USPS boosts extra trips, returns mail processing machines to service
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[October 24, 2020]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Postal
Service (USPS) told a U.S. judge on Friday it has returned 137 mail
processing machines to service since August and approved thousands of
daily extra delivery trips this month as it works to deliver millions of
ballots.
U.S. District Judge Emmett Sullivan had ordered the return of mail
sorting machines if removals could impact timely ballot deliveries ahead
of the Nov. 3 presidential election.
The Postal Service said since Aug. 18, 137 mail processing machines have
been returned to service and it has not removed any additional machines
from service.
Lawmakers and others heavily criticized Postmaster General Louis DeJoy,
a Trump donor who took over in June, for cost-cutting organizational
changes adopted in July including eliminating extra and late mail
deliveries that critics said caused delays in deliveries.
In August, DeJoy agreed to suspend changes through Election Day.
Four U.S. judges, including Sullivan, have issued preliminary
injunctions barring USPS from making service reductions before the vote.
Sullivan prohibited USPS from barring late or extra trips.
USPS told Sullivan on Friday it told all employees last week that late
and extra trips "should be used when they would facilitate the
expeditious delivery of Election Mail."
It said it had about 2,000 average daily late and extra trips through
mid-October, including 2,178 late trips and 740 extra trips on Thursday.
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A sample ballot is inserted into a New York State Secure Ballot
Dropbox as State and City legislators held a rally for their new
legislation that would to allow local Boards of Elections to
establish absentee ballot drop box locations across the state, in
New York City, New York, U.S., August 31, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar
On Thursday, USPS said it had delivered more than 100 million blank
or completed ballots since early September.
In total, 523 million pieces of election mail have entered the USPS
network, up 162% over the 2016 election.
Starting on Monday, supervisors are "instructed to use extraordinary
measures" to accelerate ballot deliveries, USPS said. The postal
service is delivering ballots "with or without sufficient postage"
and extending retail hours at some Post Offices through Election
Day.
A record number of voters are casting ballots by mail instead of in
person because of the coronavirus pandemic, but President Donald
Trump has repeatedly said, without providing evidence, that mail
voting would lead to widespread fraud.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Chris Reese and Sonya
Hepinstall)
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