USPS Will Begin Plant Closures Next Week

thoughtone

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source: Washington Post

Postal Service poised to begin controversial plant closures next week


The U.S. Postal Service next week plans to begin a new round of plant closings and consolidations that will affect dozens of mail-processing centers, despite calls from more than half the members of the outgoing Senate to postpone the changes.

Earlier this month, 30 senators, all but one of them Democrats, issued a letter to Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe urging USPS not to move forward with its “network rationalization” program until the agency has completed its analyses of potential impacts.

USPS spokeswoman Sarah Ninivaggi said the agency plans to respond to the senators’ letter, but she did not provide a timeline.

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The Postal Service is set to move forward on Monday with controversial plans for closing and consolidating many of its mail-processing centers. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

All told, the Postal Service plans to close 82 mail processing centers nationwide next year, starting on Jan. 10.

USPS officials have said the consolidation plan will help the financially struggling agency save money and adjust to dwindling demand for first-class mail, one of its core services. But critics say the program will slow down delivery times and harm the agency’s brand.

In October, the USPS inspector general released a report saying the Postal Service was leaving communities in the dark about the impacts of the changes. Auditors found incomplete impact studies for all of the 95 mail-processing facilities that are due to absorb operations from other centers.

The Postal Service said it could not complete the statutorily required analyses because it had not yet finalized its new processing guidelines, which will scale back delivery standards starting on Monday. The agency does not plan to update its impact studies before the consolidation plan begins, Ninivaggi said.

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Despite the inspector general’s findings, the Postal Service insisted this week that it had fulfilled its obligations with the impact reports.

Ninivaggi said the agency has been transparent and that it began notifying customers of the consolidation plans in 2011. “The Postal Service is committed to providing the level of customer service that our customers expect and deserve, and we have met the requirements to notify and inform customers in advance of the transitions,” she said.

In their letter, the senators criticized USPS’s initial studies, saying the language in the reports was “so vague and uninformative as to be meaningless to the public.” They asked the agency to postpone its plans to accommodate further analyses.

“USPS gains little by deciding to continue the consolidation process on its current, arbitrary timeline,” the letter said.

But the Postal Service, which has lost billions of dollars each year since 2006, has shown no appetite for delays. Ninivaggi said the agency will begin its network rationalization program, estimated to save $750 million annually, on Jan. 10, as originally scheduled.

Already, the Postal Service has consolidated 350 mail-processing facilities and taken other steps to reduce costs since 2006. In the past three years alone, the agency closed 143 plants and eliminated about 3,800 routes, in addition to reducing hours at more than 9,700 offices and trimming its workforce by 3,000 employees.

USPS said in its annual report to Congress this month that the past three years of changes “resulted in negligible service impact, required no employee layoffs and generated annual cost savings of approximately $865 million.”

The next phase of consolidation will increase delivery times and eliminate overnight delivery for “a large portion of First-Class Mail and periodicals,” according to the inspector general’s report.

A Postal Service fact sheet says the changes will only nominally increase the average delivery time for first-class mail, from 2.14 days to 2.25 days. Ninivaggi said the agency based its estimate on “extensive modeling and real-time info from last year’s consolidations.”

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), who helped draft the letter to Donahoe, said there is more at stake than just delivery times. She said in a statement on Tuesday that the Postal Service could lose one of its biggest advantages: Its reach into virtually every American community.

“I grew up in small-town Missouri, and I know personally that our postal facilities are more than brick and mortar — they’re the lifeblood of communities across the country,” McCaskill said. “Any CEO will tell you that voluntarily giving up your competitive advantage and lowering standards isn’t a recipe for success.”

Much of the Postal Service’s financial troubles in recent years stem from declines in mail volume, which have decreased by more than 27 percent since 2006. Nonetheless, some of the agency’s largest expenditures are beyond its control, including a congressional mandate to prefund retiree health benefits to the tune of about $5 billion a year.

In a sign of hope for the postal network, USPS has seen rapid growth in its package business, increasing revenues in that area by 18 percent since 2012. Still, the agency has been unable to make a profit for several years.

Donahoe has asked Congress to remove or restructure the eight-year-old prefunding requirement, something that postal unions have pushed for as well. But an agreement on comprehensive postal legislation has proven elusive for several years, with lawmakers from both parties opposing bipartisan plans that would involve service cuts such as an end to Saturday mail delivery.
 
They need to privatize it and expand their service to delivering other things.
 
Not surprising. USPS sucks.

The ONLY package that I shipped with USPS this Xmas was the ONLY package that did not make it on time. It was on the 3 day guaranteed delivery option and it didn't get delivered until 8 days later.

Anyway, the postal service is struggling bad. I got fam that works for them and for the first time in their career they are afraid of losing their job. USPS was once a sure gig until retirement.
 
They delivered everything I ordered for Christmas to my neighbors. It's like they said "fuck it Imma leave everything here at the corner house and they'll distribute it"

Luckily I got some good neighbors and they gave me my package

Then

I called Amazon and told them I didn't get any packages.... Got all my money back!

:dance:

Sent from my SPH-L720 using Tapatalk
 
Yes UPS will leave your package on your porch a lot. But I remember when the post office was talking about not opening on Saturdays any more.
For years now people have been doing a lot of shopping and ordering on line. E-bay and Amazon do a lot of packaging. So what is suppose to pick up the slack fed x or something?
A lot of strange things are happening in America.

http://oneblacknation.webs.com/

http://blacknation.vpweb.com/default.html
 
im confused as to how usps is that broke when due to ebay and amazon package delivery is at a all time high.
 
im confused as to how usps is that broke when due to ebay and amazon package delivery is at a all time high.

From what I understand pensions and retirement funds are killing them. The same thing that is happening to the US automakers. They are paying out billions per year to these retirement funds.

In fact, I just did a quick search. USPS had to pay $5.7 billion to the retirement fund in 2014. And the payout is getting bigger every year. And they had a $2 billion dollar loss for the year. Plus they have to spend $2.5 billion a year to upgrade vehicles and facilities.

That is a lot of billies they are spending.
 
PeerlessMack It still sounds like a lot of bullshit to me. Right now small town and small city people can shop like they are in a big city and get good prices from ordering online.

Something is going on because all over America certain people are living large for the masses to work for their being able to live large. To give you an example these war we have had and all the money the international bankers and crooked contractors have made and lived large off of. They are not going to pay that back. The problem of that falls on the American people.

And things like this is happening all over America. Only people getting any real money is those that are no threat to the system of Satan.

And on top of that the fear they are programming black America with. It is not safe to let your kids go to the store anymore. And if your devotion is not to this crooked system then you are in trouble.

I have learned to smile through it all. Either the world will control you or you will overcome the world and change it. I have did all that I could with what little I have had to work with.

The electric car is no longer here being mass produced because they outlawed it. The use of solar energy is still being controlled and the knowledge of it. Clean air and water is only for a while if we keep going at the pace we are going with the polluting of the ocean and all. Pure food is only for a while as long as these devils stay in power. And freedom is surely only for a very brief while for those pure at heart.

This thing with the mail is only another step in changes being made. http://oneblacknation.webs.com/http://blacknation.vpweb.com/default.html
 
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Peeps; the republiklans unbeknownst to 99% of most American 'sheeple' have initiated the demise & collapse of the United States Post Office since Dec 20, 2006 when bill [H.R. 6407] (109th congress) passed. The corporate television "media of mass distraction" (CNN, NBC, ABC, CBS, <s>FOX</s> FAKE) - which more than 90% of American 'sheeple' rely on as their ONLY source of -??news??- never told them that the U.S. Post Office which is mentioned in the U.S. Constitution was being destroyed. Meanwhile zombie-like gun zealots walk around shopping malls with machine guns strapped to their backs screaming about their second amendment rights to open-carry any size fucking gun they want. Now, if you can't figure out why republiklans & a few democrats want to destroy the USPS, - then you really haven't been paying attention to the "reality-based" economic and political mega-trends of the past 10 years.








How Republicans Crippled the United States Postal Service



09/14/2011

“Neither snow, nor rain, nor heat, nor gloom of night, stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds,” reads the unofficial motto of the United States Postal Service.

