Postmaster
General Patrick Donahoe claimed in a May 9 press release that the Postal
Service had its “third straight quarter of revenue increase.” Actually, the
Postal Service has been reporting revenue increases for five straight quarters.
Why is
Donahoe minimizing the winning streak? Perhaps someone in Postal HQ’s
statistics department was snoozing that day. But there is a more disturbing
explanation.
Over the
last few years, faced with falling revenue, postal management has closed post
offices, slashed rural office hours, sold historic buildings, cut jobs, and
consolidated processing plants.
More
recently however, postal finances have improved. Cash on hand increased from
$2.3 billion to $3.7 billion over the last two quarters.
Excuse for Austerity
Despite
that, Donahoe has continued his campaign
to impose austerity on the public (pushing to end
door-to-door delivery, for example), and on employees (efforts to privatize
its trucking arm and shift
retail work to Staples). His ally in Congress, Representative Darrell
Issa—the postal Voldemort—is pushing for a drastic overhaul.
Their
biggest weapon has been the persistent “we’re losing billions” message—drumming
into the public and employees that there is no use in resisting.
Donahoe is
apparently marching to the tune of big mailers, companies that send out a lot
of advertising or presort mail at bargain-basement wages to take advantage of
bulk mail rates. They don’t go to small towns to mail letters—or to ordinary
post offices, for that matter. They want a streamlined network of postal
facilities without the costs imposed by the mandate for prompt, universal
service.
In fact, postal
reform is needed, but not the slash-and-burn kind. Expanding postal banking,
beyond money orders, could provide valuable financial services to underserved
areas and populations, as well as generate substantial revenue, according to a
January report
by the Postal Service’s Inspector General. Germany , Israel , and South Korea already do it. In fact, postal
banking services were offered in the U.S. from 1911 to 1964 as a trusted
alternative to banks.
Fanciful Debt
Why are
phony losses reported in postal press releases and parroted by the media,
despite the reality of rising revenue and operating profits? Congress is to
blame, through a 2006 law that required the Postal Service to pump
$5.5 billion a year for ten years into a federal treasury account,
ostensibly to pre-fund future retiree benefits.
Plumping up
the federal budget was the motivator, not future retirees’ needs. In fact, for
the past several years no actual money has changed hands—the Postal Service,
unable to pay, has defaulted on this debt. But guess what? It still counts as
an asset in the federal budget… and a debt in the postal budget.
And this
artificial debt is being used as a battering ram to fool the public into
thinking service
cuts are necessary, when they really aren’t.
> The
article above is reprinted from Labor Notes, and was written by David C. Yao.
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