By Josh Eidelson How Darrell Issa and the Right Are Planning to Kill the U.S.
Post Office The Postal
Service faces a threat greater than email or economics: Politics.
March 18, 2012 | This story was
originally published at Salon.
http://www.alternet.org/story/154596/how_darrell_issa_and_the_right_are_planning_to_kill_the_u.s._post_office_
After a stopgap measure last year, Congress will
once again debate whether the United States Postal Service as we know it can
survive. The better question is:
Will Congress let it?
The U.S. Postal Service is at risk of defaulting on healthcare
obligations or exceeding its debt limit by the end of the year. Last month,
USPS management unveiled a ÒPath to ProfitabilityÓ that would eliminate over a
hundred thousand jobs, end Saturday service and loosen overnight delivery
guarantees. The Postal Service also proposes to shutter thousands of post
offices. ÒUnder the existing laws,
the overall financial situation for the Postal Service is poor,Ó says CFO Joe
Corbett. Republicans have been
more dire, and none more so than Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, who
warned of a Òcrisis that is bringing USPS to the brink of collapse.Ó
Listening to Issa, youÕd never know that the
post officeÕs immediate crisis is largely of CongressÕs own making. Conservatives arenÕt wrong to say that
the shift toward electronic mail – what USPS calls Òe-diversionÓ –
poses a challenge for the Postal ServiceÕs business model. (The recent drop-off in mail is also a
consequence of the recession-induced drop in advertising.)
But even so, in the first quarter of this
fiscal year, the post office would have made an operational profit, if not for
a 75-year healthcare Òpre-fundingÓ mandate that applies to no other public or
private institution in the United States. Warren Gunnels, aide to Sen. Bernie Sanders, calls
that mandate Òthe poison pill that has hammered the Postal Service É over 80
percent of the Postal Service deficit since that was enacted was entirely due
to the pre-funding requirement.Ó
This death hug was part of the Postal
Accountability and Enhancement Act, which was passed on a voice vote by a lame
duck Republican Congress in 2006. As
IÕve reported, the mandate required the Postal Service, over 10 years, to pre-fund
healthcare benefits for the next 75.
This unique burden costs USPS $5.5 billion a year. The new law also
restricted the Postal ServiceÕs ability to raise postage rates, or to provide
Ònonpostal servicesÓ that, in an e-diversion era, could be key to its
future. American Postal Workers
Union president Cliff Guffey says the bill was designed Òby those people who
hate government É to destroy the Postal Service. And thatÕs what they did.Ó
The Postal Service has long been required to
provide Òuniversal serviceÓ: delivering to all 151 million addresses in the
United States. Conservatives promise that private companies could serve the
Postal ServiceÕs function more efficiently, but when itÕs their money on the
line, the private companies themselves arenÕt always so sure. Some of the
packages sent through UPS or FedEx are actually delivered by the Postal
Service, because those companies save money by contracting with USPS to serve
more remote customers. The
Postal Service fulfills its mandate without direct government funding. Faced with right-wing warnings about
bailouts, the postal worker union this week is running a new round of TV ads
reminding taxpayers that USPS is funded entirely by fees, not taxes. Guffey says the union — the
largest of four representing post office workers — will likely hold
rallies on next monthÕs Tax Day to drive home the same point. Issa and other Republicans have
been insisting for years that to stay solvent, USPS needs to make big cuts. In
2010, Issa told the postmaster general at a congressional hearing that the
Postal Service has Òmore or less a third more people than you need. He warned in an Op-Ed that ÒAllowing USPS
to postpone billions in obligations just makes a bailout easier.Ó In a December
Op-Ed, Issa compared continuing Saturday mail service to Òasking us to revive
the Pony Express.Ó Instead, Issa
proposes creating a new board that, in the event of default on pre-funding or
any other Postal Service obligation, would be empowered to override union
contracts and managerial decisions for years.
