Postal Service Looks At Closing Hundreds Of Offices
Published: August 4, 2009
WASHINGTON - The local post office long has been the center of many American communities, but with people turning increasingly to the Internet to send messages and pay bills, financial losses are forcing the Postal Service to consider consolidating or closing hundreds of local facilities.
The post office is facing a $7 billion loss this year despite a 2-cent rate increase. The agency has shed 150,000 workers since 2000, removed hundreds of mail collection boxes and taken other
steps to save money.
Now the agency has sent a list of nearly 700 potential candidates for closing or consolidation to the independent Postal Regulatory Commission for review, and officials say more may be added.
Some of the offices could be closed while others might 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 still might offer services such as selling stamps and mailing parcels and letters. In other cases one of the offices might be closed.
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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, considering 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 across the country.
“We anticipate that out of these 3,200 stations and branches (being reviewed), under 1,000 offices could be considered as viable candidates to study further” for closing, 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 there are serious and significant structural financial challenges currently facing 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,“ the 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 $2 billion annually.
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.
At the same time population growth and new business mean the post office has to serve 1.2 million new addresses every year.
While Congress votes money for free mail delivery for the blind and to offer reduced rates to charities, the post office does not receive taxpayer funds for its operations.
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Reader Reactions
mlbfan76 - The USPO inefficient? Haven’t you ever noticed how the counter employees hustle to take care of as many customers they can as rapidly as they can? Also, have you not noticed that when the lines get long they open another consumer service station so that their customers do not have to wait a long time? You haven’t?
Then you also probably have never noticed the donkeys flying overhead either.
The Postal Service needs to realign their staff and facilities due to their decreased volume. Their pay and benefits package is out of line with today’s economy to begin with and they refuse to lay off any workers in spite of lower volume and more automation. Kind of sounds like GM doesn’t it?
Hey we all have email. People will just have to get motivated and step up there game. If you are expecting an actual letter or parcel, than you will have to go pick it up yourself.
What boggles me is this.. We see how inefficient the gov’t runs the postal service as well as social security. Do you want the same management of your health care system? Just a thought.. (AND NO I AM NOT MAKING IT A DEM OR CON ARGUMENT EITHER)
There is no way that you can have a
P.O. Box for every resident in the city
of Columbus. you would have to open more post office’s of larger size’s plus what about those Citizen’s that cannot get around on their own? That
is not a good idea. Also, FedEx and UPS rates would go up because of their increase in costs because they would have to hire more people to walk the
neighborhoods, they make their money thru small and large business’s. They
also deal with more time sensitive
information.
The Post Office could just require everyone to have a po box and not deliver to home addresses….. they do that in Buckeye Lake, I am sure this would be a way they could get more money, as long as the offices have enough boxes….??
I hope they close many offices and only deliver mail 3 times a week! The postal service lacks effiency, customer service and the cost to mail a letter - way too much! If that doesn’t work, say goodbye, we don’t need them….FedEx or UPS can deliver the mail at a very low cost….


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