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To: madison10
I work at a huge postal facility (emp. since '86). Many employees are being offered early retirement with an enticement bonus. Retirement and health care is very costly for USPS.

We're getting less mail but fewer and fewer employees mean a much heavier workload per employee.

Smaller post offices: Where I live in Beverly MA, there is one huge post office and two smaller ones--one in Beverly Farms, a well-to-do area, and one in Prides Crossing, ditto. (John Updike used to live nearby) Don't know if those 2 smaller offices would be among those closing (people would have to go downtown). There have been some "college post office" branches selected for closure.

Don't know much fat at USPS HQ could be cut (further...). Some of the deficit could be made up with a rate increase, but at a time when newspapers cost $1.50 and you can send a letter 3,000 miles away for 44 cents (I know, email "free"), you'd think they could boost it to 50 cents or so to make up these deficits. It wouldn't be backbreaking. (A move to up the rate to 46 cents failed).

Of course the PO has also done things like spend millions to sponsor Lance Armstrong...

29 posted on 01/24/2011 9:15:05 AM PST by raccoonradio (..)
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To: raccoonradio

Personally, I would have no problem with them rounding the postage up to 50 cents if they would keep my small town post office open. Everything is just too far apart here, plus the crossing of zip code/county lines, for them to close. Closing just screws addresses up, doesn’t it?

I don’t care to get e-mail cards anyway.

The USPS should be privatized, but keep the small branches open for convenience.


35 posted on 01/24/2011 9:25:29 AM PST by madison10
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