Tuesday 21 August 2012


POSTAL NEWS
NO.   70/2012
Formulated by UNI-JAPAN POST
In cooperation with UNI APRO, ASPEK INDONESIA and SPPI

  1. Postal Service Bankrupt Shows Why USPS Must Be Privatized. Aug 7, 2012.
  2. Liberia: Postal Ministry Dedicates Voinjama Post. Aug  6, 2012.
  3. Postal politics: Federal help for the USPS is overdue. Aug 5, 2012.
  4. New Russia post office in limbo. Aug 4, 2012.
  5. Postal Service Misses $5B Payment, Could Bankruptcy Be Next? Aug 4, 2012.
  6. Postal Service Posts Big Loss as Cash Runs Low. Aug 9, 2012.


  1. Postal Service Bankrupt Shows Why USPS Must Be Privatized


The United States Postal Service’s anticipated default tonight shows that both Congress and Americans are on the mailman’s side.

USPS will default at midnight because it cannot pay $5.5 billion to retiree health benefits. Back in 2006, the Republican-dominated Congress passed the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act, which mandated the USPS to “prefund all of its retirees’ health benefits” for the next 75 years. Naturally, they couldn’t afford to meet the requirement, and now find themselves in default six years later.

Despite the agency’s insistence that this default “will have no material effect on the operations of the Postal Service,” the impact won’t go unnoticed. A first-time default will crack a few bones of the service’s infrastructure, and a foreseeable second default in September could destroy it.

Yet both of these defaults hold good news: now that the skeleton of the postal service is broken, Americans will truly realize that change—on a radical level—needs to occur. Even if Congress passed a bill that was clearly unattainable, they did it with honorable intentions. This default needed to happen a decade ago. Now more than ever, it needs to happen so we can find a new pathway out.

Some call the postal service's foundation “old-fashioned,” but I think a more suitable term is archaic. The underpinning is based on a government-induced monopoly, a money-losing flat rate service, and a hope that Americans use snail mail instead of email. The simple reality? Delivering letters to rural places for the same 44-cent rate as delivering them to populated urban areas isn’t lucrative. Reforms have only lead to more junk mail. According to Bloomsberg, “the USPS needs three pieces of junk mail to replace the profit of a vanished stamp-bearing letter.” Additionally, the Internet has stolen the top money-makers from the USPS: Christmas cards and college acceptance/rejection letters. This spring, my mailman won’t get the satisfaction of delivering any rejection letters to my door! My Gmail account, however, will.

The only way out is to completely reconstruct the whole “one size fits all” plan. Privatization is inevitable.

Although many oppose privatizing because it could curtail unions, it has worked in socialist countries like Finland, Sweden, Germany, Switzerland, and Austria. The European Union “prodded members to give up their monopolies and compete with one another,” and the result has been glorious compared to our system.

Furthermore, the postal service would not be obliterated if we privatize it. More mail delivery services mean more job opportunities, more efficiency and more freedom. That little post office around the corner might be closed, but it doesn’t mean Americans will completely forget or demolish the legacy of the USPS. Privatizing will force the postal services to be rejuvenated, modernized, and ready to compete in the 21st century.

In a perfect world, Ben Franklin would have wanted us to keep the USPS alive. But this is far from a utopia. Our economy is already suffering, and privatizing mail is the only answer.

  1. Liberia: Postal Ministry Dedicates Voinjama Post
Tagged: Business, Governance, ICT, Liberia, West Africa
6 August 2012

The Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications has dedicated the Voinjama Post in Lofa County. According to a release, the ceremony brought together officials of the county, including Acting Superintendent Gimmy Kamara, Acting City Mayor Bizzie, other assigned officials of the ministries of Education, Labour, Public Works, Internal Affairs, LISGIS, General Services Agency, Church Leaders and opinion leaders in the county.

Acting Superintendent Kamara lauded President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Postmaster General Frederick Norkeh and the Universal Postal Union for the relentless efforts exerted, which led to the dedication of the Voinjama Post.

"Although it wasn't possible to dedicate Voinjama Post Office during the July 26 Independence Day Anniversary celebrated in our County, we are quite grateful that today marks the day God designed for Voinjama Post to be dedicated to serve our people", Acting Superintendent Kamara said. The Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Ferdrick Norkeh said the dedication of the facility means a lot for the people of Lofa.

He encouraged all to make maximum use of the various services available to them now thru Voinjama Post; "instead of going to Monrovia for such services which is quite costly, these same services are now available at Voinjama Post with the staff set to serve", the Minister said and added, "building post offices and windows at strategic areas throughout rural Liberia will greatly reduce the burden of poverty on the citizenry."

