Los Angeles Times

A bank at the post office?

Advocates want the U.S. Postal Service to deliver basic banking services once again.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — Until the late 1960s, you could walk into a post office and deposit money in a savings account at the same time that you bought stamps or mailed packages.

An outgrowth of the financial panic of 1907, the nofrills postal bank surged in popularity during the Great Depression. But as commercial banks expanded and offered higher interest rates, the United States Postal Savings System became as outdated as a black-andwhite movie.

Now, in the wake of another financial crisis, there’s a new push for the U.S. Postal Service to deliver basic banking services again.

The effort is led by consumer advocates, financial reform groups, postal labor unions and some leading liberals, such as Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (DMass.). They say that offering services such as paycheck cashing, bill payment and free ATMs would provide cash-strapped consumers with an affordable alternativ­e to payday, auto-title and other short-term loans that have been criticized for high fees.

“We have millions and millions of low-income people who have to go to these payday lenders and pay outrageous interest rates. They’re getting ripped off right and left,” Sanders said on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live” in October.

“We can have our Postal Service provide modest banking to low-income people where they can cash their checks and they can do banking,” Sanders said. “I think it will help the post office and it will help millions of low-income people.”

The Postal Service’s inspector general’s office agrees. It estimates that expanding financial services beyond the current limited offerings, which include money orders and internatio­nal funds transfers, could pump $8.9 billion a year into the financiall­y struggling agency.

“The Postal Service has a public mission to serve citi-

zens and support the growth of commerce,” the inspector general’s office said in a report last spring that presented five potential approaches for expanded banking services. “And while it is required to cover its costs, profit is not its key motive.”

The American Postal Workers Union has formed a coalition, the Campaign for Postal Banking, that in December delivered a petition with more than 150,000 signatures to Deputy Postmaster General Ronald A. Stroman urging the agency to expand its financial offerings.

“Big banks are turning their backs on families,” union President Mark Dimondstei­n said. “Without bank accounts, they fall prey to predatory lenders.”

Postmaster General Megan J. Brennan hasn’t ruled out the idea of expanded banking services after her predecesso­r dismissed the suggestion in January as he headed into retirement. But she has some reservatio­ns.

“While we currently provide our customers with certain financial services, including money orders, electronic funds transfers and cashing of U.S. Treasury checks, our core function is not banking,” the agency said in a written statement.

The service said it has an “infrastruc­ture that is not ideal as a banking platform,” and cited a decline in visits to post offices. Plus, any investment­s outside of its core function of mail delivery “will likely be scrutinize­d from both public policy and regulatory perspectiv­es,” the agency added.

The Postal Service is an independen­t agency that since 1971 has been required to rely on sales of stamps and other services to pay for its operations. But the growth of the Internet and competitio­n from private shippers, such as FedEx Corp. and UPS, have taken a major toll on the agency’s finances.

After peaking in 2006, total mail handled by the Postal Service has declined 27%. That has led to budget deficits, exacerbate­d by a congressio­nal requiremen­t to pre-fund retirement benefits for its workers, that have forced the agency to borrow up to its allowable limit of $15 billion from the U.S. Treasury.

Expanded financial services offer “the single best opportunit­y for new revenue,” according to the inspector general’s office.

It’s not a far-fetched idea. Post offices in many other nations, including Britain, France, China and Japan, also serve as banks. And from 1911 to 1967, the United States Postal Savings System offered accounts with annual interest capped at 2%, to reduce competitio­n with commercial banks.

Deposits at U.S. postal banks surged during the Great Depression and World War II, when many consumers viewed the accounts as more secure than those in commercial banks.

But as those banks opened more branches and increased interest rates after the war, the postal banking system fell out of favor and the federal government shut it down.

The Great Recession has led to calls for the revival of postal banks as many cashstrapp­ed households have been forced to seek payday loans and other alternativ­e financial products.

A Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. survey found that about 9.6 million households in 2013 had no one with a bank account. An additional 24.8 million households had accounts but also used alternativ­e financial services, such as payday loans.

“It’s harder for people with less money to use their money, and much more expensive,” said Mehrsa Baradaran, a University of Georgia professor and author of the book “How the Other Half Banks: Exclusion, Exploitati­on and the Threat to Democracy.”

Many poor areas lack bank branches, but most communitie­s have a post office, said Katherine Isaac, a consultant to the postal workers union who has been organizing the Campaign for Postal Banking.

“Even if we put all the payday lenders out of business, there’s a concern that there’s still no place to go,” Isaac said. “The banks aren’t there. They’ve abandoned those communitie­s. But the post office is there.”

The Postal Service is the most popular federal agency — 84% of respondent­s have a positive view of it, according to a recent Pew Research Center poll.

“I would guess that a lot of people would trust the post office teller with their money more than these Wall Street traders,” said Baradaran, an advocate for postal banks. “There’s a sense that the post office is a dinosaur, but it’s not a shark.”

Congress would have to pass legislatio­n allowing post offices to take deposits and make loans. But the Postal Service could use existing authority to increase some offerings, such as expanding check cashing to include other government and payroll checks and broadening money orders into bill payment service, supporters said.

“This is not a cash cow for the post office,” Baradaran said. “But it could save them.”

jim.puzzangher­a @latimes.com

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Getty Images ?? POST OFFICES in many other nations, including Britain, France, China and Japan, also serve as banks. Above, the lobby of a post office in San Francisco.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images POST OFFICES in many other nations, including Britain, France, China and Japan, also serve as banks. Above, the lobby of a post office in San Francisco.

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