The
US Postal Service has long lived on the financial edge, but it has
never been as close to the precipice as it is on Monday. The agency is
so low on cash that it will not be able to make a $5.5-billion payment
due this month and may have to shut down entirely this winter unless
Congress takes emergency action to stabilise its finances.
The post office’s problems stem from one hard reality: it is being squeezed on both revenue and costs.
As any computer user knows, the internet revolution has led to people and businesses sending far less conventional mail.
At
the same time, decades of contractual promises made to unionised
workers, including no-layoff clauses, are increasing the post office’s
costs. Labour represents 80 per cent of the agency’s expenses, compared
with 53 per cent at United Parcel Service and 32 per cent at FedEx, its
two biggest private competitors. Postal workers also receive more
generous health benefits than most other federal employees.
The
Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee will hold a
hearing on the agency’s predicament tomorrow. So far, feuding Democrats
and Republicans in Congress, still smarting from the brawl over the
federal debt ceiling, have failed to agree on any solutions. It doesn’t
help that many of the options for saving the postal service are
politically unpalatable.
“The
situation is dire,” said Thomas R Carper, the Delaware Democrat who is
chairman of the Senate sub-committee that oversees the postal service.
“If we do nothing, if we don’t react in a smart, appropriate way, the
postal service could literally close later this year. That’s not the
kind of development we need to inject into a weak, uneven economic
recovery.”
Missing
the $5.5-billion payment due on September 30, intended to finance
retirees’ future health care, won’t cause immediate disaster. But
sometime early next year, the agency will run out of money to pay its
employees and gas up its trucks, officials warn, forcing it to stop
delivering the roughly three billion pieces of mail it handles weekly.
The causes of the crisis are well known and immensely difficult to overcome.
Mail
volume has plummeted with the rise of email, electronic bill-paying and
a Web that makes everything from fashion catalogues to news instantly
available. The system will handle an estimated 167 billion pieces of
mail this financial year, down 22 per cent from five years ago.
It’s
difficult to imagine that trend reversing, and pessimistic projections
suggest that volume could plunge to 118 billion pieces by 2020. The law
also prevents the post office from raising postage fees faster than
inflation.
Meanwhile,
the agency has had a tough time cutting its costs to match the revenue
drop, with a history of labour contracts offering good health and
pension benefits, underused post offices, and laws that restrict its
ability to make basic business decisions, like reducing the frequency of
deliveries.
Congress
is considering numerous emergency proposals — most notably, allowing
the post office to recover billions of dollars that management says it
overpaid to its employees’ pension funds. That fix would help the agency
get through the short-term crisis, but would delay the day of reckoning
on bigger issues.
Postal
service officials say one reason for their high costs is that they are
legally required to provide universal service, making deliveries to 150
million addresses nationwide each week. They add that a major factor for
the post office’s $20 billion in losses over the past four years is a
2006 law requiring the postal service to pay an average of $5.5 billion
annually for 10 years to finance retiree health costs for the next 75
years.
But
the agency’s leaders acknowledge that they must find a way to increase
revenue, something that will prove far harder than simply slicing costs.
In
some countries, post offices double as banks or sell insurance or
cellphones. In the US, the postal service is barred from entering many
areas. Still, the agency is considering ideas, like gaining the right to
deliver wine and beer, allowing commercial advertisements on postal
trucks and in post offices, doing more “last-mile” deliveries for FedEx
and UPS and offering special hand delivery services for correspondence
and transactions for which email is not considered secure enough.
Donahoe’s
hope is to cut $20 billion of the $75 billion in annual costs by 2015.
To do that, he wants to close many post offices and slash the number of
sorting facilities to 200 from 500 and trim the agency’s work force by
220,000 people, from its current 653,000. (A decade ago, the agency
employed nearly 900,000.)
The
postal service has the legal authority to close facilities, although
community opposition can make the process difficult. To placate critics
and cut costs, officials say they would seek to run some postal
operations out of stores like Walmart or to share space with other
government offices.
Cutting
the work force is more difficult. The agency’s labour contracts have
long guaranteed no layoffs to the vast majority of its workers, and
management agreed to a new no-layoff clause in a major union contract
last May.
But
now, faced with what postal officials call “the equivalent of Chapter
11 bankruptcy,” the agency is asking Congress to enact legislation that
would overturn the job protections and let it lay off 120,000 workers in
addition to trimming 100,000 jobs through attrition.
The postal service is also asking Congress for permission to end Saturday delivery.
Given the vast range of stakeholders, getting consensus on a rescue plan will be difficult.
Senator
Susan Collins of Maine, like many lawmakers from rural states,
vigorously opposes ending Saturday delivery, which would trim only two
per cent from the agency’s budget. Collins, the ranking Republican on
the committee overseeing the postal service, said the cutback would be
tough on people in small towns who receive prescriptions and newspapers
by mail.
“The
postmaster general has focused on several approaches that I believe
will be counterproductive,” she said. “They risk producing a death
spiral where the postal service reduces service and drives away more
customers.”
The
post office’s powerful unions are angry and alarmed about the planned
layoffs. “We’re going to fight this and we’re going to fight it hard,”
said Cliff Guffey, president of the American Postal Workers Union, which
represents 207,000 mail sorters and post office clerks. “It’s illegal
for them to abrogate our contract.”
Senators
Carper and Collins do back several of the postal service’s main ideas
to avoid default, including recovering around $60 billion that some
actuaries say the agency has overpaid into two pension funds. Although
the Obama administration is working closely with the senators to find a
solution, it has signalled discomfort with the pension proposals,
questioning whether the postal service really overpaid.
Meanwhile,
Representative Darrell Issa, the California Republican who is chairman
of the House Oversight Committee, says the pension proposals would
amount to an unjustifiable bailout that would not solve the agency’s
underlying problems. He is pushing a bill that would create an emergency
oversight board that could order huge cost-cutting and void the postal
service’s contracts — a proposal that not just the unions, but Senators
Carper and Collins oppose.
Fredric
V. Rolando, president of the National Association of Letter Carriers,
warned of disaster if partisanship keeps Congress from acting.
“This
is about one of America’s oldest institutions,” he said. “It survived
the telegraph, it survived the telephone, and we have to do everything
we can to preserve it and adapt.”
Source: The New York Times News Service
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