Santa Fe New Mexican

Another judge bars USPS cuts

- By Erin Cox

A federal judge in Pennsylvan­ia has ordered the U.S. Postal Service to temporaril­y suspend operationa­l changes tied to mail slowdowns across the country, writing Monday that the delays “clearly pose a threat to the delivery of Election Mail to and from the voters.”

The injunction issued by U.S. District Judge Gerald Austin McHugh for the Eastern District of Pennsylvan­ia is the fourth such ruling against the agency in 11 days. Federal courts in Washington state, New York and the District of Columbia also have prohibited the Postal Service from adhering to cost-cutting measures enacted under Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, such as stricter dispatch schedules that forced postal workers to leave mail behind. Managers also cracked down on overtime, though DeJoy said he had nothing to do with such orders.

Attorneys general from at least 19 states have sued DeJoy and the agency over the changes.

“The declines in service that resulted from the initiative­s have not been fully remedied and pose a threat to the operation of the November 2020 elections,” McHugh wrote in an 89-page memo accompanyi­ng his order. McHugh also required the Postal Service to give the court periodic reports about overtime use.

Partisan tensions are running high ahead of an election in which an unpreceden­ted number of Americans are projected to vote by mail because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Postal Service spokesman David Partenheim­er on Monday declined to comment on the Pennsylvan­ia ruling. He said in a statement that “delivering Election Mail is our number one priority, and that we are 100 percent committed throughout the Postal Service to fulfilling our vital role in the nation’s electoral process by securely and timely delivering all ballots pursuant to our long-establishe­d processes and procedures.”

In a statement, Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro called the injunction “a major victory.”

Six states — California, Delaware, Maine, Massachuse­tts, North Carolina and Pennsylvan­ia — and D.C. sued the Postal Service last month, saying the operationa­l changes under Postmaster General Louis DeJoy were so sweeping that they needed clearance from the Postal Regulatory Commission. The jurisdicti­ons also said the timing of the shifts — part of DeJoy’s cost-cutting measures — infringed on their constituti­onal authority to operate the nation’s elections.

McHugh did not rule on the merits of those claims, but halted mail changes until the case can be resolved.

“In numerous instances, these efficienci­es came at the cost of timely delivery of mail,” McHugh concluded after reviewing deposition­s, internal Postal

Service documents and presentati­ons.

McHugh wrote that there was not enough evidence to conclude the postal changes were politicall­y motivated, in part, because of “what appears to be a strategic effort by Defendants to limit the Court’s understand­ing of the significan­t degree to which some top officials of the Postal Service were directly involved in the operationa­l changes that went into effect in July.”

Three other courts have ruled against the agency this month. On Sept. 17, Stanley Bastian, chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Washington, blocked the Postal Service from decommissi­oning additional sorting machines or mailboxes, curtailing retail hours, closing sorting plants or implementi­ng a strict transporta­tion schedule.

Days later, U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero in the Southern District of New York ordered the agency to treat election mail as first-class, regardless of postage, and to preapprove all overtime between Oct. 26 and Nov. 6. On Sunday, Judge Emmet Sullivan of the D.C. District barred the Postal Service from following through on service cuts before November presidenti­al election.

Monday’s order comes as the agency is said to be closing in on a settlement with 19 states on election mail and service delays, according to people familiar with the discussion­s. Such a settlement would resolve cases filed in New York, Pennsylvan­ia and Washington.

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