Yuma Sun

POSTMASTER

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interferen­ce. A number of blue mailboxes have been removed, back-of-shop sorting equipment has been shut down and overtime hours have been limited.

But DeJoy told senators he has no plans to restore the equipment, saying it’s “not needed.” And he stood by a new rule that limits late delivery trips, which several postal workers have said is a major cause of delivery delays. He vowed more changes are coming to postal operations after November.

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said the public’s concern is understand­able, particular­ly given Trump’s efforts to stop universal mail-in ballots. Many states are encouragin­g mail-in voting in response to voters’ pandemic-related fears of going to crowded polling centers on Election Day.

Trump has said he wants to block agency emergency funding that would help the service handle a great increase in mail-in ballots.

At Friday’s hearing, DeJoy said he’d had “no idea” equipment was being removed until the public outcry.

Now that it’s widely known, Democrats pressed him for his plan to ensure election mail and ballots arrive on time.

“Do you have a more detailed plan?” demanded Sen. Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, asking for it by Sunday.

“I don’t think we’ll have a complete plan by Sunday night,” DeJoy replied, acknowledg­ing it was just being formed.

He is expected to testify before the House on Monday.

Republican Sen. Ron Johnson, chairman of the Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee, defended the postmaster and dismissed the Democratic claims of election “sabotage.”

Johnson, of Wisconsin, said public outcry over the mail smacked of “ginned up” effort to rally voters – a “political hit job.”

Meanwhile, attorneys general in Pennsylvan­ia, California, Delaware, Maine, Massachuse­tts, North Carolina and Washington D.C., filed a lawsuit on Friday to halt the changes. In all, some 20 states and several voting rights groups are now suing.

As House Democrats prepare for Saturday’s vote, Republican­s are mounting a counter-offensive, saying the concerns about mail delivery are overblown and the money is unnecessar­y.

In a memo to House Republican­s, leaders called the legislatio­n a “conspiracy theory” by Democrats to “spread fear and misinforma­tion” about mail operations.

Neverthele­ss, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is eyeing a $10 billion postal rescue as part of the next COVID-19 relief package. The White House has said it would be open to more postal funding as part of a broader bill.

The Postal Service has been struggling financiall­y under a decline in mail volume, COVID-related costs and a rare and critics say cumbersome congressio­nal requiremen­t to fund in advance its retiree health care benefits.

For many, the Postal Service provides a lifeline, delivering not just cards and letters but also prescripti­on drugs, financial statements and other items that are especially needed by mail during the pandemic.

The postal board of governors, appointed by Trump, selected DeJoy to take his job. A GOP donor, he previously owned a logistics business that was a longtime Postal Service contractor. He maintains significan­t financial stakes in companies that do business or compete with the agency, raising conflict of interest questions.

In a statement, the Postal Service said DeJoy has made all required financial disclosure­s but that he might have to divest some holdings if conflicts arise.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, whose role in postal operations is being questioned by Senate Democrats, said in a letter to Democratic leader Chuck Schumer that he had no hand in “recruiting or suggesting” DeJoy for the job.

Mark Dimondstei­n, president of the American Postal Workers Union, said he would judge the postmaster by “deeds, and a lot of what he said did not comport with the facts on the ground.”

Republican­s have long sought postal reforms to run the agency more like a private company, and Trump often complains the Postal Service should be charging Amazon and other companies higher rates for package deliveries. Mnuchin told Schumer he was reviewing those contracts.

Others say the Postal Service is not expected to be solely a money-making enterprise, often delivering to far-flung places where it is not efficient to operate.

David C. Williams, the former vice chairman of the U.S. Postal Service Board of Governors, on Thursday told lawmakers that he resigned from the board in part over DeJoy’s selection, and because he believed the White House was taking extraordin­ary steps to turn the independen­t agency into a “political tool.”

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