Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Slower, costlier mail thanks to a Trump holdover

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

Is there a federal official more out of step with the purposes of his agency than Postmaster General Louis DeJoy?

Sorry, that’s a rhetorical question, because everyone knows the answer: Of course it’s “no.” DeJoy is proving it once again by mandating crummier service on first-class mail and hiking prices on your packages.

The U.S. Postal Service is now giving itself extra time to deliver letters longer distances than can be reached by a six-hour drive.

Instead of the previous standard, which called for first-class mail to reach its destinatio­n in a maximum of three days regardless of the distance, the maximum will be five days. Obviously, that would apply to a letter sent from, say, New York to Los Angeles. The change started Oct. 1.

The USPS is also raising prices on domestic parcels by anywhere from 25 cents to $5, depending on the packages’ distance and weight. The service says the price increase is “temporary,” starting Oct. 3 and remaining in effect through the holiday season, ending Dec. 26. The increases can come to 10% or more.

In an absurd example of corporate-speak, the Postal Service describes the aim of reducing delivery standards as improving “delivery reliabilit­y, consistenc­y, and efficiency.” As USPS spokeswoma­n Kim Frum put it: “With this change, we will improve service reliabilit­y and predictabi­lity for customers while also driving efficienci­es across the Postal Service network.”

Let’s be clear about this. Increasing the time you have to wait to receive a letter isn’t an improvemen­t in reliabilit­y or efficiency, but just the opposite. As for “consistenc­y,” the service’s strategy is perfectly analogous to what airlines do when their on-time flight performanc­e deteriorat­es: They increase the standard for “on time,” and presto! Every flight is on time again.

Consistent­ly bad performanc­e is consistent all right, but that doesn’t make it something to brag about. The Postal Service said the changes would leave 61% of firstclass mail volume unaffected, as if that were all to the good. The math indicates, however, that fully 39% would take longer to reach its destinatio­n.

A USPS spokeswoma­n called the old three-day standard “unattainab­le,” but that’s so only because the service doesn’t choose to meet it. Doing so would require the agency to “rely on air transporta­tion, yielding unreliable service,” she told USA Today. She didn’t explain why air service is inherently more unreliable than trucking mail across the country or sending it by train.

The Postal Service’s complacenc­y in the face of deteriorat­ing performanc­e must be blamed on DeJoy, whose appointmen­t was orchestrat­ed in 2020 by a Donald Trump-controlled USPS board of governors.

He was the first postmaster general in two decades not to have any experience with the service. On the other hand, he had been a major fundraiser for the Trump campaign. Insiders related how Dejoy’s name had been inserted into the short list for postmaster candidates seemingly out of nowhere. Possibly this reflected interferen­ce by then-Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who should have kept his hands off.

Questioned by congressio­nal committees about noticeable declines in service on his watch, DeJoy, a former executive of a private logistics company, truculentl­y defended his intention to make the service operate more like a business than a government agency.

To that end, he oversaw a 10year strategic plan designed to narrow the service’s deficit the way a struggling private business would — by stretching out mail delivery deadlines, raising postal rates (perhaps steeply), cutting back on post office hours and closing branches.

The changes in standards and rates that DeJoy is implementi­ng come right out of that strategic plan. The changes are expected to save about $170 million a year, or about two-tenths of a percent of its operating budget of more than $82 billion. But they will have significan­t effects on many postal customers.

DeJoy’s actions are somewhat subject to the independen­t, fivemember Postal Regulatory Commission, which has limited powers to block service changes. The commission, which has a 3-2 Democratic majority, issued a critical analysis of the upcoming changes on Wednesday.

The analysis said that DeJoy’s estimate of cost savings from the changes seemed inflated and that they could “diminish its reliabilit­y.” The commission said it doubted the USPS could even manage the changes it was implementi­ng, and recommende­d that they be delayed. The betting here is that DeJoy isn’t paying the recommenda­tion any attention.

It should go without saying that the USPS is not a business, but a public service. It’s true that its traditiona­l standards can’t be profitable in customary business terms. It’s expected to deliver letters anywhere in the United States for the same flat fee, whether it’s traveling across town or coast to coast.

With few exceptions, its carriers are expected to reach every household. In return, it’s endowed with an effective monopoly on first-class mail. Its postmarks serve as documentat­ion of when an item was mailed, whether a postcard or a ballot.

It’s true that the service’s revenues have come under pressure as letter mail gives way to electronic communicat­ions, and banks and retailers move away from mailing account statements and bills to customers in favor of dealing with them online.

But it’s well known that the biggest single burden on the service’s bottom line is a 2006 congressio­nal mandate that it prefund its retiree healthcare liability, which no other government agency and few private businesses do. (Most fund those obligation­s on a pay-asyou-go basis.)

Absent that mandate, the Institute for Policy Studies calculated in 2019, the USPS would have consistent­ly reported operating profits instead of losses. DeJoy has acknowledg­ed the burden of the prefunding mandate, the repeal of which would require congressio­nal action. But his treating congressio­nal committees as troublesom­e busybodies wasting his time with their questions doesn’t make him a very suitable advocate for that change.

It’s also true that DeJoy doesn’t serve at the president’s pleasure, but rather that of the nine-member USPS board of governors.

At the moment, the board is split 6 to 3 with Trump appointees in the majority, but one of those Trump appointees is a holdover member whose term ended last year, and the term of another expires in December and two more in December 2022. That means that Biden can have a majority by the end of this year. Nothing is keeping the current board from canning DeJoy right now, though.

Already, the Biden cadre has begun to make its voice heard. At the board’s August meeting, newly appointed member Ronald Stroman, a former deputy postmaster general, called DeJoy’s plan “strategica­lly ill-conceived.” He said it would create “dangerous risks that are not justified by the relatively low financial return, and doesn’t meet our responsibi­lity as an essential part of America’s critical infrastruc­ture.”

 ?? Tom Williams Pool Photo ?? THE POSTAL SERVICE, led by Louis DeJoy, has just implemente­d higher rates and longer first-class delivery times.
Tom Williams Pool Photo THE POSTAL SERVICE, led by Louis DeJoy, has just implemente­d higher rates and longer first-class delivery times.
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