Deciding which plants to c lose will be difficult and face opposition 
			from community leaders. Actually closing all of them could take a 
			few years, and most workers will stay employed under union rules. 
			The bulk of the job cuts will actually come from attrition and 
			retirements, not layoffs, while the remaining workforce is shuffled 
			into new locations and positions.What's about to unfold in cities 
			from Reno, Nev., to Chicago will illustrate the complexity of 
			cutting a workforce protected by strong union contracts and of 
			shrinking operations dependent on intricate logistics. 
			"The downsizing or the demise of the postal service, it's going 
			to be a mess, and it's going to be a mess for a long time," said 
			John Zodrow, a retired Denver attorney and former Postal Service 
			arbitrator who wrote a book about its labor relations. "It's a huge 
			undertaking." 
			
			  
			The proposed closures are among several moves aimed at helping 
			the agency avert bankruptcy and adjust to declining mail volume as 
			customers migrate to the Internet to communicate and pay bills. 
			Delivery changes announced Monday would virtually eliminate the 
			chance for stamped letters to arrive the next day, for the first 
			time in 40 years, and would pave the way for closing more than half 
			of the 461 plants where the mail gets processed and sorted. 
			Postal officials say they can save up to $3 billion by 2015 by 
			following through with the cuts -- getting rid of buildings, running 
			equipment more efficiently, operating fewer mail trucks and cutting 
			employees. 
			The postal service's manager of collective bargaining said Monday 
			that the agency foresaw the "potential for significant attrition," 
			given that more than 20 percent of postal workers were eligible for 
			early retirement. Managers and non-career employees could be laid 
			off, while no decisions have been made on how any early retirement 
			incentives will be offered, said the official, Kevin Rachel. 
			For most workers and communities, the uncertainty is terrible, 
			but the economic impact might not be as catastrophic as feared. Most 
			workers in the facilities are represented by the American Postal 
			Workers Union, which reached a four-year contract in May 
			guaranteeing that its 220,000 clerks and maintenance employees 
			cannot be laid off or transferred more than 50 miles away. 
			Employees in plants that are closed will have to decide whether 
			to relocate to the places where work is consolidated, which will 
			need to rapidly expand in size. If they stay behind, they will fight 
			for remaining jobs in the area and will likely have to switch 
			duties. Many post offices, for instance, have deliberately left open 
			retail clerk and letter-carrying jobs. 
			"It's ‘grab a job before there are no more jobs left to be 
			grabbed.' It's the proverbial musical chairs," Zodrow said. 
			Zodrow said the turbulence could motivate more workers to take 
			early retirement, which he warned would be a mistake for some. 
			Postal workers do not have skills that transfer well to the private 
			sector and are making more than they would elsewhere, he said. 
			
			[to top of second column] 
			
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			 The outcome of negotiations between the postal service and unions 
			representing mail handlers and letter carriers, which both have 
			deadlines of next week, could be crucial in determining how 
			cost-cutting plans are carried out. Mail handlers, who are 
			represented by a union of 47,000 members, are bargaining about job 
			protections and reassignment rules. 
			Kate Bronfenbrenner, director of labor education research at 
			Cornell University, said she wonders whether the postal service will 
			get as many retirements as it is counting on. "Nobody in this 
			economy is retiring unless they are really ready. There has to be 
			some incentive," she said. 
			The agency first has to decide which plants to close. 
			While they have had a list of 252 prospective targets since 
			September, postal officials say final decisions will not be made 
			until they assess the potential savings, the impact on mail delivery 
			and whether other plants in the area could handle the volume. 
			There will be intense local opposition. The city council in Reno, 
			Nev., passed a resolution Wednesday protesting any plans to close 
			its processing facility and move 177 jobs to West Sacramento, 
			Calif., one of the proposals under review. Members of Congress in 
			Iowa, Illinois and elsewhere are already going to bat for local 
			plants. Businesses that rely on speedy mail delivery are fighting, 
			too. 
			Once a closing decision is made, it could take a year or longer 
			to wind down operations and transition work elsewhere, postal 
			service spokesman Richard Watkins said in a phone interview from 
			Kansas City. 
			
			  
			The closing of the mail processing center in Sioux, City, Iowa, 
			in October illustrates what may be awaiting other postal workers. 
			Some mail handlers and clerks moved 90 miles north to the 
			facility in Sioux Falls, S.D., where their operations were 
			transferred. Some union employees filled vacant positions for letter 
			carriers in Sioux City and are now walking routes. Others have been 
			performing temporary assignments while they wait for permanent jobs. 
			"I can't imagine what the hell they are going to do with all 
			these employees," said Scott Tott, the president of the American 
			Postal Workers Union chapter in Sioux City, who lost his job sorting 
			pallets of magazines but still shows up to work every day. "This is 
			a nightmare." 
			
[Associated Press; 
By RYAN J. FOLEY] 
            Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This 
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