Missing mailboxes hit hot button
But USPS cuts 3,000-plus a year for past decade
A U.S. Postal worker rolled through downtown Columbus, Ohio, in late May, stopping to hoist iconic blue mailboxes onto a flatbed truck. Protests after George Floyd’s death under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer had taken a destructive turn the night before.
In front of the offices of the Columbus Dispatch, a reporter asked the worker why he was taking the boxes. Because of the riots, he told her. In all, more than 30 mailboxes disappeared from the city’s streets that day.
They didn’t return until Aug. 21, the same day Postmaster General Louis Dejoy testified to a Senate committee about postal cuts.
In the meantime, across the United States, missing mailboxes had become a political hot button.
On average, from 2010 through 2019, the Postal Service reports it removed 3,258 drop boxes per year.
The Postal Service did not respond to USA TODAY’S request for records of boxes removed this year. Comparing a list of mail collection boxes the Postal Service released in September 2019 to those listed on the agency’s website this month showed a reduction of more than 4,200.
Reporters across the USA TODAY Network checked on 271 of those boxes in 20 states and confirmed that 186 were not there. The others had not been removed.
Even if this year’s removals track with historical averages, 2020 has been anything but a normal year. Some voting rights experts question why the Postal Service would remove any mailbox during a pandemic when more voters than ever are expected to cast ballots by mail.
“Why now? Why not wait until after the election?” said Bernard Fraga, associate professor of political science at Emory University.
“It’s a lifeline for a lot of people,” said Brett Max Kaufman, a senior staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union.
Seniors, those with disabilities and limited transportation, often rely on collection boxes in their neighborhood for outgoing mail. They will grapple with the choice of voting in-person and risking illness or trying to navigate voting by mail, according to Capri Cafaro, a former Democratic member of the Ohio Senate who now teaches politics at American University.
“The removing of mailboxes and sorting machines has a disproportionate impact on underserved communities, where the post office is really relied upon,” she said.
States are expanding voting access in different ways, including offering ballot drop boxes, and in some cases extending the deadline for returning ballots.
Fears about voter suppression centered on mailboxes in mid-august when at least one viral tweet purported to show a pile of them at a dump. The photo was debunked, but it was shared more than 80,000 times and coincided with real news reports of boxes being removed.
Public concerns reached the highest levels of government. The House approved legislation Aug. 22 to allocate $25 billion to the Postal Service and ban operational cuts until after the election – a move the agency said would happen. More than two dozen Republicans joined Democrats to vote for the measure, which isn’t expected to get a vote in the Republican-controlled Senate.
Trump repeatedly said he opposes federal funding for the post office, which is losing money, and has made false claims about fraud related to mailin voting.
Dejoy – a major donor to Trump’s campaign with large financial interests in the Postal Service’s private competitors – told a Senate committee that the safe and timely delivery of election mail was his “sacred duty.” But he also said the Postal Service will not re-install mailboxes and mail sorters that it has already removed.
As the political fighting intensified, Nathan Story, who runs a website connecting users to the nearest mailbox or post office, started hearing from people concerned about preelection mailbox removals. So, he compared an official mailbox location list he’d requested from the Postal Service last year to information from the agency’s website this month. It’s the same analysis USA TODAY conducted after Story shared the 2019 list he’d obtained.
He expected to find more missing mailboxes.
“When I crunched the numbers,” he said, “I felt a lot less concerned about it.”
Postal officials have removed collection boxes to cut costs since the 1970s. Still, through at least the late 1990s, there were years the Postal Service had added as many as 70,000 boxes, agency records show.
The number of boxes peaked in 1973 at 386,000. A steep plunge began after the 9/11 terrorist attacks and the anthrax incidents that followed in 2001. Security concerns prompted the removal of more than 20,000 boxes in 2002.
“In these instances, if municipal, state, or other responsible officials informed local postal officials that they wanted boxes removed from in front of prominent buildings or other suspected potential targets, the Postal Service complied with those requests,” the Postal Service wrote in answer to a legal complaint about box removals in 2002.
At the end of 2002 there were 304,849 boxes in use. By 2006 that number was 211,581 and in 2009 another purge of more than 24,000 boxes brought the total down to about 182,000, Postal Service reports show.
The Postal Service’s bleeding started with the Accountability Act in 2006, which required the agency to pre-fund health benefits for potential future retirees, O’rourke said. That requirement cost the agency more than $20 billion from 2007 to 2010 and it hasn’t been able to make any contributions since, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
The Postal Service also does not receive federal funding and instead relies upon the revenue it generates from postage, which has been declining. The agency reports a 31.4% decline in pieces of mail delivered since 2000.
But trust in the Postal Service has already been damaged, said Patti Brigham, president of the League of Women voters of Florida.
“The seeds of doubt have now been sown,” she said. “We are concerned that this is an attempt at massive voter suppression. What’s going on is too coincidental.”