The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Postal Service: More financial loss as mail delivery slumps

- By Hope Yen

WASHINGTON » The U.S. Postal Service reported another quarterly loss on Friday after an unrelentin­g drop in mail volume and costs of its health care and pension obligation­s outweighed strong gains in package deliveries.

Amid sharp criticism from President Donald Trump that it is being scammed out of billions by online retailers such as Amazon.com, the Postal Service called for greater freedom to raise stamp prices to help cover costs. It warned of a serious financial situation that prevented it from making much-needed investment­s in letter and package delivery, saying it could not wait for a task force created by Trump to study the reasons behind its losses at a time of increased competitio­n in the e-commerce age.

That task force, which was establishe­d by an executive order signed by Trump last month, will have 120 days to submit a report with recommenda­tions.

The Postal Service has requested that the Postal Regulatory Commission grant it power to raise stamp prices beyond the rate of inflation, a change to its pricing system that would be the biggest in nearly a half century.

“Congress and the commission need to act now,” said Postmaster General and CEO Megan J. Brennan.

The Postal Service’s report shows a net loss of $1.3 billion between January and March, larger than a $562 million loss in the same period last year, due in part to rising fuel costs and added wage expenses as it grows its package business.

The Postal Service notched a 10 percent increase in package delivery, boosted by its business with Amazon and other Internet retailers, but suffered a loss in first-class letters and marketing mail, which together make up more than two-thirds of postal revenue.

Quarterly revenue came to $17.5 billion, up slightly over the same period in the previous year.

Trump in recent months has railed against Amazon, accusing it of not paying enough in shipping costs. He says the Postal Service “loses a fortune” and should charge more for delivering packages, including on Sundays, which Amazon has a competitiv­e advantage in providing goods to people’s homes thanks to a contract with the Postal Service in which its vast network of mail carriers is used for special deliveries.

Trump’s executive order said the Postal Service is on “an unsustaina­ble financial path and must be restructur­ed to prevent a taxpayerfu­nded bailout.” The task force establishe­d by Trump is being assigned to study factors including the Postal Service’s pricing in the package delivery market.

Package delivery has been a bright spot for the Postal Service. Helped by booming e-commerce, it has enjoyed mostly double-digit increases in revenue from delivering packages, though that hasn’t been enough to offset declines in first-class letters and marketing mail.

To become financiall­y stable, the Postal Service is urging Congress to provide it relief from a mandate to prefund retiree health and pension benefits, something that neither the government nor private companies are required to do. The prefunding requiremen­t, put in place by Congress beginning in 2007, has contribute­d to 11 straight years of financial losses. It has defaulted on the multibilli­ondollar prepayment­s each year since 2012.

“Today’s USPS quarterly financial report shows the Postal Service’s underlying business strength while also indicating the need to address external matters beyond USPS control,” said Fredric Rolando, president of the National Associatio­n of Letter Carriers. “Congress should address the pre-funding burden it imposed.”

The Postal Service is an independen­t agency and does not use taxpayer money for its operations.

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