I guess no one ever thought it would be the Republican Party finishing off the Postal Service when those words were borrowed from the ancient Greek and chiseled in granite over the entrance to the James Farley Post Office in New York City on Labor Day in 1914.

Our postal system is quite remarkable if you think about it for a minute.

For just forty-four cents, you can send a Mother’s Day card from anywhere in the United States to the woman who carried you for nine months, providing she lives in the United States and it will arrive in a matter of days. Or as Comedy Central’s Jon Stewart more simply quipped, “Someone comes to your house, takes something you’ve written, and brings it to a person that you want them to give it to anywhere in the world for like fifty cents,” before deadpanning, “oh, but it’s going to take a couple of days.”

The power to create post offices is enumerated in our Constitution. Our Postal Service is even fully funded by the sale of stamps, not through tax dollars. That is a combo that should bring tears of joy to the eyes of tea partiers and Republicans alike.

GOP efforts to cripple the Postal Service predate the current tea party “cut government spending” drumbeat echoing throughout Washington during these difficult economic times.

Five years ago, during the Bush administration, the Postal Service handled the largest volume of mail ever seen in its 236-year history. It was in that year, that the Republican-controlled Congress passed the Postal Accountability Enhancement Act (PAEA).

The legislation’s title certainly sounds pretty great. But, as is the case with so much in Washington, the words chosen were simply window dressing for a very destructive proposal.

As Truth-Out.org’s Allison Kilkenny recently reported, by passing PAEA, Congressional Republicans mandated that within ten years the United States Postal Service would have to fully fund retirement healthcare benefits for the next 75 years. Or to put it more plainly, the Postal Service had a decade to fully fund the retirement healthcare benefits for future employees that will not even be born until 2057 at the earliest.

Of course, if tea partiers succeed in repealing child labor laws (because we all know that little hands are better for cutting stamps) we can probably drop that year to the mid-2040s.

Interestingly, this dreadful law holds a delicious bite of irony in that it requires government-funded universal healthcare benefits for Americans that will not be born for a generation.

Imagine what the right would say if President Obama and the Democrats proposed legislation that required businesses and corporations to fully fund healthcare benefits for all of their current workers and workers who haven not even been born yet.

Socialist. Communist. Marxist. Maoist. Pick any of the ists. They would call Obama a cartoonist if they thought it would kill the bill.

The only reason we keep hearing so much about the Postal Service’s impending budget shortfall is because PAEA requires that on September 30 a down payment be made on the healthcare benefits of postal workers 75 years into the future. This law has forced the Postal Service into the red for two years running.

In the end, Republicans know the Postal Service is a government agency that works well for Americans. And you know the GOP cannot have an example of good government floating around out there lest it get in the way of their political aspirations.

Why let a self-funding government agency flourish when you can privatize it and make your corporate cronies even richer?

Left to the Republicans, we would probably start receiving our mail intermittently from some smelly, scruffy, raggedly dressed character on horseback like Kevin Costner from The Postman, 1997’s worst picture Razzie award winner.

It is enough to make you go, well, postal.

LINK







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On a whole they are paying all their workers too much compaired to UPS and Fedex.



Your statement is FALSE


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The history of Labor Unions (collective bargaining) in US history has been lost. Non-critical thinking US citizens never stop to think where the 5 day work week came from, or the minimum wage, or child labor laws, or overtime pay, or paid vacations, or employer-based healthcare, and much more.

Non-critical thinking US citizens who have willfully decided not to learn the brief 237 year history of the US have forgotten that prior to unions some employers DID NOT EVEN PAY THEIR WORKERS MONEY (US currency)

What mining companies used to do before unions was to “pay” their workers in something called “scrip” . The “scrip” could only be used in the company owned store to buy food, clothing etc. In other words workers were neo-slaves. If workers demanded collective bargaining (a union) , the company would bring in armed guards, Pinkertons and others to kill any worker who dared demand collective bargaining (a union).

