The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

USPS is testing paycheck cashing

Postal banking could transform how millions access money, pay bills.

- By Jacob Bogage

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Postal Service quietly began offering paycheck-cashing services at several East Coast post offices last month, testing a plan that financial experts say has the potential to transform how low-wage and underserve­d Americans access their money.

Postal customers can now redeem paychecks in Washington, Baltimore, Falls Church, Va., and the Bronx, N.Y., for Visa gift cards topping out at $500, an agency spokespers­on said. Postal officials expect to expand the pilot into a fuller study with more locations and financial products, such as bill-paying services and ATMS, according to three people involved with the program who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive business strategy.

Postal banking has become a Democratic hobby horse in recent years, with activists and politician­s saying it solves two problems: the Postal Service’s precarious financial condition and the barriers many U.S. households face to building wealth and accessing their money.

For the nation’s 14.1 million unbanked and underbanke­d adults, the plan presents a government-backed alternativ­e to paycheck cashing stores and payday lenders, which target vulnerable population­s with outsized fees and interest rates. Democrats embraced the idea years ago: Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT., made postal banking part of his 2016 and 2020 presidenti­al platforms, and it was adopted by the Biden-sanders Unity Task Force as part of President Biden’s 2020 campaign agenda.

The pilot program represents the mail agency’s most ambitious push into financial services in decades. Though it sells money orders, it dropped most other banking services in 1966.

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