Elijah Cummings, the Oversight CommitteeÕs
ranking Democrat, says for union members who just ratified a contract last
year, that would be Òa slap in their face É particularly when you have unions
who have worked very hard and in a very cooperative manner to help to
right-size the Postal Service employee force.Ó
Cummings also voices concern over USPS managementÕs proposed
cuts to jobs and services. While
agreeing reductions are necessary, he says, ÒI donÕt think they would do it
with the compassion that I would.Ó
As for ending Saturday service and changing the overnight guarantee,
Cummings warns, ÒWe have to be careful that we donÕt do things that push even
more people away from using the postal service.Ó Corbett acknowledges that such changes will cost customers,
but says that after factoring in such losses, USPS projections show it will
still save billions of dollars.
ÒIt only makes sense,Ó says Corbett. ÒAny financial enterprise would do it.Ó
Twenty-six Senate Democrats, plus Sanders, have
signed a letter raising similar concerns about service cuts and calling for an
alternative approach: ending the pre-funding mandate, allowing the Postal
Service a refund on billions in overpayments to pension funds, and allowing and
encouraging USPS to diversify its services. In a TV interview last month, Sanders suggested that diversification
could include shipping alcohol and providing notary and licensing
services. (Last year, USPS
commissioned a report from Accenture that examined diversification strategies
in other countries and estimated that such an approach could have brought USPS
$74 billion from 2003 to 2008.) By contrast, Sanders warned that the USPS
managementÕs proposed cuts would mean Òa death spiralÓ as customers are driven
elsewhere.
Sanders is among the backers of the Postal
Service Protection Act, whose recommendations are similar to the ones in the
senatorsÕ letter. Guffey says the most promising route to an acceptable
compromise would be for these recommendations to be incorporated into a
tri-partisan bill introduced by Sens. Joe Lieberman, Tom Carper, Susan Collins
and Scott Brown.
Among USPS managementÕs proposed changes are a
transformation of workersÕ healthcare plans and the elimination of at least 155,000
jobs. USPS has already eliminated
130,00 full-time equivalent positions in the past three years. In a union contract signed in May 2011,
APWU agreed to concessions in order to preserve its Òno-layoffÓ clause; Guffey
says that the Post OfficeÕs projections, designed to make the case for further
sacrifices from workers, fail to factor in savings from the concessions theyÕve
already agreed to. Union leaders
expressed surprise last year when, within three months after signing the new
contract with APWU, USPS issued white papers in support of congressional
proposals to override those layoff protections. But Corbett says he believes the reduction can be
accomplished through voluntary incentives.
Cutting those jobs would mean further reductions
in public sector employment, including among veterans and African-Americans,
who for decades have been over-represented in Postal Service ranks. ÒIt just doesnÕt seem like itÕs the
right time to go after veterans and their employment,Ó says Guffey. He wants
Congress to maintain current delivery standards, which he says would save many
post offices from closure.
Cuts have intangible costs as well. Interviewed for a Washington Postprofile of the endangered
post office in Star Tannery, Va., one resident said, ÒClosing the post office
would be one step toward eradicating small-town life in America.Ó
True to form, President Obama falls between
Sanders and Issa: He would scale back the pre-funding requirement and allow
postage rates to rise, but would also back the elimination of Saturday service.
In an emailed statement, White House spokesperson Matt Lehrich wrote, ÒThe
President proposed a balanced plan that would return USPS to financial
viability while saving taxpayers money, and Congressional action that enacts this
type of balanced plan is necessary.Ó
If you want a measure of the narrowness and conservatism of our politics, consider this: In a still-weak economy, with a recovery slowed by historic public sector layoffs, not even Bernie Sanders, the self-identified socialist senator, is proposing that the public good of universal delivery get a public subsidy. Instead, the range of debate is over how Congress should let the Postal Service fund itself: allowing it to raise rates, diversify services and cease funding benefits decades ahead of time; or letting it slash jobs and services. Since most of these proposals require legislative change, any deal will have to make it past filibuster-happy Senate Republicans and John BoehnerÕs House of Representatives. That political reality – more than technology or economics – is the greatest immediate threat facing the Post Office