Fast forward to today. Unions built the middle class in America. Did you have a package delivered today by United Parcel Service (UPS)? If you did the people who work at competitor Federal Express thank you; because UPS is a union shop with excellent benefits, ESOP (employee stock ownership plan) etc. and existed prior to Federal Express. When Federal Express started (it is non-union) they had to pay wages and benefits equivalent to UPS in order to attract workers. The UPS union wages set the floor for FedEx pay.

The RepubliKlan party represents the Über Capitalist class.

They don’t give a shit about the declining US middle class. Lower wages for the peons, equals - higher stock prices, equals – more Ho’s, more private jets, more houses, more $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$,
MORE POWER.

RepubliKlans in 2010 blocked an anti-outsourcing bill.

US Senate Republicans blocked a bill from coming to the US Senate floor that would of outlawed tax breaks for firms that outsource jobs overseas. The bill would of given new tax incentives to businesses to bring jobs back to the US.​

The RepubliKlans said fuck the American worker, let’s send more jobs to China where $310. a month is considered middle class. That’s right Three Hundred Ten Dollars per month!!!!!!

Look at the charts and play the videos below.
It will explain to you if you are ignorant why the Über Capitalist are opposed to collective bargaining (Unions).

In one a <s>FOX</s> FAKE News commentator explains to their brain addled viewers what collective bargining represents, proving that even a broken clock is right at least twice every 24 hours.




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As union membership declines, WAGES DECLINE FOR THE MAJORITY OF ALL WORKERS, corporate profits increase and corporate taxes decrease as jobs and profits are outsourced overseas.

The largest employer in the state of Texas is??????? Can’t figure it out????? The answer is??? WALMART. Yes WALMART. Non-Union poverty wages WALMART.

That is the business model that the Über Capitalist have in mind for the entire United States. How dare a teacher with a Masters Degree earn $51,000 a year and have health care and a pension after 25 years of service. $36,000 with no benefits and a 401k should be enough for a teacher, after all teachers are just part-time workers.

Will the majority of non-critical thinking Americans wake-up as they are being boiled alive and having their lifestyle dramatically downsized by the Über Capitalist?? I’m not optimistic. The digital brownshirts are winning.



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Most New Jobs (86%) Created Last 12 Months Pay Less Than $13.00 A Hour, No Benefits

http://www.mainstreet.com/article/career/survey-most-new-jobs-pay-low-wages

http://archive.chicagobreakingbusin...ge-job-growth-seen-as-hurdle-to-recovery.html


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On a whole they are paying all their workers too much compaired to UPS and Fedex.

Maybe UPS and Fedex are paying their workers too little compared to the USPS.

This exposes your thinking.

Working people make too much, rich people earn too little.

The race to the bottom and the reason why the income gap between the rich and wealthy and the rest of us is growing wider all the time!
 
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The RepubliKlans passed 'poison pill' legislation in 2006 which effectively strangles the U.S. Post Office to a slow but certain Death!. There has been a slight mitigation to the timed bomb destruction of the U.S. Post Office since the 2006 bill, but the fuse is still lit and it is fait accompli that the U.S. Post Office as we have known it since the founding of America is gone.
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<font face="Tahoma" size="6" color="#d90000"><b>The Republicans Are Now a Step Closer
To Shutting Down The Post Office</b></font></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><b><font face="Trebuchet MS" size="4">My congratulations to FedEx and UPS. By now, you’ve probably heard the United State Postal Service announcement that most of Saturday’s mail service will be eliminated.<br>

Come August 5th there will be no more first-class Saturday mail. You’ll still get packages and express mail and meds but no letters or bills or assorted other stuff you’re used to finding in your mailbox. It’s all part of (wink, wink, nudge, nudge), “restructuring.” What’s being restructured are the votes of plaint legislators swooning to the siren songs and campaign money promises and whatever other sleazy tactics lobbyists use to twist our central government into a corporate-owned meaningless big room with chairs.<br>

I’ve already backgrounded this subject in an earlier submission. <span style="background-color: #FFFF00">The
initial grease for the slide to oblivion was a piece of 2006 legislation with the alleged goal of reforming postal laws. It was titled the “Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act.” A Republican Congress was behind its passage and its singular purpose was designed to kill the USPS.</span><br>

