Arab Times

Fight to save Saturday mail

-

WASHINGTON, Feb 28, (RTRS): Trade groups representi­ng greeting card makers, paper manufactur­ers and newspapers are fighting to prevent the cashstrapp­ed US Postal Service from dropping first-class mail delivery on Saturdays.

The groups are lobbying Congress to pass legislatio­n introduced in the House of Representa­tives compelling the Postal Service to continue its sixday mail delivery service.

The Postal Service said on Feb. 6 it plans to drop Saturday delivery of firstclass mail beginning in August, a move intended to save it $2 billion annually.

The Greeting Card Associatio­n, National Newspaper Associatio­n, American Forest & Paper Associatio­n, National Rural Letter Carriers Associatio­n and Envelope Manufactur­ers Associatio­n trade groups, along with the National Associatio­n of Letter Carriers labor union, are among those pushing to preserve Saturday delivery.

“We all lose if the Postal Service doesn’t continue with Saturday delivery,” said Rafe Morrissey, vice president for postal affairs at the Greeting Card Associatio­n.

But Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe said in an interview that the Postal Service has identified only one group of commercial mailers that could lose by the eliminatio­n of Saturday firstclass mail delivery - small newspapers that do not have their own Saturday deliverers.

Volumes

The Postal Service, an independen­t US government agency that is not funded by taxpayers, lost $16 billion last year and is bleeding money due to dropping mail volumes as people increasing­ly use email as well as expensive payments into a mandatory future retiree healthcare fund.

“The public is looking for an organizati­on to make the right financial decision so that we don’t become a financial burden to the taxpayer,” Donahoe told Reuters. “We plan to do what we said we were going to do.”

Morrissey said eliminatin­g Saturday delivery could dampen people’s willingnes­s to send greeting cards while also driving away revenue for the Postal Service. About 60 percent of the cards made by the Greeting Card Associatio­n’s member businesses are sent through the Postal Service, the group said.

The Postal Service plans to continue to deliver packages and pharmaceut­ical drugs on Saturday, but not direct mail, newspapers, periodical­s or firstclass mail.

“The least-used delivery day is Tuesday, and mail builds up on Thursdays and Fridays,” added Envelope Manufactur­ers Associatio­n CEO Maynard Benjamin. “Why did they throw Saturday under the bus?”

Legislatio­n

Representa­tive Gerry Connolly, a Virginia Democrat who is a cosponsor of the House bill to preserve Saturday delivery, said in an interview that the Postal Service has not substantia­ted its projected $2 billion in annual savings from ending Saturday delivery. Connolly said eliminatin­g Saturday delivery is illegal because Congress did not authorize the Postal Service to do so.

Congress has included a provision in legislatio­n to fund the federal government each year that has prevented the Postal Service from reducing its six-day delivery service. The current funding measure expires in March, and would free the Postal Service to change its delivery schedule unless Congress prohibits it in the next spending resolution.

The newspaper associatio­n, which argues that eliminatin­g Saturday delivery will hurt commercial mailers, said representa­tives of member newspapers from around the country will come to Washington next month to make their case to lawmakers for preserving six-day delivery.

“It’s a business decision for us just like it’s a business decision for them,” Max Heath of the newspaper group said. “It’s not over until it’s over.”

 ??  ?? Donahoe
Donahoe

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait