It's no surprise to anyone who's been following news of the U.S. Postal Service that the post office is in financial trouble. If you're a letter writer, you know how few of us there are out there, compared to past generations. 
 
Here's some information from a recent USPS news release:
The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) has asked members of Congress to enact legislation to return the organization to financial stability.
Here's some information from a recent USPS news release:
The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) has asked members of Congress to enact legislation to return the organization to financial stability.
In a letter signed
  jointly by Board of Governors Chairman Louis Giuliano and Postmaster General
  Patrick Donahoe, USPS urged Senator Hutchison to support action to:
·        
  Eliminate current mandates requiring
  $5.5 billion annual retiree health benefit pre-payments;
·        
  Allow the Postal Service to access
  Civil Service Retirement System and Federal Employee Retiree System (FERS)
  surpluses; and
·        
  Give the Postal Service the
  authority to determine the frequency of mail delivery.
USPS is in “a dire
  financial predicament” according
  to Giuliano and Donahoe, despite ongoing aggressive cost-reduction
  initiatives. Over the last four fiscal years, the Postal Service has reduced
  its size by 110,000 career positions and saved $12 billion in costs. 
Absent legislation this fiscal year, Giuliano and Donahoe
  said making the mandated $5.5 billion pre-payment due Sept. 30 will not be
  possible. “This pre-payment for future retiree health benefits is no
  longer tenable given present-day financial challenges,” they said.
Federal retirement law also has resulted in a $6.9 billion
  surplus for Postal Service contributions into the Federal Employees
  Retirement System (FERS). The letter calls for these funds to be restored to
  the Postal Service to help avoid insolvency. The Postal Service informed the Office of
  Personnel Management (OPM) that it is suspending employer contributions for
  the defined benefit portion of FERS annuities effective June 24. 
The Postal Service will continue to transmit
  employees’ FERS contributions to OPM, as well as employer automatic and
  matching contributions and employee contributions to the Thrift Savings Plan,
  and employees will continue to receive service credit. The annuity payment
  suspension is an emergency cash conservation measure expected to free about
  $800 million in the current fiscal year.
The letter states a cash shortfall is projected to occur
  as early as October: “The Postal Service is facing the real prospect
  that it will not be able to meet payroll next (fiscal) year, thus disrupting
  mail delivery.”
The Postal Service has been communicating regularly with Congress and the Administration about its serious financial
  position, expressing support for provisions of two separate pieces of
  legislation introduced by Sen. Tom Carper (D-DE) and by Sen. Susan Collins
  (R-ME), respectively.  
“The need for legislative change is
  immediate,” Giuliano and Donahoe said. “We urge your support of
  this vital postal legislation and ask that you work for immediate enactment
  this fiscal year to avoid the possibility of mail and package delivery
  disruptions.”
The Postal Service receives no tax dollars for operating
  expenses, and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund
  its operations.
 
 
 
1 comment:
I find it so sad that such a critical part of our nation is in such trouble. :( As an avid letter writer, I don't know what I would do without the US Postal Service.
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