New York Daily News

Mail voting jam

Bug-ravaged Postal Service buried in ballots

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WASHINGTON — The Postal Service’s famous motto — “Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers” — is being tested like never before, by challenges that go well beyond the weather.

The coronaviru­s has devastated its finances. The Trump administra­tion may attach big strings to bailouts.

The agency’s responsibi­lities, meanwhile, are mounting. A dramatic shift in many states to voting by mail is intended to protect voters from spreading the virus at polling places. But it’s also making more work for post offices and contributi­ng to delays in determinin­g election winners.

Election results have been delayed this week in Kentucky and New York because both states were overwhelme­d by huge increases in mail ballots.

“What we don’t need is more chaos in the chaos,” said Wendy Fields, executive director of voting rights advocacy group The Democracy Initiative.

President Trump opposes expanding voting by mail, asserting it will trigger fraud, even though there’s no evidence that will happen. Trump and many of his administra­tion’s leading voices frequently vote absentee themselves.

The president has also called the Postal Service “a joke” and says package shipping rates should be at least four times higher for heavy users such as Amazon. But shipping packages is the main revenue generator, and critics say Trump is merely looking to punish Amazon founder Jeff Bezos in retaliatio­n for unflatteri­ng coverage in The Washington Post, which the billionair­e owns.

Trump has acknowledg­ed larger political calculatio­ns are at work, tweeting that expanding vote by mail will “LEAD TO THE END OF OUR GREAT REPUBLICAN PARTY.” His Democratic rival, Joe Biden, has suggested that Trump’s opposition to absentee voting and criticism of the Postal Service may help the incumbent “steal” the election.

Mark Dimondstei­n, president of the American Postal Workers Union, which represents 200,000-plus employees, said the administra­tion is “shamefully trying to use the crisis to carry out an agenda” of privatizat­ion, which would ultimately “break up the Postal Service and sell it.”

Unlike its private competitor­s, the Postal Service cannot refuse to make costly deliveries to especially hard-to-reach addresses. Still, much of its budgetary concern stems from a 2006 law requiring the agency to fully fund retiree health benefits for the next 75 years.

It normally operates without taxpayer funds. During the pandemic, however, it lost $4.5 billion in the 2020 budget year’s second quarter. Congress

approved a $10 billion line of credit for the agency as part of an economic rescue package in March. Since then, though, the Postal Service and the Treasury Department have had discussion­s about requiremen­ts to extend those loans.

Neither side will say publicly what’s being negotiated, but Trump has made his feelings clear. A 2018 Treasury task force also recommende­d the Postal Service increase package rates and cut labor costs. A second coronaviru­s aid package passed in May by the Democratic-controlled House includes $25 billion in direct aid for the Postal Service, but the GOP-majority Senate hasn’t approved its own version.

Postal Service spokespers­on David Partenheim­er said more recent trends “indicate that our 2020 financial performanc­e will be better than our early scenarios predicted,” though he said much remains uncertain.

“Our current financial condition is not going to impact our ability to deliver election and political mail this year,” Partenheim­er said.

 ??  ?? Supporters of the Postal Service have pushed for a bailout on Capitol Hill, while the Trump administra­tion may look to attach strings to any aid.
Supporters of the Postal Service have pushed for a bailout on Capitol Hill, while the Trump administra­tion may look to attach strings to any aid.
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