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By Randolph E. Schmid
WASHINGTON
The post office is renewing its drive to drop Saturday delivery - and plans a rate increase - in an effort to fend off a projected $7 billion loss this year.
Without drastic action, the agency could face a cumulative loss of $238 billion over 10 years, Postmaster General John Potter said in releasing a series of consultant reports on agency operations and its outlook.
"The projections going forward are not bright," Potter said. But, he added, "all is not lost.... We can right this ship."
Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., chairman of the Senate subcommittee with oversight authority over the Postal Service, called on Congress to give the post office the flexibility to deal with its future needs.
"In light of the serious financial challenges facing the Postal Service, postal management must be allowed to make the business decisions they need to stay competitive and viable in the years to come," Carper said in a statement. "As we have seen, it is not productive for Congress to act like a 535-member board of directors and constantly second-guess these necessary changes."
Frederic Rolando, president of the National Association of Letter Carriers, also urged Congress to provide the post office with "financial breathing room," but he opposed eliminating one day of delivery.
"I do not believe that weakening our commitment of six-day service to the public will enhance the long-term position of the Postal Service as a critical element in our nation's economic infrastructure," Rolando said.
As Americans turn more and more from paper to electronic communications, the number of items handled by the post office fell from 213 billion in 2006 to 177 billion last year.
At the same time, the type of material sent is shifting from first-class mail to the less lucrative standard mail, such as advertising.
And as people set up new homes and businesses, the number of places mail must be delivered is constantly increasing.
The agency has asked Congress for permission to reduce delivery days and has previously discussed the need for other changes such as closing some offices.
Cutting back Saturday home delivery, however, does not mean post offices would close that day.
There seemed to be concern on the part of Congress that officials had not looked at all possible options, Potter said. That was part of the reason for the three consultant studies, he said.
Potter said he would like to see mail delivery cut to five days a week starting next year.
Later this month, he said, the Postal Service will ask the independent Postal Regulatory Commission to review its plans for the service reduction.
Under the law, the agency is not supposed to raise rates more than the amount of inflation, but there is a loophole allowing for higher increases in extraordinary situations such as the current recession and drop in mail volume.
"We intend to use that tool," Potter said.
He said the Postal Service's governing board is engaged in lively discussions of rate increases, though he declined to speculate on a new price. Currently, first-class stamps cost 44 cents. Rates for other classes vary.
"We need to walk slowly and very, very careful" in raising prices, Potter said, noting that increases can also drive business away.
A proposal before the Postal Regulatory Commission has estimated that increases of 3 percent this year and 10 percent next year would be needed to get the agency back to break-even.
While suggestions to close local post offices always draw complaints, Potter said the current system could be improved by opening more postal facilities in places such as convenience stores and supermarkets. A few Office Depot stores are already doing this, he said.
The average post office has 600 patrons a week, Potter said, while the average supermarket brings in 20,000 people each week and is open longer hours and more days.
Only after such new facilities were available would a local post office close, he said.
Money-saving ideas considered and dismissed by the consultants included reducing the efficiency of mail delivery, Potter said.
Currently, the standard is to deliver first-class mail in one to three days, depending on the distance traveled. Changing this to two to five days could save money by allowing more use of ground transport, but Potter said it would also reduce the value of mail use, especially to businesses.
Another possibility would be to ask Congress for a subsidy, but, noting financial conditions, Potter said "we do not plan to pursue that." The post office has not received taxpayer subsidies for its operations since the early 1980s.
Potter said the agency is looking to new types of mail services to offer but will not seek to get into other types of business, such as banking.
The agency has cut its work force from a peak of 800,000 to about 600,000, and Potter said it wants to use more part-time people. Over the next 10 years some 300,000 postal workers will become eligible to retire, and that will offer an opportunity to make such a change, he said.

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making parcel delivery simpler
Great article, well written.
