Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Records: Mail delivery lags as election nears

- By Anthony Izaguirre and Pia Deshpande

The slice of Michigan that covers Detroit, its suburbs and towns dependent on the auto industry is coveted political terrain in one of this year’s most important presidenti­al swing states. It also has another distinctio­n as home to one of the worst-performing U.S. Postal Service districts in the country.

In Michigan and beyond, states are seeing record-breaking interest in mail-in voting during the coronaviru­s pandemic. But controvers­ial changes at the Postal Service have compounded long-standing delivery delays nationwide and sparked concerns among election officials and voters alike over the agency’s ability to deliver this fall.

Data obtained by The Associated Press show postal districts across the country are missing by wide margins the agency’s own goals for on-time delivery, raising the possibilit­y that scores of mailed ballots could miss deadlines for reaching local election offices if voters wait too long. Missing a deadline is a key reason mail-in ballots get rejected.

Several postal districts serving urban regions in battlegrou­nd states have a history of delivering mail at below the national targets and saw sharp drop-offs in performanc­e over the summer. The message to voters is clear: Mail those ballots early.

“As soon as possible,” said Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat.

The Postal Service, long an afterthoug­ht in the political process, has been drawn into the fray after its new leader, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, implemente­d a series of cost-cutting measures that delayed deliveries nationwide. The changes have sparked a flurry of legal challenges and caused concerns over the agency’s ability to handle the anticipate­d crush of election mail this year, although DeJoy has said it will be the Postal Service’s top priority.

DeJoy, a GOP megadonor with no previous experience at the Postal Service, postponed the removal of mail sorting machines and collection boxes lastmonth. He said it was “to avoid even the appearance of impact on election mail.”

Despite pausing some policies, DeJoy left in place rules restrictin­g when mail can leave warehouses, which several postal workers have said is a main culprit behind the delays. Federal judges have since ordered the Postal Service to halt all changes, although the agency said it is exploring its legal options.

On-time delivery across the country dipped substantia­lly in the weeks after DeJoy took office in mid-June, according to internal weekly performanc­e data obtained by The Associated Press through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request. While service began rebounding toward the end of summer, no Postal Service region is meeting the agency’s target of delivering more than95% of first-class mail within five days.

“One of the most frustratin­g aspects about the changes that have happened at the Postal Service over the past several months is that it’s created uncertaint­y and chaos where none existed prior, and now you do have so many citizens asking, ‘Is my vote going to get there on time?’” Benson said.

Even as DeJoy took over, many of the Postal Service districts serving regions that are in important presidenti­al swing states delivered mail at well below the national average. Quarterly data covering April through June shows that 17.5% of first-class mail took longer than three or five days to arrive at its destinatio­n in many parts of the country.

Mail arrived within three to five days less than 90% of the time in Milwaukee, Miami, Orlando, the Ohio valley and in the North Carolina cities of Raleigh, Durham and Charlotte, according to the agency’s quarterly data.

Delivery times worsened after DeJoy started and remained below the agency’s targets at the end of August. On-time delivery in northern Ohio, which includes Cleveland, dipped to as low as 63% in July before rising to88% by the endof August.

 ?? GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A forklift operator loads absentee ballots for mailing at the Wake County Board of Elections as preparatio­ns for the upcoming election are ongoing in Raleigh, N.C.
GERRY BROOME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A forklift operator loads absentee ballots for mailing at the Wake County Board of Elections as preparatio­ns for the upcoming election are ongoing in Raleigh, N.C.

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