USPS Proposal would stop door-to-door mail for millions
Proposal would stop door-to-door mail for millions
Proposal would end door-to-door mail delivery for
millions, switch to communal box or curbside
By Pauline Jelinek, Associated Press
22 hours ago
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Millions of Americans would no longer
get mail delivered to their door but would go to communal or curbside boxes
instead, under a proposed law.
The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
debated Wednesday a bill to direct the U.S. Postal Service to convert 1.5
million addresses annually — 15 million over the next decade — to the less
costly, but also less convenient delivery method.
"I think it's a lousy idea," said Democratic
Rep. Stephen Lynch of Massachusetts. He was joined by some other lawmakers in
saying it wouldn't work in urban areas where there's no place on city streets
to put banks of so-called "cluster boxes" that have compartments for
multiple homes. Under the proposal, waivers could be given to people with
disabilities who have difficulty leaving their homes, and people who still want
door delivery could pay extra for it — something Lynch derided as "a
delivery tax."
The measure falls far short of comprehensive reform most
officials agree is needed to solve the postal service's financial problems.
Republican committee chairman Darrell Issa of California acknowledged that at
the outset but said it "provides an interim opportunity to achieve some
significant cost savings."
Converting to communal or curbside delivery would save $2
billion annually, Issa said, quoting from estimates that door delivery costs
$380 annually per address compared to $240 for curbside and $170 for centralized
methods. He said less than 1 percent of all addresses nationwide would undergo
a delivery change annually and that communal boxes offer a safe, locked
location for packages, doing away with the need for carriers to leave packages
on porches and subject to theft and bad weather.
The Postal Service reported a $1.9 billion loss for the
first three months this year despite continued cost-cutting, a 2.3 percent rise
in operating revenue and increased employee productivity. Package business has
risen but the service struggles with inflationary cost increases and continued
decline in first-class mail as people move to the Internet for letter writing
and bill paying.
Postal officials have asked repeatedly for comprehensive
legislation giving them more control over personnel and benefit costs and more
flexibility in pricing and products. Though various legislative proposals have
been advanced, Congress has not been able to agree on a bill with broad
changes.
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