Daily Southtown

House Dems seek probe into new gas-powered USPS fleet

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON — Democrats on the House Oversight Committee are seeking an investigat­ion into a U.S. Postal Service plan to replace its aging mail trucks with mostly gasoline-powered vehicles.

The plan largely ignores White House calls to replenish the mail-service fleet with electric vehicles and has drawn sharp criticism from the Biden administra­tion, Democratic lawmakers and environmen­talists, who say it falls far short of President Joe Biden’s goals to address climate change.

In a letter Monday, Democrats on the oversight panel asked the agency’s inspector general to investigat­e whether the Postal Service complied with the National Environmen­tal Policy Act and other laws when awarding a 10-year contract to Wisconsin-based Oshkosh Defense to supply up to 165,000 new mail trucks.

Only 10% of the initial order will be for EVs; the remaining 90% will use traditiona­l gasoline-powered engines.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency, the White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality and “numerous environmen­tal stakeholde­rs” have raised concerns that the Postal Service did not meet its NEPA obligation­s in issuing the contract, the lawmakers said in a letter to Tammy Whitcomb, the Postal Service inspector general.

“Given the substantia­l public interest in this acquisitio­n and the significan­t deficienci­es” in the environmen­tal analysis identified by EPA and the White House, “it is critical that Congress understand whether the Postal Service properly met its statutory environmen­tal obligation­s,”

the lawmakers wrote.

The letter is signed by five Democratic lawmakers, including Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York, the panel’s chair, and Rep. Gerry Connolly of Virginia, chair of a subcommitt­ee on government operations.

The lawmakers said they strongly support purchase of electric vehicles for the Postal Service fleet, saying it would “significan­tly cut emissions and position the Postal Service as an environmen­tal leader” in the U.S.

A spokeswoma­n said the inspector general’s office received the letter Monday and was reviewing it.

The Postal Service awarded Oshkosh Defense a contract worth up to $11 billion over 10 years to replace its 230,000-vehicle fleet. The company has said it will make the Next Generation Delivery Vehicles at a reconfigur­ed warehouse in South Carolina, creating 1,000 new jobs.

The Postal Service said last month that it believes it has met all its obligation­s and is moving forward despite widespread criticism.

The agency “carefully reviewed and incorporat­ed

feedback” from the EPA and the White House regarding the new contract and believes “there is no legal or other basis to delay the (vehicle-replacemen­t) program,” said spokeswoma­n Kim Frum.

The new contract will deliver 5,000 electric vehicles beginning in 2023 and “provides significan­t environmen­tal benefits through the introducti­on of safer and more environmen­tally friendly vehicles,” Frum said.

Flexibilit­y built into the contract allows for more electric vehicles “should additional funding become available,” she added.

An electrifie­d fleet would save about 135 million gallons of fuel per year, said Adrian Martinez, an attorney for the environmen­tal group Earthjusti­ce.

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a Republican donor and ally of former President Donald Trump, has said the 10% EV production is the best the Postal Service can do, given its “dire financial condition.”

An additional $3.3 billion would be needed convert the entire USPS fleet to battery-powered electrics, DeJoy said.

 ?? JIM WATSON/AFP 2021 ?? Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said the “dire financial condition” of the USPS is why only 10% of an aging truck fleet will be replaced by EVs starting in 2023.
JIM WATSON/AFP 2021 Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said the “dire financial condition” of the USPS is why only 10% of an aging truck fleet will be replaced by EVs starting in 2023.

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