The
announcement comes after the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) in March
outlined a proposed 10-year strategic plan that would slow
current first-class delivery standards and raise some prices to
stem $160 billion in forecasted red ink over the next decade.
The plan has drawn criticism from many U.S. lawmakers including
some calling for the board to fire Postmaster General Louis
DeJoy and others who have urged Biden to remove the existing
board members.
DeJoy, a supporter of former President Donald Trump, was named
head of the Postal Service last year. After heavy criticism,
DeJoy suspended operational changes in August ahead of the 2020
presidential election.
Democrats said the service cuts were an attempt to boost Trump’s
re-election chances. DeJoy denied that and in testimony before
Congress noted USPS delivered more than 135 million ballots
ahead of the 2020 elections and "went to extraordinary lengths"
to get ballots delivered.
Biden nominated Anton Hajjar, former general counsel of the
American Postal Workers Union; Amber McReynolds, CEO of the
National Vote at Home Institute, a non-partisan non-profit
dedicated to expanding vote-by-mail systems and former elections
official in Denver; and Ron Stroman, a former deputy postmaster
general.
The six current board members and DeJoy are all white men and
the board's lack of diversity has also come under criticism.
USPS officials told Reuters last month they were optimistic
Congress will pass financial reforms providing the money-losing
agency with as much as $60 billion in relief. DeJoy has warned
without changes USPS would need a "government bailout."
Representative Carolyn Maloney, who chairs the committee
overseeing USPS, has circulated draft legislation that would
eliminate a requirement USPS pre-fund retiree health benefits.
It also would require postal employees to enroll in
government-retiree health plan Medicare.
USPS reported net losses of $86.7 billion since 2007. One reason
is 2006 legislation mandating it pre-fund more than $120 billion
in retiree health care and pension liabilities, a requirement
labor unions have called an unfair burden not shared by other
businesses.
DeJoy's revamp plan would revise existing one-to-three-day
service standards for first-class mail letters to one to five
days. USPS said 61% of current first-class mail volume would
stay at its current standard.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Shri Navaratnam and
Michael Perry)
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