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Postal Service considers closings, consolidation

Mon Aug 3, 2009 3:28 PM EDT
business, politics, us, united-states, postal-service, postal, closings
Randolph E. Schmid, AP Science Writer
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WASHINGTON — A pillar of U.S. communities since the nation's founding, the post office is facing the prospect of closings or consolidation of services at hundreds of locations amid a sharp decline in business due to e-mail.

The Postal Service may register a loss of nearly $7 billion this fiscal year in spite of a 2-cent increase in the price of stamps in May, cuts in staff and removal of collection boxes.

Post officials sent a list of nearly 700 potential candidates for closing or consolidation to the independent Postal Regulatory Commission for review. More may be added, but the current list of candidates can be viewed at the commission's Web site, http://www.prc.gov

Some of the offices could be closed while others could have some of their functions consolidated with other offices. For example, in some cases preparing mail for delivery may be shifted from Office A to nearby Office B, but the first office might still offer such services as selling stamps and mailing parcels and letters. In other cases one of the offices might be closed.

Postal Vice President Jordan Small told a congressional subcommittee that local managers will study activities of approximately 3,200 stations and branches across the country and consider factors such as customer access, service standards, cost savings, impact on employees, environmental impact, real estate values and long-term Postal Service needs.

No changes are expected before the end of the current fiscal year on Sept. 30. There are 32,741 post offices.

"We anticipate that out of these 3,200 stations and branches, under 1,000 offices could be considered as viable candidates to study further," Small said.

In addition to the switch of business to the Internet, the recession has hurt the post office by reducing advertising mail. Last year's high gas prices also siphoned millions of dollars from its coffers.

Just last week the Government Accountability Office added the Postal Service to its list of troubled agencies, saying serious and significant structural financial challenges face the agency.

"Every major postal policy, from employee pay, to days of delivery, to the closing of postal facilities must be on the table. Without major change, the day will soon come when the Postal Service will be unable to pay its bills," GAO said.

Congress is considering a bill to change the way the post office funds its retiree health benefits over the next two years that could save it $2 billion annually.

The post office also filed a petition with the independent Postal Regulatory Commission indicating that managers are looking at closing many post offices to save money.

In addition, Postmaster General John Potter has asked Congress for permission to reduce mail deliveries from six days a week to five.

Last year, mail volume fell by 9.5 billion pieces to a total of 203 billion pieces. It is expected to fall by 28 billion pieces this year to a total of 175 billion pieces.

___

On the Net:

U.S. Postal Service: http://www.usps.com

PRC list of candidates for closure:

http://www.prc.gov/Docs/63/63990/SBOC%20Full%20Study%20July%20List.pdf

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Randolph E. Schmid's Column, All of Newsvine
  • Groups: none
  • Regions: Washington DC
  • Public Discussion (18)
Dreama

Another BROKE gov failure to add to the list. Gee I have so much faith in them, don't you?

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Mon Aug 3, 2009 4:59 PM EDT
JayB

Yup! About as much faith as a screen door in a submarine!

And they actually want to handle your health care? OMG!

#2...Rep/Ind/Conserv all want the TRUTH!

    #1.1 - Mon Aug 3, 2009 9:59 PM EDT
    Frank BlackDeleted
    Lampell

    Excuse me but the USPS was privatized during gd senile dead President Reagan's term bubba jack!

    The post office was not privatized, it was reorganized so that it could stand on its own feet. If it were privatized there would be sharelholders, there are none. The post office has access to government aid, which is why they will be borrowing more money, they have a 15 billion dollar credit line with the govt, and can tap 3 billion a year. Their website is a dot gov, not com. Please check your facts before you post

    • 1 vote
    #1.3 - Mon Aug 3, 2009 11:26 PM EDT
    Reply
    Pittsburgh Dan

    Damn is THAT unfair...the article clearly states how electronic avenues, rather than ineffective govt., have hurt postal revenues.

    I can drop something in the mail today for 44 cents...and have it get to my buddy in California no later than Thursday.

    44 cents to go 2500 miles.

    And they're still handling 175 BILLION pieces a year...you do know that that's roughly 20 pieces of mail for every man, woman and child in the US, right?

    Ooops...sorry...you're obviously a 'pub and not interested in anythin' factual...

    • 3 votes
    Reply#2 - Mon Aug 3, 2009 6:00 PM EDT
    R. Donald Snyder

    Don't confuse the anti-government idiots with the truth.....just makes the angry and crap their diapers.......and then an undocumented worker has to change them.

    • 1 vote
    #2.1 - Tue Aug 4, 2009 2:59 AM EDT
    Dreama

    R. Snyder

    Can you point to a Gov. venture that is NOT losing $? That's not tapped out? That's not inefficient? That doesn't suck the tax payers dry? Give me one that makes a profit.

    It doesn't matter what caused the loss, all businesses face different causes of potential loss. You either make adjustments to pull through it, more tech, spending cuts, product improvement, etc, or you fail. Guess what the gov, does? Yep, prop it up with tax dollars and let it continue to lose $ (drain the tax payer) Thanks gov!!

      #2.2 - Tue Aug 4, 2009 9:02 AM EDT
      Pittsburgh Dan

      Seems to me, Wall Street (Giant Financial Houses and Insurance Companies) has been, at the very least, EQUALLY inefficient. You know, given that we bailed everyone out to the tune of a TRILLION dollars just to TRY and prevent a depression.

      Not sayin' your wrong. But not sayin' your right, either.

      • 1 vote
      #2.3 - Wed Aug 5, 2009 10:48 AM EDT
      Reply
      Frank BlackDeleted
      Division by Zero

      I would like to see the USPS drop Saturday delivery and possibly reduce residential delivery to Mon-Wed-Fri. There is really nothing I can think of that requires daily residential service. If it's time-sensitive I'm going to pay for overnight delivery, otherwise it can wait an extra day.

        Reply#4 - Tue Aug 4, 2009 9:05 AM EDT
        raymond-392453

        Elimanate ALL Unauthorized Junk Mail & Advertising ---- That would in itself CUT DOWN Mailing costs !!!!!

          Reply#5 - Wed Aug 5, 2009 6:48 AM EDT
          NoMoreSuffering

          No, that's a cash cow for the post office no matter how many exclamation points you use.

          They need to control costs - highly paid postmasters at small offices, too many managers/supervisors for number of employees, high hourly rates for workers. Consolidate processing facilities and then reduce headcount through attrition and early retirements would be a good start.

          ----------

          FoolsGladly

          • 1 vote
          #5.1 - Wed Aug 5, 2009 8:35 AM EDT
          Reply
          breelaboyDeleted
          breelaboyDeleted
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