For all the crocodile tears about competition from emails, texting et al, annual Postal Service revenues are about what they were in 2002. What has changed dramatically are the employment numbers. The nation’s largest employer of veterans has sacrificed a total of 200,000 career postal union jobs in the past 10 years.<br>

The 2006 act forced USPS to pre-fund the Postal Service Retiree Health Benefits Plan for a decade paying 75 years forward. Most people who pay attention to current events are already aware of the huge multi-billion dollar obligation and profit drainer. Annual payments range from $5.4 – $5.8 billion. The Postal Service simply can’t pay the current installment.<br>

And while all attention is riveted on the pre-funding issue, little notice is paid to that section of the bill that may sound the death knell for a venerable American institution. It recasts the Postal Regulatory Commission. The PRC is comprised of five members armed with incredible powers, virtually none in service to the Postal Service.<br>

Section 702 as worded “Requires a report from the PRC to the President and Congress on universal postal service and the postal MONOPOLY in the United States, including the monopoly on the delivery of mail and access to mailboxes. A Republican Congress worried about a monopoly after laboring for the past century to guarantee same for their corporate pals?<br>

Then we move on to Section 703. It requires a report from the Federal Trade Commission to the President, Congress and the PRC identifying federal and state laws that apply differently to the Postal Service with respect to the competitive category of mail and to private companies providing similar products.<br>

And here’s the clincher; There’s another oversight group in play here,<span style="background-color: #FFFF00">the Postal Service Board of Governors made up of a Bush-appointed right wing lobbyist and former head of a state Republican Party, a Carlyle
Group (a right-wing international business juggernaut) adviser, a former Republican Representative and a Chairman who is an active member of the Federalist Society. Supreme Court Justices Scalia, Thomas and Alito were once members. Need I say more?<br>

The Board of Governors establishes rates and classes for products in the competitive category of mail (priority and expedited mail, bulk parcel post and bulk international mail and mailgrams). With a 4-1 Republican Board of Governor’s majority, do you suppose these rates might favor the FedEx’s and UPS’s of the world?</span><br>

Here’s the payoff. Under “Modern Rate Regulation”, the PRC is to
establish “a modern system for regulating rates and classes for
market-dominate products.” That would seem to include anything and everything that competitively moves through mail commerce; all first-class mail, parcels and cards, periodicals, standard mail, single-piece parcel post, media mail, bound printed matter, library mail, special services and single-piece international mail. All rate-regulated mind you. Regulation??? <i>But mommy, I taut da wepubicins hated wegulation.</i><br>

I’m not done yet. The system is also required to include an annual LIMITATION on percent changes in rates. Free Market? With hypocritical Republicans anything goes when it comes to destroying a unionized business.<br>

So let’s take a peek at the makeup of this omnipotent Postal Regulatory Commission. Robert Taub is a member. He was appointed by Barack Obama in October of 2011 for a six-year term. He was once Chief of Staff to former Republican Representative John McHugh from upstate New York. Who is John McHugh you ask? Probably the one man who had more to do with the construction and passage of the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act than any single Congressman or woman. That’s who John McHugh is and his former COS is the Fox in the PRC hen house as the Vice Chairman of the PRC looking after his former bosses legislative progeny. So what was Obama thinking? Maybe there’s another fox in the hen house.<br>

Another PRC member is Mark Acton a big shot in the Republican National Committee. He was reappointed by Obama in 2011. Acton served as Executive Director of the RNC Redistricting Committee. You know all about Republican Redistricting especially designed to guarantee perpetual Republican Districts. Welcome back Mr. Acton.<br>

Tony Hammond, a Republican is now serving his third term as
commissioner. Something akin to a lifetime appointment for Republicans I guess. He’s another big RNC guy who was originally appointed by George W. Bush and obligingly re-upped by our current President. Hammond once served on the staff of Mississippi Representative Gene Taylor, a Democrat who proudly announced he voted for John McCain in ’08. He is from Mississippi after all. Oh, and Taylor was the ranking member of the House Post Office and Civil Service Committee when he left office, so staffer Hammond will fit right in at the wake for the USPS.<br>

