Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

House panel to subpoena Postal Service, DeJoy

- JACOB BOGAGE THE WASHINGTON POST

WASHINGTON — The head of the House Oversight Committee says the panel will issue subpoenas to compel the U.S. Postal Service and Postmaster General Louis DeJoy to turn over documents on slowdowns in mail service and any communicat­ions DeJoy might have had with President Donald Trump or members of his reelection campaign.

Committee Chair Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., plans to subpoena the Postal Service on Wednesday after DeJoy refused to provide records requested last week by committee members.

“I trust my Aug. 24 testimony before the Committee on Oversight and Reform clarified any outstandin­g questions you had regarding operationa­l changes that I have implemente­d,” he wrote in a letter to Maloney on Aug. 28, two days after the deadline the committee imposed for the Postal Service to submit documents.

A Postal Service representa­tive did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment.

During the hearing, House members requested any analysis the Postal Service ran on the effect of the operationa­l changes DeJoy instituted at the agency, which included eliminatin­g extra mail delivery trips and stricter dispatch schedules that have caused mail and packages to pile up.

Postal workers from coast to coast and national union leaders also say workers were told overtime hours would be eliminated and that the directive was issued by the postmaster general. Memos circulated to mid-level managers and obtained by The Washington Post stated that DeJoy planned to eliminate overtime hours.

“Carriers were ordered off the streets at 5 o’clock whether you finished your route or you didn’t finish your route,” said Al Friedman, president of the Florida State Associatio­n of Letter Carriers. “That was everywhere. That was all over Florida.”

A letter carrier in New Jersey told The Post he was ordered to do the same thing.

DeJoy denied in sworn testimony that he’d ever given such an order, and suspended some of the cost-cutting moves until after the November election.

But DeJoy is considerin­g additional changes after the Nov. 3 vote. The plans under considerat­ion, described by four people familiar with the discussion­s, include geography-based pricing, lower mail delivery standards and raising prices.

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