U.S. Postal Service finalizes plan to slow some mail deliveries
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[August 07, 2021]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Postal
Service (USPS) on Friday finalized a plan effective Oct. 1 to slow down
some first-class mail deliveries as part of efforts to cut red ink.
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy proposed in March to revise existing one-
to three-day service standards to one to five days for first-class mail.
USPS said on Friday that 61% of first-class mail will remain at its
current standard.
USPS said in a notice published in the Federal Register current
standards require it "to rely heavily on air transportation, using air
cargo transportation carriers and commercial passenger air carriers."
Delivery standards will be slower for about 7% of periodicals.
Airplanes, USPS added, are less reliable than surface transportation and
costs much more because of "weather delays, network congestion, and air
traffic control ground stops."
The "addition of one or two days to current service standards for
first-class mail and periodicals would enable the Postal Service to
convey a greater volume of mail within the contiguous United States by
surface transportation," it said.
While acknowledging "some uncomfortable changes," DeJoy defended the
plan earlier on Friday at a board of governors meeting, saying it makes
a commitment to deliver to "every address in the nation, six days a
week, and strives for financial sustainability."
USPS on Friday posted a $3 billion quarterly net loss, with a 1.1% rise
in first-class mail deliveries to 12.1 billion pieces. But "volumes
remain lower than pre-pandemic levels and we expect continued secular
declines," it added.
For the minority of first-class mail affected by the slower delivery
window "the standard would only change by one or two days (with most of
such volume experiencing a one-day change)," USPS said.
USPS added it has been unable to achieve existing "service performance
targets for many years, and that these service failures illustrate the
weakness of the current transportation model."
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United States Postal Service (USPS) workers load mail into delivery
trucks outside a post office in Royal Oak, Michigan, U.S. August 22,
2020. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
In June, the attorneys general of 20 states asked the
U.S. Postal Regulatory Commission to reject plans to slow down some
first-class deliveries, saying allowing that to happen could harm
local governments' ability to fulfill essential functions.
DeJoy unveiled a plan in March to cut $160 billion in predicted
losses over the next decade with the changes in service standards a
key part.
USPS has struggled with poor delivery performance over the past
year, facing a huge boost in packages and staffing issues due to the
coronavirus pandemic. It said Thursday that through July it
delivered 89% of first-class mail on time, up 1.5 percentage points.
Starting Aug. 29, USPS will raise prices of first-class postage
stamps to 58 cents from 55 cents. Price hikes are needed because
over the past decade, mail volume has declined by 46 billion pieces,
or 28%, while single piece first-class mail declined 47%, USPS said.
Congress is considering a plan to provide USPS with $46 billion in
financial relief over 10 years, including eliminating a requirement
that USPS pre-fund retiree health benefits for 75 years.
The agency has reported net losses of about $90 billion since 2007.
One reason is 2006 legislation mandating that it pre-fund more than
$120 billion in retiree healthcare and pension liabilities, a
requirement labor unions have called an unfair burden not shared by
other businesses.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; editing by Diane Craft, Marguerita
Choy and Richard Chang)
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