wrist and send them on their way.
I have to rent a P O Box for $45 a year because my mailbox was getting smashed weekly without fail.
Why do they produce several new stamps per year at the cost of over a Million each one? Or move exc. a few miles on the taxpayers dime? Why do we even need more than a handful of stamps to begin with? So some idiot who collects stamps can have a new addition to their collections?
How to reduce cost, it’s a few years old, but the same principles applies.
https://www.uspsoig.gov/blog/how-can-postal-service-reduce-costs-associated-postage-stamps/
I decided long ago, based on their service, the USPS is largely incompetent. I got a private mail box at the local UPS store and rarely have to interact with the USPS.
The PMB costs about $14/month, and provides 24 hour access. The store accepts any packages sent to me there and even sends me an email when I get one. Their service, unlike the USPS is well worth the cost.
The USPS has been great, to a USPS person with whom I've interacted in my great state of Idaho.
I live in a very nice area of southern MI, but like most rural areas, mail boxes take a bad hit.
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