The Columbus Dispatch

Mail delivery back on time after hectic election delays

Analysis: Postal Service finally hits benchmark

- Matt Wynn and Mike Stucka

After seven weeks and sending 193 pieces of mail short distances, it finally happened: a perfect week of on-time mail delivery.

Out of 20 packages sent the week of Election Day in six states, not one took more than three days to reach its destinatio­n – the U.S. Postal Service’s benchmark for delivery of local mail.

It was the first time that happened in the course of the USA TODAY Network’s effort to track mail delivery times across the nation in the lead-up to the presidenti­al election. The project was a collaborat­ion with the University of Maryland’s Howard Center for Investigat­ive Journalism.

By the end of the project, 22 packages (11%) took longer than three days to arrive at their destinatio­ns. Thirteen of those long trips took place in Michigan, meaning more than a quarter of all packages mailed by reporters in the state arrived late.

The Postal Service declined to speculate on what could have caused deliveries to speed up after weeks of delays.

Kristin Seaver, chief retail and delivery officer for the Postal Service, noted the huge volume and quick turnaround of mail ballots during election season. She said the agency delivered 135 million ballots – counting inbound and outbound – with an average 2.5-day turnaround and made special effort to deliver identifiable ballots as quickly as possible.

It’s possible the focus on ballots in the weeks leading up to the election led to slower turnaround for the news network’s mailings, which plainly did not contain ballots.

Ballots arriving too late to be counted could affect election results. Delaware had 163,589 mail ballots returned for counting. Eight were rejected for a missing signature on the envelope, and 355 mail ballots were rejected because they arrived after the deadline.

The only hiccup in delivery during election week came when a USA TODAY Network package was mailed in Green Bay, Wisconsin. That package, like the bulk of those sent by the news organizati­on, was sent as certified mail. Such mail carries bar codes and tracking numbers that allow customers to check online for each time and location where postal employees log a package’s status.

The post office never logged the Green Bay envelope as having been delivered, but the recipient confirmed to a reporter that it arrived one day after it was shipped.

Several letters throughout the effort were similarly never logged as delivered, despite arriving at their destinatio­n.

In Florida, the Postal Service’s failure to record deliveries by scanning ballot envelopes fueled concerns that ballots had not been counted – when really they had.

USA TODAY’S mail project started in mid-september. Dozens of reporters sent a mix of certified mail and packages containing GPS units to crosscount­y locations.

The intent was to mimic, as closely as possible, the path that ballots would take during what turned out to be a heavily mail-reliant election.

More than 65 million ballots were cast by mail this election season.

Reporters sent packages in the swing states of Arizona, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin, Florida, Pennsylvan­ia and Nebraska’s 2nd District.

In September and October, those mailings revealed circuitous routes and packages that sat in distributi­on centers for more than a week before getting delivered. Some packages took more than two weeks to arrive at their destinatio­n. Nebraska and Wisconsin were the only states without any delays.

There were no such problems during election week.

The week after the election, things still looked good.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/AP ?? Out of 20 packages sent by the USA TODAY Network the week of Election Day, none took more than three days to reach its destinatio­n.
MATT SLOCUM/AP Out of 20 packages sent by the USA TODAY Network the week of Election Day, none took more than three days to reach its destinatio­n.

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