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3/2/2010
Nix Saturday deliveries. Close post offices
Typical Americans. We want the government to spend less, and we holler at our representatives for more service. Typical. Bipartisan whining about service cuts last year succeeded in staving off any productive change at the post office. Great.
For cripes sakes, is anyone’s mailbox as full as it used to be in years past? My gosh. Nix Saturday deliveries. Close more post offices. Manage the outfit responsibly. We’ve got to get realistic here.
Hopefully the reduced service will come with tons of changes – the postmaster spent $4.8 million with consultants to become “armed” with the data needed to convince Congress. Maybe it’s a way we constituents could ask for less for a change. Call your congressman.
The postmaster general called for many of these changes last year but failed to convince lawmakers.
….Three studies -- by Accenture, the Boston Consulting Group and McKinsey and Co. -- reviewed the Postal Service's books and presented 50 options for cuts and new services. The agency's business model is so poor, consultants concluded, that privatizing it is untenable.
….the Postal Service will ask Congress to cut mail delivery to five days per week, a move backed by a June Gallup survey that found 52 percent of Americans support eliminating Saturday deliveries in order to reduce costs.
Other possible changes carry much greater risk: Officials can seek permission from the Postal Regulatory Commission to increase prices beyond the rate of inflation, but doing so could scare away more customers.
…. Officials will also seek greater flexibility in forthcoming union negotiations, including addressing ballooning health-care costs, [Postmaster General John E.] Potter said.
He particularly wants Congress to reverse a 2006 law requiring the Postal Service to prepay its retiree health benefits, to the tune of $5 billion per year. No other federal agency or Fortune 500 company makes such payments, Potter said.
The agency's call last year to consolidate about 3,000 post offices drew a firestorm of protest from the public and lawmakers.
But the Postal Service is considering more next year, potentially closing thousands of locations and moving some products and services to nearby supermarkets, office supply stores and pharmacies.
Jo Egelhoff, FoxPolitics.net
COMMENTS
We only need residential delivery 3 days a week. So you could have Mon-Wed-Fri or Tues-Thurs-Sat. Businesses could get their mail daily at their PO Box. Would cut their delivery crew substantially.

Jim Smits (Tue Mar 02 11:12:59 2010)
Hear hear!!

Jo (Tue Mar 02 13:54:54 2010)
I agree, 3 days a week is just fine. However,be careful that there may be some items as mundane as credit card bills that are presumed to be delivered within a certain time frame. If there is a gap, could cause a problem. What I'd like to see is more places to buy stamps and drop mail (the blue post boxes). I don't put any outgoing mail in my home box. In the long run the postal system is screwed. The post office is very efficient for what it provides and low cost but if it loses more customers especially the commercial customers rates, will go up thereby causing less usage and so on. I heard the average post office has less than 600 customers a day. That's about one a minute if it is open 10 hours a day. Close a bunch of them down.

dave allen (Wed Mar 03 07:25:37 2010)
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