I am the MD of text-lock and we are soon launching our new product text-padlock, which is a padlock which can be operated remotely by mobile phone, leaving an electronic signature of anyone using or requesting access. This system is perfect for unmanned deliveries, collections or to allow someone access to a secured area. Because there is no keyway it is virtually impossible to crack or pick, and therefore far more secure than traditional locks.. Please see http://www.text-lock.com/text-lock_GSM_SMS_padlock.html for more details on the product.
I welcome your opinions on this and would be fascinated to see your views in this blog.
Oliver
Guess I'm in the minority
I guess I'm in the minority, but since I was a little girl, I've had great experiences with the US postal service. I've known all my mail carriers by name and make sure they are on my Christmas list every year. Now my mailbox is across the street from my home and the carrier drives from box to box, but no matter what the weather is like she will bring oversized packages to our covered side porch...because she knows the front door is just for strangers.
Good, and privatize it. Gov't run anything is costly and ...
Good, and privatize it. Gov't run anything is costly and poorly managed. Look at the continued massive fraud, waste and abuse in Medicare.
Obama, Pelosi and others need to get out of office or start doing what they were hired to do, the "will of the people", not the people that fill their political pockets!! We wouldn't be in the shape we're in if it weren't the complete disregard for our laws. People don't spend like they use to because of job losses and wage suppression, get illegals out of here so we can get our country back on track!!
Impossible to Privatize
If the postal service were privatized, corporations would cut unprofitable service to sparsely populated rural areas. Large numbers of people would no longer have access to mail (including legal, Federal, & state documents, bills, advertisements, not to mention prescription medicines and other non-paper items), a basic necessity. Until we are able to substitute in entirety for this service (everyone has Internet access and all paper documents are delivered digitally and non-paper items some other manner), the effects might be similar to cuts in emergency services, electricity, or water. The postal service is provided as a "service" to our citizens. It is something the citizens pay for through taxes, just like roads and basic infrastructure.
Sorry, not buying your
Sorry, not buying your logic. There are still many rural areas of the country where the USPS does not deliver to the residence, but rather to a box in town with a Rural Route Number associated with that residence. Some places are just too remote to justify delivering to, so it becomes the residents responsibility to check their boxes, rather than spend the hours it would take to deliver mail to a handful of individuals.
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Always found it fun to open junk mail with postage paid envelopes inside. Swap the stuff around and mail it back to them.
This is why the post office
This is why the post office is gone down the commode. This is the message you get when you try to track your package, you get this message until the day you get your package....or not. Why do they have tracking numbers if no one will scan the package? I mailed 30 packages one day and watched them physically scan them, they someone forgot to upload the information to their computer. It is a joke.
"The U.S. Postal Service was electronically notified by the shipper on March 3, 2010 to expect your package for mailing. This does not indicate receipt by the USPS or the actual mailing date. Delivery status information will be provided if / when available. Information, if available, is updated periodically throughout the day. Please check again later."
No updates are ever provided.
You all
All PO employees are not bad. The ones you all are complaining about just don't do their job right. My parents have been working for USPS for 16 & 20 years and work hard at it. For the comment about the mail being stuffed in the mailbox - ever think that your neighbors didn't put in a change of address? Before you go pointing at the whole business, maybe you should just evaluate your own carrier.
okay which...
okay which day of the week will they cut out next year when then need to cut services and raise prices etc.; less services for more money, not good for business. turn over all gov't run services proven failures to private, vdot, dmv, etc. they can't do any worse - until there're corrupt
yes sir, turn mail over to the enrons and aetnas
The primary reason for a business is to maximise profits. The primary reason for the post office is to get correspondence TO EVERY HOUSEHOLD. UPS and FEDEX do not deliver to all addresses and if it is a residence they charge extra. Private businesses can declare bankruptcy and just walk away, then how will the mail get delivered. Then you have the increasingly corrupt business taking as much money as they can then moving on. Would you want an enron, or an aetna,an aig, or an citi, or some si,ilar private company delivering your payment, or important document.