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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

 

The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) on Friday finalized a plan effective Oct. 1 to slow down some first-class mail deliveries as part of efforts to cut red ink.


Postmaster General Louis DeJoy proposed in March to revise existing one- to three-day service standards to one to five days for first-class mail. USPS said on Friday that 61% of first-class mail will remain at its current standard.


USPS said in a notice published in the Federal Register current standards require it "to rely heavily on air transportation, using air cargo transportation carriers and commercial passenger air carriers."


Delivery standards will be slower for about 7% of periodicals.


Airplanes, USPS added, are less reliable than surface transportation and costs much more because of "weather delays, network congestion, and air traffic control ground stops."


The "addition of one or two days to current service standards for first-class mail and periodicals would enable the Postal Service to convey a greater volume of mail within the contiguous United States by surface transportation," it said.


While acknowledging "some uncomfortable changes," DeJoy defended the plan earlier on Friday at a board of governors meeting, saying it makes a commitment to deliver to "every address in the nation, six days a week, and strives for financial sustainability."


USPS on Friday posted a $3 billion quarterly net loss, with a 1.1% rise in first-class mail deliveries to 12.1 billion pieces. But "volumes remain lower than pre-pandemic levels and we expect continued secular declines," it added.


For the minority of first-class mail affected by the slower delivery window "the standard would only change by one or two days (with most of such volume experiencing a one-day change)," USPS said.


USPS added it has been unable to achieve existing "service performance targets for many years, and that these service failures illustrate the weakness of the current transportation model."


In June, the attorneys general of 20 states asked the U.S. Postal Regulatory Commission to reject plans to slow down some first-class deliveries, saying allowing that to happen could harm local governments' ability to fulfill essential functions.


DeJoy unveiled a plan in March to cut $160 billion in predicted losses over the next decade with the changes in service standards a key part.


USPS has struggled with poor delivery performance over the past year, facing a huge boost in packages and staffing issues due to the coronavirus pandemic. It said Thursday that through July it delivered 89% of first-class mail on time, up 1.5 percentage points.


Starting Aug. 29, USPS will raise prices of first-class postage stamps to 58 cents from 55 cents. Price hikes are needed because over the past decade, mail volume has declined by 46 billion pieces, or 28%, while single piece first-class mail declined 47%, USPS said.


Congress is considering a plan to provide USPS with $46 billion in financial relief over 10 years, including eliminating a requirement that USPS pre-fund retiree health benefits for 75 years.


The agency has reported net losses of about $90 billion since 2007. One reason is 2006 legislation mandating that it pre-fund more than $120 billion in retiree healthcare and pension liabilities, a requirement labor unions have called an unfair burden not shared by other businesses.


Reuters (Reporting by David Shepardson; editing by Diane Craft, Marguerita Choy and Richard Chang)
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/u-s-postal-service-finalizes-plan-to-slow-some-mail-deliveries/ar-...

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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

They need a plan to slow down deliveries ?   They seem to be doing great with that already.

Message 2 of 11
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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

What is that piece of excrement still doing there?

Message 3 of 11
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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

Judging from the speed, or lack of, with which my mail arrives, I thought they had already put the slow-down plan in place.

Our outgoing mail, even if addressed within the same zip, first goes to a larger city about 40 miles north of us, then comes back and gets delivered.

Therefore, a birthday card for a grandchild here across town -- and this is not a large town -- has to be put in the mail at least a week before the birthday, more if I want to be absolutely certain it arrives on time.  

Message 4 of 11
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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

De (no) Joy already slowed down the mail last year by causing many sorting machines to be removed.  Now he wants to slow it down more and raise prices?  The guy with connections to USPS competitors?  Congress needs quickly to approve the latest nominations to the board of governors so they can fire this clown!

 

Oh, sorry, "congress" and "quickly" in the same sentence may have caused some distress.

List more, sell more. Goodwill that other, uh, stuff.

Feeling sleepy? There's an app for that.
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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

I've never been able to understand how can USPS be in the shape it is. They have a PO or agent in every single town as well as a mailbox or drop box area, they have their own delivery trucks, for the postal subcontractors mail takes priority over other cargo except medical, government, perishable items. Yet, after all this, their service level has decrease. SMH

Message 6 of 11
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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

If they were any slower, they'd be going backwards!

Message 7 of 11
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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

Our mail sits on hubs for days sonetimes.  Gonna have to deliver myself i guess.

Message 8 of 11
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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

Article said as of Oct 1st, I noticed a slow down in Aug. First Class packages dropped off are sitting at local post at least a day before moving. This is not happening to every first class package, but many. Hoping ebay adjusts the expected delivery time.  Just not great with 4th quarter soon. 

 

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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

Slow down October 1st? How would you know?

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U.S. Postal Service Finalizes Plan to Slow Some Mail Deliveries

This is pretty concerning as a buyer AND seller. My purchases this month, from across the country, have taken 8-10 days to arrive, vs. 3-5 earlier this year. In-state delivery times are still acceptable. The recent USPS issues are obviously out of sellers' control, but I wouldn't be surprised if my buyers start complaining soon...

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