Posted on 07/27/2016 7:44:11 AM PDT by Kaslin
Despite a packed legislative agenda and shortened calendar, postal reform legislation has advanced in Congress. Both of the Senate bills shepherded by Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., have stalled, but the Postal Service Reform Act of 2016 passed unanimously through the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform barely a month after it was introduced.
The legislation, offered by Chairman Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, Ranking Member Elijah Cummings, D-Md., and others, includes a variety of measures members hope will shore up the Postal Services financial position. Unfortunately, the legislation fails to address either the financial situation or the need for the Postal Service to focus on its core mission of delivering mail.
The goal of the legislation is to shore up the Postal Services dismal finances. It has lost more than $50 billion since 2007, and it is projected to lose another $4 billion this year. This would be easier to swallow if the Postal Service was excelling at its principle goal of delivering mail, but delivery times have actually worsened in recent years.
But the losses stem largely from ill-conceived side projects, such as functioning as a delivery service for a fish market in Manhattan and delivering groceries in San Francisco. And theyre probably even worse than stated because the equipment and personnel to engage in these projects are considered by the Postal Service to be part of routine mail delivery. No company could exist with the accounting techniques the Postal Service uses, and no bank would lend to such a business.
The legislation would raise the rate for sending a first-class letter to 48 cents. In April, rates were rolled back from 49 cents to 47 cents because of the expiration of a temporary surcharge in place to help the Postal Service mitigate the effects of the 2008 recession.
In response, the Postal Service lobbied to extend this temporary price increase permanently, but both the Postal Regulatory Commission and the U.S. Court of Appeals turned it down. It would be most unusual for Congress to pass legislation that overrules the judgment of both the regulator and the court.
The legislation also calls for postal retirees to enter the Medicare system, a measure so controversial it alone could bring down the bill. The Postal Service has fallen nearly $60 billion behind in its health care payments, and it says this provision is the only way to recover.
Shifting retirees to Medicare may move costs off the Postal Services bottom line, but it would seriously threaten Medicare, which currently can pay full benefits only until 2030. The Congressional Budget Office has not provided a budget score yet, but a similar provision from an earlier proposal was determined to add $13.2 billion in costs to Medicare, which would move up that timetable considerably.
The National Active and Retired Federal Employees opposes this move as a step backward for retired postal workers health care. It says postal retirees who make up a third of its membership would be hit with higher monthly premiums -- a $122-per-month increase for largely the same coverage.
The bill shoulders postal retirees with the responsibility of fixing the Postal Services finances in the name of expediency, the group wrote in a letter to the House Oversight Committee. It compromises fairness and breaks a promise made to now-retired postal workers and their survivors regarding their health benefits.
NARFE also charged that the provision changes the bargain regarding health benefits for postal retirees after they have retired, setting a dangerous precedent.
The legislation also would enable the Postal Service to move immediately toward centralized delivery to business addresses and also for residential addresses if 40 percent of the residents who would be affected in a given community agree to the measure.
Postal unions have opposed this move because of the potential to reduce the number of letter carriers and shrink their union dues-paying membership. In Congress, Rep. Susan Davis, D-Calif., also has raised concerns about the impact of this provision on senior citizens and persons with disabilities.
Ultimately, the legislation seems designed to allow the Postal Service to offload its management mistakes onto taxpayers but protect its ability to pursue unproven lines of business. How about getting the Postal Service to do what we give it monopoly protection to do deliver first-class mail and scale down the rest.
Otherwise, well continue to pay more and get less from this still-vital national resource.
I think we have to look at the contracts of the subcontractors. We’re getting scr**** over big time.
Let the postal service go totally private. It should have nothing to do with government.
Unfortunately running a postal service is one thing the Constitution actually REQUIRES the Federal Government to do.
Short of an amendment we’re SCROOOOOD.
Constitution says they may do it....not that they must do it.
What’s wrong with the USPS are politicians and unions.
Cutting routine Saturday delivery would be a start.
Shipping has become so expensive at this point.
International shipping costs are a joke. It wasn’t too many years ago that a very large portion of my business was overseas buyers. That’s pretty much gone now.
I once sold hundreds of used books a month and used surface mail ( big container ships ) for overseas buyers.
That’s gone and so are those sales. Shipping a book overseas is very expensive.
Keep raising rates, USPS, soon I’ll be out of business.
As mentioned by another, it’s actually referenced in the Constitution. I believe there should be a government recognized service that cannot go out of business for purposes of issuing subpoenas, sending legal documents, getting mail to soldiers, interacting with foreign post offices, etc. that will go to EVERY U.S. address.
They don’t have to be in the overnight delivery business (that came AFTER Federal Express invented the category)
They don’t have to be in the big package delivery business.
They don’t have to be in the cheap junk mail business.
They certainly don’t have to be in the subsidize shipments from Red China business.
I find priority mail is mature and works well.
There is no political will to close the remote and rural post offices.
There is no political will to dump Saturday delivery.
We should make the postal service smaller in order to make the inevitable shortfalls more tolerable.
The junk mail sector is used to keep the USPS large. Dump the subsidies, make a first class letter 75 cents. The people whp howl about it are the same ones who also boast that they use Internet and email for everything.
I send a lot of personal snail mail, and scads of Christmas cards. I am willing to pay the extra quarter per throw, to make a better postal system with less junk mail.
Do you realize how late the mail would be delivered on Monday which is usually late anyway because they have to catch up on the mail that comes in.
Bring in the auditors and find out why they are bleeding money. Then fix the problem. This isn’t difficult.
While that would help cut the fat, it’s the unfounded healthcare and retiree liabilities that are the 10 ton boat anchor...
Sadly, that's one of the few things that is profitable for them.
“Junk mail” is the only class of postage that has been growing. First class mail has been in a steady decline since the mid-90’s with the advent of email and it took another huge hit with electronic bill pay.
They have to rationalize their infrastructure. They need to offload their retiree benefits as well. Those are untenable as currently constructed.
It is the pension plan they have that is killing the postal system.
Roll it into a 401k plan instead.
I didn’t realize that the workers got direct free medical care coverage forever, even after age 65, instead of Medicare. It is bad enough that they receive it up to 65 even after a relatively short “career.” The cost of medical care is this country’s cancer, eating away throughout the economy.
Track 1 gets delivery on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Track 2 gets delivery on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.
The worst thing that happens is that you get half your mail a day later. If you don't like that, rent a P.O. Box and pick it up yourself every day.
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