The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

US mail delays still occur

- By Karen Shuey kshuey@readingeag­le.com

Postal delivery woes continue to plague the tri-county region.

Agency officials acknowledg­e the service is experienci­ng delivery delays, and say there are several factors contributi­ng to the problems.

In a statement from a local spokesman for the Postal Service, the agency cited unpreceden­ted challenges amid the ongoing COVID pandemic that include staffing shortages at many of its post offices in central Pennsylvan­ia.

“As you know, the American Rescue Plan expanded employee leave to respond rightly to the pandemic,” spokesman Desai Abdul-Razzaaq said in the emailed statement. “As a result, staffing is occasional­ly impacted and we thank our customers for their understand­ing and continued support.”

He added that Postal Service has taken specific actions to continue service to customers.

Those actions include: Continuing to fully authorize overtime to allow employees to work the time necessary to deliver mail.

Expanding mail deliveries to earlier in the morning, later in the evening and on Sundays to ensure customers receive mail at the earliest date possible.

Using additional carriers from nearby offices, when necessary, to maintain mail deliveries.

Hiring additional personnel. Specifical­ly, the Postal Service is currently seeking 40,000 workers nationwide for seasonal positions in preparatio­n for the 2021 holiday season — the agency’s peak season for mail and package deliveries.

In support of its hiring effort, Abdul-Razzaaq said the Postal Service is hosting hiring fairs in select cities across the country where potential employees for seasonal positions can immediatel­y apply for opportunit­ies.

The latest postal delays are not a new problem. The beleaguere­d agency has failed to restore its target delivery times nearly a year after an election thrust problems at the Postal Service into the national spotlight.

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy announced changes in March as part of a sweeping reorganiza­tion plan for the USPS as it faces a projected $160 billion deficit over the next decade. He contends the plan will cut costs and create more consistenc­y in transporta­tion schedules.

Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro has been outspoken critic of the plan.

In June, Shapiro led a group of 21 attorneys general in calling on the Postal Regulatory Commission to oppose DeJoy’s proposed service cuts that could slow delivery times for first-class mail, shorten hours at some post offices and increase the price of a first-class stamp.

He said 40% of all firstclass mail in the U.S. will be slowed by DeJoy’s proposed changes.

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