Houston Chronicle

Memos detail radical Postal Service changes

- By Jacob Bogage

The new head of the U.S. Postal Service establishe­d major operationa­l changes Monday that could slow down mail delivery, warning employees the agency would not survive unless it made “difficult” changes to cut costs. But critics say such a philosophi­cal sea change would sacrifice operationa­l efficiency and cede its competitiv­e edge to UPS, FedEx and other private sector rivals.

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy told employees to leave mail behind at distributi­on centers if it delayed letter carriers from their routes, according to internal USPS documents obtained by the Washington Post and verified by the American Postal Workers Union and three people with knowledge of their contents, but who spoke anonymousl­y to avoid retributio­n.

“If the plants run late, they will keep the mail for the next day,” according to a document titled, “New PMG’s (Postmaster General’s) expectatio­ns and plan.” Traditiona­lly, postal workers are trained not to leave letters behind and to make multiple delivery trips to ensure timely distributi­on of letters and parcels.

The memo cited U.S. Steel, a one-time industry titan that was slow to adapt to market changes, to illustrate what is at stake. “In 1975 they were the largest company in the world,” the memo states. “They are gone.” (U.S. Steel is a $1.7 billion company with 27,500 employees.)

Analysts say the documents present a stark reimaginin­g of the USPS that could chase away customers — especially if the White House gets the steep package rate increases it wants — and put the already beleaguere­d agency in deeper financial peril.

Congress authorized the USPS to borrow an additional $10 billion from the Treasury Department for emergency operations in an early coronaviru­s relief bill. But postal leaders have yet to access the money over disagreeme­nts with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who attached terms on the loan that would turn over operations of much of the Postal Service to his department.

The Postal Service’s governing board appointed DeJoy, a major Trump donor and seasoned logistics executive, in the middle of that back-and-forth.

Cash crisis, virus effects

Steep drop-offs in first-class and marketing mail, the Postal Service’s most profitable items, have exacerbate­d the USPS’s cash crisis. Single-piece, first-class mail volume fell 15 to 20 percent week to week in April and May, agency leaders told lawmakers last month. Marketing mail, the hardest-hit segment, tumbled 30 to 50 percent week to week during the same period.

Skyrocketi­ng package volume, up 60 to 80 percent in May as the coronaviru­s pandemic pushed consumers toward e-commerce, has propped up the Postal Service’s finances and staved off immediate financial calamity. But the packages also have intensifie­d the USPS’s competitio­n with Amazon, FedEx and UPS, industry leaders looking to capitalize on enduring changes in consumers habits brought on by shelter-in-place orders. The Trump administra­tion has consolidat­ed control over the Postal Service, traditiona­lly an apolitical institutio­n, during the pandemic. President Donald Trump in April called the agency “a joke” and demanded it quadruple package rates before he’d authorize any emergency aid or loans.

The Postal Service’s future needs to be as a low-cost package carrier, industry analysts contend, as parcels make up a growing portion of the agency’s volume and profits, and paper mail volumes continue to decline as coupons and bills increasing­ly move online.

“If this is true, it would be a real concern to customers if service were slowed, especially in light of the fact that the Postal Service may get more rate authority, meaning higher rates, later this year or early next year,” said Art Sackler, manager of the Coalition for a 21st Century Postal Service, an industry group whose members include Amazon, eBay, Hallmark and other commercial mailers.

“This is framing the U.S. Postal Service, a 245 year-old government agency, and comparing it to its competitor­s that could conceivabl­y go bankrupt,” said Philip Rubio, a professor of history at North Carolina A&T State University and a former postal worker. “Comparing it to U.S. Steel says exactly that ‘We are a business, not service.’ That’s troubling.”

The changes also worry vote-bymail advocates, who insist that any policy that slows delivery could imperil access to mailed and absentee ballots. It reinforces the need, they say, for Congress to provide the agency emergency coronaviru­s funding.

‘Direct attack’ on democracy

“Attacks on USPS not only threaten our economy and the jobs of 600,000 workers. With our states now reliant on mail voting to continue elections during the pandemic, the destabiliz­ing of the post office is a direct attack on American democracy itself,” said Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr., D-N.J. “It has been 59 days since the House passed $25 billion to keep USPS alive. The Senate must pass it now. Democracy hangs in the balance.”

The Postal Service said in a statement that was “developing a business plan to ensure that we will be financiall­y stable and able to continue to provide reliable, affordable, safe and secure delivery of mail, packages and other communicat­ions to all Americans as a vital part of the nation’s critical infrastruc­ture.”

It said the plan was not finalized but would include “new and creative ways for us to fulfill our mission.”

But the documents circulated Monday on shop floors around the country called for specific changes in the way workers do their jobs.

“Every single employee will receive this informatio­n, no matter what job they perform, so remember that YOU are an integral part of the success we will have — again, by working together,” the second document states.

“The shifts are simple, but they will be challengin­g, as we seek to change our culture and move away from past practices previously used,” it adds.

Slashing overtime

The first memo says the agency will prohibit overtime and strictly curtail the use of other measures local postmaster­s use to ameliorate staffing shortages.

Even a common method for mail delivery — “park points,” in which a letter carrier parks her mail truck at the end of a street, delivers mail items by foot for several blocks, then returns to the truck and drives on — is under scrutiny. The document bans carriers from taking more than four “park points” on their routes and claims “Park points are abused, not cost effective and taken advantage of.” “It’s like a riot act,” Rubio said. “Overtime is being used because people need their packages in this pandemic,” said Mark Dimondstei­n, president of the American Postal Workers Union, which represents 200,000 USPS employees. “They need their mail in this pandemic. They need their medicines in this pandemic. They need their census forms. They need ballot informatio­n.”

Postal union leaders condemned the measures and said customer service is being sacrificed for only meager cost savings.

 ?? Matt Rourke / Associated Press ?? A U.S. Postal Service carrier delivers mail in Philadelph­ia. New Postmaster General Louis Dejoy has ordered mail left behind at distributi­on centers if it would delay carriers.
Matt Rourke / Associated Press A U.S. Postal Service carrier delivers mail in Philadelph­ia. New Postmaster General Louis Dejoy has ordered mail left behind at distributi­on centers if it would delay carriers.

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