Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cost-cutting uncertaint­y said to mire mail service

- JACOB BOGAGE

WASHINGTON — Confusion over Postmaster General Louis DeJoy’s planned cost-cutting changes has gripped the nation’s mail service and threatened to bring even more delivery delays, say postal workers and union officials.

Days after DeJoy testified before Senate and House committees, vowing to prioritize election mail, postal workers disputed his assertions that pandemic-related challenges were to blame for widespread mail slowdowns. They say the holdups are tied to the postal leader’s crackdown — since partially suspended — on overtime and other operationa­l changes, as well as the lack of clarity about which of his proposals will ultimately stick.

In Philadelph­ia, some letter carriers have gone two weeks without a day off, said one postal worker who, like 11 others interviewe­d for this piece, spoke on the condition of anonymity because of fears of reprisal from their superiors. Processing facilities in other parts of Pennsylvan­ia — Scranton, Harrisburg, Lancaster, the Lehigh Valley — have weeklong package backlogs. In Florida, some workers are being instructed not to log mail that arrives after carriers have left on their routes, an anathema to long-serving agency employees.

In the Great Lakes region, which includes parts of Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, Illinois and Missouri, managers are unsure whether DeJoy’s realignmen­t of the agency will continue, further slowing the daily movement of hundreds of millions of mail items.

“Everyone’s clueless,” said one region midlevel manager.

In other areas, including California, Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin, postal workers say previous delays have been resolved, but employees are bracing for the election and holiday season, and additional changes DeJoy could institute after the Nov. 3 vote.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., who chairs the committee in charge of postal oversight, said the Senate may consider fulfilling the Postal Service’s request for $25 billion pandemic funding in a future relief spending package in exchange for “true reforms.”

“I think everybody’s just confused. They don’t know where it’s going,” said Mike Stephenson, president of the Pennsylvan­ia Postal Workers Union. “And what I’m afraid of the most is, I believe, this is all part of a bigger picture to sell the post office.”

DeJoy has denied those claims, saying he accepted the role of postmaster general to fix the Postal Service’s long financial issues while preserving universal service to the public. The agency is nearly $161 billion in debt, three-fourths of which is tied to its pension obligation­s.

The Postal Service has spent months reeling from changing consumer habits during the pandemic. Volumes of paper mail — the Postal Service’s most profitable revenue stream — fell after businesses closed in the name of social distancing. Package volumes soared as consumers turned to online shopping and delivery to avoid venturing out.

That shift in volumes wrong-footed the Postal Service, which was designed to handle more paper than boxes, even before DeJoy arrived June 15. But within a month of taking over the agency, he required mail transit trucks to leave processing plants for distributi­on centers even if workers hadn’t finished sorting the mail. He also told letter carriers to begin their routes at specific times even if it meant leaving mail behind.

Those changes have benefited dispatch schedules, he testified. “In just a few weeks, we have substantia­lly improved our on-time dispatch schedule from 89.4% to 97.0% on time,” he submitted to the House Oversight Committee in written testimony. “We have also focused on decreasing the number of extra trips we operate.”

DeJoy also banned workers from making extra trips to deliver mail processed later in the day. Memos circulated to mid-level managers and obtained by The Washington Post stated that DeJoy planned to eliminate overtime hours. Postal workers in Pennsylvan­ia, California, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Florida and Iowa have told The Post they were warned overtime would be curtailed in official USPS lectures on shop floors.

DeJoy denied issuing any such direction in sworn testimony before a House panel on Monday and a Senate committee on Aug. 21, and also said he was not involved with decisions to remove roughly 700 high-speed mail sorting machines or dozens of public collection boxes, or cutting hours at retail windows.

“I had nothing to do with the collection boxes, the sorting machines, the post office hours or limiting overtime,” he told the House Oversight Committee. “The change I made was I asked them to run the transporta­tion on time and mitigate extra trips based on a review of an [Inspector General] audit.”

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