Georgia Sen. Jon Ossoff seeks more control over postmaster general after
mail meltdown
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[September 19, 2024]
By CHARLOTTE KRAMON
ATLANTA (AP) — Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff of Georgia said Wednesday
he wants Congress to have more control over selecting the U.S.
postmaster general after a mail-service breakdown in his state.
Ossoff's proposed Postmaster General Reform Act would require the U.S.
Senate to confirm a president's appointment to the role. Right now, the
position is appointed by the U.S. Postal Service Board of Governors
without confirmation from Congress. The legislation would also allow
postmaster generals to stay in office for a maximum of two five-year
terms. The position currently has no term limits.
“The execution debacle by the U.S. Postal Service in Georgia has been a
failure of leadership and a failure of management, and it has reflected
the incompetent leadership and the incompetent management of the
postmaster general himself,” Ossoff said at a news conference Wednesday.
Lawmakers across states have criticized DeJoy for his management of the
Postal Service. The legislation comes as DeJoy has tried to squash
concerns from election officials throughout the country that the postal
system is not prepared to handle a rush of mail-in ballots ahead of the
November election.
Georgia lawmakers have blamed operational issues at the postal facility
in suburban Atlanta for many of the state’s delivery hiccups. USPS
consolidated multiple facilities into one in Palmetto, which was
supposed to make the delivery process more efficient.
Similar hubs were created in Richmond, Virginia, and Portland, Oregon,
as the Postal Service has tried to deal with nationwide slowdowns in
delivery and financial losses. The volume of first-class mail has
dropped 80% since 1997 as packaged shipments have grown, leading to $87
billion in losses from 2007 to 2020.
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Chair of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Subcommittee on Investigations Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga., speaks during
the hearing on Sexual Abuse of Female Inmates in Federal Prisons,
Dec. 13, 2022, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis
Magana, File)
But Georgia was ranked as the worst-performing state in a Postal Service
service performance report for the second quarter of 2024 that tracked
transit time for mail delivery. Ossoff has regularly pressed DeJoy for
updates on how he plans to improve the agency's operations, a concern
that has also been echoed by a number of Georgia's Republican U.S. House
members.
“This is about whether seniors are receiving their medication in the
mail,” Ossoff said Wednesday. “This is about whether citizens are
receiving vital notices from the court -- notices to appear, notices of
eviction. This is about whether small businesses can function. High
quality postal service can’t be a luxury. It is a necessity.”
After the Palmetto facility opened, delivery rates slowed. Georgia saw a
90% on-time delivery rate for first-class mail for most of 2023. That
rate dropped below 40% in March, but it has since rebounded above 80%.
Ossoff visited Palmetto in June. He called out DeJoy for poor management
as employees from across the state had to move to the Palmetto location.
DeJoy told local leaders he planned to add staff and noted that mail
service in the state was improving.
Ossoff said Wednesday that Georgians deserve better, saying he expects
bipartisan support for the legislation.
"This is a job of such importance that there needs to be a real job
interview with those the people elect to confirm the most important
officials in the federal government," Ossoff said.
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