Deputy Posts Minister Dolomengi said in accordance with the Ministry's mandate to develop and promote a people-friendly postal industry, the Voinjama Post will strive to provide postal services such as Letter posts, parcel posts, registered & expressed mail, Expedited Mail Services (EMS), Book posts, Small packets, philatelic (stamp sale), Institutional and Home mail delivery and sales of variety of post cards, among other services.

  1. Postal politics: Federal help for the USPS is overdue
Published: Sunday, August 05, 2012, 3:55 AM
Staten Island Advance Editorial By Staten Island Advance Editorial

It has been a vital part of life in America since even before the birth of the United States. Now the U.S. Postal Service is struggling to survive modern times.

Ben Franklin was named by the Continental Congress as the first Postmaster General in 1775. Under Article 1 of the U.S. Constitution, which was ratified in 1792, the post office became the nation’s first government agency.

But the USPS is on the way to bankruptcy, which could bring chaos to its traditional role in the quick and reliable delivery of the mail throughout America.

To prevent this, Congress should do the right thing and establish the sensible reforms needed to put mail delivery on a sound basis.

Only the Postal Service makes deliveries to every one of this nation’s 151 million residential, business and government addresses. In doing so, it carries nearly 40 percent of the world’s mail.

Yet the USPS, an independent agency since 1972, receives no tax money. It relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund it operations, including a total of 32,000 post offices and other sites across the country.

Unfortunately, its annual revenue of more than $65 billion has not been enough to stem the tide of red ink.

From 2007 to 2010, the USPS lost $20 billion as the volume of mail it handled dropped 20 percent, mostly due to the growth in e-mail, bill paying via computer and competition from private carriers such as FedEx and UPS.

The Postal Service is now losing $25 million a day.
Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe has urged Congress to let him eliminate Saturday delivery, slow down first-class mail and raise the cost of a stamp by 5 cents.

But Republicans and Democrats have been unable in an election year to agree on what to do to help.

A few days ago, the USPS defaulted on a $5.5-billion payment mandated by Congress to pre-pay for the health care of future retirees. No other government agencies or private companies do this.

The ill-advised requirement dates from legislation passed in 2006 during the Bush administration to keep postal expenses from being charged to the federal deficit.

It’s clear the Postal Service has too many workers, too many post offices and too many processing centers.

But the politics of reform are tricky.

This became a local sore point when the USPS decided in February to move all Staten Island mail-sorting from the Manor Road Post Office to Brooklyn.

Even though labor costs represent 80 percent of Postal Service expenses, Congress is highly reluctant to tamper with the second largest employer in the nation. It has over half a million workers.

So the agency that delivered 171 million pieces of mail in America last year has been left in the lurch.

Nothing significant in the way of long-term reform is expected to be OK’d by the current Congress.

This isn’t what the Founding Fathers had in mind.

August 4, 2012
  1. New Russia post office in limbo

ALVIN REINER Press-Republican

NEW RUSSIA — The future of the New Russia post office is still in limbo.

The U.S. Postal Service had indicated that it might be closed last year, news that brought impassioned pleas to keep it open from residents at a meeting held in the Elizabethtown Town Hall with Dan Cronin, manager of post office operations for the area.

To resounding applause at that November meeting, Alden Harris, landlord of the building that houses the Post Office, volunteered to cut the annual rent to $1 and to cover the utility costs out of his own pocket.

The support at the meeting and a letter-writing campaign to postal and elected officials saw the facility spared, at least temporarily.

The dark financial picture of the Postal Service has driven the decision to close some post offices. There has been a decline in business in recent years, since stamps can be ordered online and email and texting have replaced much interchange that once was done by mail.

"People used to be good for a lot of mail — paying their bills and sending birthday cards,” said Margaret McCoy, who retired as postmaster in New Russia this week.

"Now, they do a lot of this online."

But a rural post office is more than a place to mail packages and pick up letters, she emphasized.

"People come here to converse, as well as get their mail,” she said. "It’s where people meet for the first time.

"If you don’t have this place (in the hamlet), there is no other public building, and you don’t get a chance to meet and find out about your neighbors or other local news."

  1. Postal Service Misses $5B Payment, Could Bankruptcy Be Next?
Written by Andrew Forgotch
Last updated on August 03, 2012 @ 6:54PM
Created on August 03, 2012 @ 6:19PM
For months 5 News has been keeping on top of the money problems facing the United States Post Office.

Earlier this week they missed a $5.5 billion tab to prepay health care benefits for retirees.

Some experts believe it could be the first step toward filing for bankruptcy.

It's too early to say if that missed payment means the end of the post office, but it's not a good sign for a group that's already announced plans here in the Mountain State to cut hours at some offices to only two hours a day.

"I believe it is a scary though," Patricia Loy-Colbank, owner of Patty's Arts Studio said. "I love mail."