A couple of years ago the PRC unanimously denied a USPS rate increase request while conceding the Postal Service pre-funding would bring about an even greater money crisis.<br>

The irony of the Saturday closing is that despite claimed savings of billions, it will still be pretty much Saturday business as usual. There’s mail to be sorted for Monday, facilities will still be opened and Mail Carriers only work five-day weeks anyway. Postal employees tell me that there’s still lots of work to do and they see virtually no savings from the move.<br>

Get ready to say bye bye to the Postal Service as we know it and hello to near-monopoly private providers who will charge high prices, pay low “Right to Work” wages, hire a majority of their workers on a part-time basis, pay little or no benefits and realize obscene profits.<br>

It’s the American way as long as Republicans control any part of the political process.<br>

http://www.politicususa.com/2013/02/06/republicans-step-closer-shutting-post-office.html&nbsp;</font></b></p>
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We need to privatize the mail service and ban municipal broadband projects. The government can subsidize all mail carriers for affordable service. The government can provide cheap financing to build a broadband network to a private enterprise.

It is not the same as water, sewer, or electric.


The government has the FBI, DHS, NSA, police that can link the information they get from this service. Sending a package through Fedex, the government would need a court order to compel the company to provide it's business records.

You are diminishing you Constitutional rights against search and seizure. A third party private enterprise could challenge any demand for information in court. You think a municipal broadband service will do that if they get a court order for all information from some rubber stamp court?
 
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We need to privatize the mail service and ban municipal broadband projects. The government can subsidize all mail carriers for affordable service. The government can provide cheap financing to build a broadband network to a private enterprise.

It is not the same as water, sewer, or electric.


The government has the FBI, DHS, NSA, police that can link the information they get from this service. Sending a package through Fedex, the government would need a court order to compel the company to provide it's business records.

You are diminishing you Constitutional rights against search and seizure. A third party private enterprise could challenge any demand for information in court. You think a municipal broadband service will do that if they get a court order for all information from some rubber stamp court?

The USPS is a service mandated by the US Constitution:


Article I, Section 8, Clause 7
Enumerated powers



Congress's legislative powers are enumerated in Section Eight:


To establish Post Offices and post Roads
You must be against the US Constitution.




Ignorant!
 
Public interests are designed to serve the public

Private interests are designed to serve whoever pays for them

Which would you rather have running the post office?
 
The USPS is a service mandated by the US Constitution:


Article I, Section 8, Clause 7
Enumerated powers



You must be against the US Constitution.




Ignorant!

Before we had the internet, virtual mail, e-mail, Fedex, UPS, and other carrier options. The U.S. was sparsely populated.

If you privatized, they can still keep the same pay and benefits.
 
Before we had the internet, virtual mail, e-mail, Fedex, UPS, and other carrier options. The U.S. was sparsely populated.

If you privatized, they can still keep the same pay and benefits.

The email as we know it is about 30 years old.

What are you talking about?
 

USPS Suspends Remaining Postal Facility Closures Scheduled for 2015





May 26, 2015

Amid a barrage of pressure from across the spectrum of postal stakeholders, the U.S. Postal Service has indefinitely postponed dozens of facility closures scheduled for later this year.

USPS had planned to close 82 facilities in 2015 in the second phase of its “network rationalization,” but the fates of most of those consolidations are now in limbo. The Postal Service already delayed many of the closures scheduled for earlier in the year, citing winter weather concerns and the need to stabilize operations.

Sue Brennan, a spokeswoman for the Postal Service, told Government Executive the consolidations will not resume until 2016.
The decision to defer the next phase of the initiative was based upon operational considerations, Brennan said, "and was made to ensure that the Postal Service will continue to provide prompt, reliable and predictable service consistent with the published service standards."
In each of the last two sessions of Congress, lawmakers in both parties pleaded with postal management to postpone or delay the consolidations, which would have cost thousands of jobs and essentially eliminated overnight delivery. Postal unions and large mailers have fought against the closures......


READ the rest
HERE
 
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