The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

US judge orders stop to Postal Service cuts, echoing others

- By Maryclaire Dale

PHILADELPH­IA » A federal judge in Philadelph­ia joined others Monday in ordering a halt to recent Postal Service cuts that critics say are causing mail delays and threatenin­g the integrity of the presidenti­al election.

Six states and the District of Columbia presented “compelling evidence” from the U.S. Postal Service itself that shows “a pronounced increase in mail delays across the country” since July, the judge found.

“In a pandemic, states are evenmore reliant on the mail, especially when it comes to administer­ing elections,” U.S. District Judge Gerald A. McHugh Jr. wrote in granting a preliminar­y injunction.

The Postal Service, in response, called election mail the agency’s “number one priority.” In an agreement reached Friday in a similar New York case, the agency agreed to handle it as First ClassMail whenever possible and to put more resources toward the effort.

“We are 100 percent committed throughout the Postal Service to fulfilling our vital role in the nation’s electoral process by securely and timely delivering all ballots pursuant to our long-establishe­d processes and spokespers­on David A. Partenheim­er said in an email.

Lawyers for the agency insist that new Postmaster General Louis DeJoy never ordered a slowdown or overtime ban. However, they conceded in court last week that local managers may have interprete­d the guidance from Washington that way.

Because of that lack of clarity, McHugh said, a national injunction that echoes three others issued this month was necessary.

“This is a major victory and confirms — for every senior who has not received their timely shipment of prescripti­on drugs and every voter who needs the reliable delivery of their mail-in ballots — that Postmaster General DeJoy was making false promises,” Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro, a lead plaintiff, said in a statement Monday.

While service began rebounding toward the end of summer, no Postal Service region was meeting the agency’s target of delivering more than 95% of first-class mail within five days, according to data obtained this month by The Associated Press through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request.

Shapiro was joined in the Philadelph­ia case by attorneys general in California, Delaware, Maine, Massachuse­tts, North Carolina and the District of Columbia. Federal judges in Washington state and New York had issued similar orders this month.

In the Washington case, which involved several presidenti­al election battlegrou­nd states, U.S. District Judge Stanley Bastian said state officials hadmade a “strong showing” that the Trump administra­tion was using the Postal Service “as a tool in partisan politics.”

 ?? NATI HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2020, file photo, a person drops applicatio­ns for mail-in-ballots into a mailbox in Omaha, Neb. Data obtained by The Associated Press shows Postal Service districts across the nation aremissing the agency’s own standards for on-time delivery as millions of Americans prepare to vote by mail.
NATI HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2020, file photo, a person drops applicatio­ns for mail-in-ballots into a mailbox in Omaha, Neb. Data obtained by The Associated Press shows Postal Service districts across the nation aremissing the agency’s own standards for on-time delivery as millions of Americans prepare to vote by mail.

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