For quite a while now, the Postal Service has been complaining that their funding needs to be increased if they are to maintain their traditional delivery schedules and other services. Congress has rebuffed those efforts thus far, but now the USPS has hatched another approach to the problem. They are launching a series of Regional Processing Centers which would serve as "mega-centers" where larger volumes of mail - particularly bulk mail - would be processed more rapidly and efficiently. But the processing centers would be operated almost entirely in densely populated urban centers. So what becomes of the mail flowing through more rural and suburban areas? It would sit overnight at regional post offices awaiting processing the following day. In other words, those mail deliveries would be intentionally slowed down while bulk mail traveling to cities would be handled at the normal speed and volume. Needless to say, not everyone is happy with this plan.
From Government Executive:
The U.S. Postal Service is moving forward with a plan to slow down delivery for a relatively small portion of mail, telling its regulator the changes would save nearly $4 billion annually and better reflect the evolving nature of mail usage.USPS has requested an advisory opinion from the Postal Regulatory Commission on its Regional Transportation Optimization plan, which requires mail to sit overnight at post offices instead of being collected each evening for transportation to a processing center. The mailing agency has been rolling out the changes on a limited basis and now, despite mixed results and significant pushback, it is looking to implement the plan on a national level.Only some facilities will be impacted by the reforms, namely those more than 50 miles from the Postal Service’s new Regional Processing and Distribution Centers. USPS plans to stand up about 60 of those mega-centers, most of which will be located in urban areas. That has led to criticism that postal management’s mail slowdown will disproportionately impact rural communities.
The current Postmaster General claims that the current system, where mail is picked up twice per day at each post office is based on "a bygone era of significant single-piece letter mail volumes.” That may be the case, but these changes would still shoot a significant hole in the traditional USPS delivery system. Pilot programs have already launched in several areas and the suburbs of Richmond, Virginia, and Atlanta both reported significant spikes in delivery times.
Concerns are already being raised over the timely delivery of ballots for the upcoming election. The Postal Service is assuring Congress that extra drivers and resources will be made available starting in the third week of October handling ballots specifically. That seems like an adequate short-term fix, but what happens after the election is over? They will already be dealing with the need to track which balloting locations may change at the last moment due to ongoing storms and other disruptions.
It's not that I'm unsympathetic to the challenges facing the USPS. They are mandated by Congress to perform this service but the taxpayers are not supposed to have to fund the service. Also, the nature of mail delivery has changed significantly since that arrangement was originally put in place. Back then, the majority of mail was personal correspondence and routine package delivery. Now bulk mail for advertising, particularly election-related flyers eats up a great deal of the volume they handle. Much of it is junk mail that most people simply discard anyway. Few would care or even notice if the latest flyer from the next aspiring member of the village council failed to show up on schedule.
Just thinking outside the box here for a moment, perhaps what the USPS really needs is a new categorization model for the mail. Packages, bill payments, and personal correspondence (for the few people left who write letters instead of emails) could be put in priority status and charged the previous existing rates. Let the bulk-mail abusers of the system pay more and take up the slack. How such mail would be correctly classified at its point of origin would need to be worked out, but who knows? It might even cut down on the bulky junk mail we're all flooded with every October.
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