It's fitting that Loy-Colebank owns a business right across from the post office in Star City.

"I think it's a nice traditional way to relay information," Loy-Colbank said of sending letters.

What's not fitting, for the sister of a letter carrier, is the post office is in serious financial bind.

They've reported several quarters of multi-billion dollar losses.

Earlier this week came word they missed a $5.5 billion payment due to the federal government.

Post offices will continue to stay open, but the question is for how long?

They've already announced plans to cut hours, including in some places in the Mountain State where some offices would only stay open for two hours a day.

"There would probably be a line clear to the road," Nancy Dias said in reference to what the line would like at the post office in downtown Morgantown if it went to two hours a day.

If the cuts indeed do go through, businesses figure to be hit the hardest.

"Quite frankly many of us who have a concern about that are hopeful that they will be able to turn things around," Morgantown City Manager Terrence Moore said.

Postal workers have pushed legislators to ease funding mandates, but congress remains sitting a bill that could help. That isn't welcome news at Patty's Art Studio.

"I need them to be open," Loy-Colbank said. "I need them open when I need them to be open. I know they can't be open 24 hours a day, but I need more than two hours a day."

There isn't any expected to be any catastrophe in mail service just yet. If the cuts go through West Virginia figures to be one of the states that should lost the most.

U.S. NEWS
Updated August 9, 2012, 5:43 p.m. ET

  1. Postal Service Posts Big Loss as Cash Runs Low

By ERIC MORATH

The U.S. Postal Service on Thursday reported a $5.2 billion quarterly loss and said it was nearly out of cash and likely to exhaust its government credit line in coming months.

The U.S. Postal Service on Thursday reported a $5.2 billion loss for its fiscal third quarter, an indication that the agency's financial woes are deepening. Eric Morath has details on The News Hub. Photo: Getty Images.
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The agency said the loss was its widest since it began releasing quarterly financials in 2007. But Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe said the Postal Service would do whatever it takes to maintain its operations, even if that means defaulting on a second multibillion-dollar retiree obligation in as many months.

"We will do everything we need to do to make sure the mail is delivered," he said. "Congress needs to act responsibly and move on this legislation." Losses and defaults will continue, despite cost-cutting efforts, unless Congress passes a postal-overhaul bill, Mr. Donahoe said.

The Postal Service's loss for its third quarter ended June 30 compared with a $3.1 billion loss for the like period a year earlier. Charges taken in connection to a mandate to prefund retiree health care drove the loss in the latest quarter, but declining first-class and advertising mail volume were a drag on revenue.

Mr. Donahoe said the Postal Service would pay its employees and critical vendors but might skip some payments to others.

He said current retirees aren't at risk of losing insurance coverage. While the Postal Service may tap all its credit from the U.S. Treasury by October, finances should improve later in the year with election mail and holiday deliveries propping up revenue, the agency said.

The Postal Service defaulted for the first time in its history on Aug. 1, failing to pay $5.5 billion for future retiree health benefits. A similar $5.6 billion payment is due at the end of next month. The agency said it wouldn't make that either, unless Congress acts.

The Senate passed postal-overhaul legislation earlier this year, but the House hasn't take up the bill or a plan drafted by Republicans.

"I'm not sure how much more evidence leaders in the House of Representatives need before they realize that the Postal Service is in dire straits," said Sen. Tom Carper (D., Del.), one of the Senate bill's authors.

A spokesman for the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee said no date has been set to take up the legislation.

The Postal Service has criticized the Senate plan for not going far enough. For example, the bill makes it difficult for the Postal Service to implement its plan to cut delivery to five days a week to reduce costs.

Rep. Dennis Ross (R., Fla.), a co-author of the House bill, said Thursday's loss shows the Senate bill, which would eliminate the prefunding requirement and return pension overpayments, isn't enough. "These declines, without right-sizing the expense side of the postal equation, spell the end of the Postal Service," he said.

The House bill, which allows for more sweeping changes that would enable the post office to cut costs sooner, has met resistance from some lawmakers who are concerned it would lead to slower service and more post-office closings.

Excluding losses tied to retiree health care and workers' compensation, the Postal Service lost $1 billion in the latest quarter. That marks an improvement from a year earlier, when the operating loss totaled $1.3 billion.

By the end of this month, the Postal Service will have closed 48 mail-processing plants this year. It plans to shut 92 more next year.

In a positive sign, the agency said it is seeing growing sales from its parcel business. Led by "If It Fits, It Ships" service, the shipping revenue was up 9.9% for the quarter. That wasn't nearly enough to make up for a 3.1% decline in first-class mail, still the main revenue driver.

Write to Eric Morath at eric.morath@dowjones.com

A version of this article appeared August 10, 2012, on page A2 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Postal Service Posts Big Loss as Cash Runs Low.


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