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USPS Mail Delivery On Saturdays


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#1 walker13.1

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Posted 06 February 2013 - 07:44 AM

© John Gress / Reuters / REUTERS

United States Postal Service Letter Carrier Lakesha Dortch-Hardy loads her van with mail at the Lincoln Park carriers annex in Chicago, Nov. 29, 2012.


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It's been debated for months and months, but on Wednesday the United States Postal Service finally will announce it's not going to deliver first-class mail on Saturdays anymore.

The postal service's announcement, planned for about 10 a.m. EST, is expected to say that packages, mail-order medicine, and express mail will continue to be delivered on Saturday, but not letters, bills, cards, and catalogs. Post offices which are now open on Saturdays will continue to be open on Saturdays.

The move is meant to save the financially struggling agency about $2 billion annually as it wrestles with the rising popularity of email and social media eating away at its core business of delivering mail, and with the climbing costs of providing health benefits to its workers.

In January, the USPS' board of governors directed management to accelerate the restructuring of postal service operations in the face of declining revenues. It said that the USPS could no longer afford to wait for legislation to salvage its business.

The agency reported an annual loss of a record $15.9 billion for the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, triple the prior year's loss and capping a year in which it was forced to default on payments to a health benefit trust fund managed by the Treasury Department. The rising costs for future retiree health benefits accounted for $11.1 billion of the losses.

The USPS is an independent agency of the government. It does not get tax money to fund its day-to-day operations, but it is subject to congressional control, and congressional foot-dragging.

On Jan. 27, the USPS raised postage stamp prices by one cent to 46 cents to help raise revenues. “We are currently losing $25 million per day,” Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe warned in January.

The move is another milestone in the long-running political dance between Congress and Postal Service managers over how to finance the delivery of mail to 151 million addresses, nearly 40 percent of the world's "snail mail" volume. Though its Capitol Hill critics complain that Postal Service should be made to operate “more like a business,” Congress has created a set of rules that all but guarantee billion-dollar losses.

Those losses are almost entirely the result of the now-defaulted “pre-funding” requirement for retiree health insurance and other accounting charges.

The Postal Service faces other constraints. It's banned from setting up retail outlets, for example, that could generate profits to help subsidize delivery costs. Worse, it is barred by Congress from charging the full cost of providing the service it is required to deliver.

http://www.nbcnews.c...rdays-1B8262819
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#2 PlasticSoul

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Posted 06 February 2013 - 07:53 AM

That is nuts but really the longer it takes for bills to come in the mail for me the better. :lol:
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#3 iwao

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Posted 06 February 2013 - 08:01 AM

My mail carrier will be pissed that she has to drop off packages to me on Saturdays when everybody else on my court is getting nothing.
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#4 Coelocanth

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Posted 06 February 2013 - 08:07 AM

Nice! Upon reading the headline, I was sad, but I'll still be able to get toys on Saturdays! I guess no DVD Netflix though.
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#5 fkro6784

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Posted 06 February 2013 - 08:13 AM

That is nuts but really the longer it takes for bills to come in the mail for me the better. :lol:


That was my thinking exactly, haha. When I get a package I tear it open right away but the bills and junk mail tend to sit on the table for a few days before I can force myself to get to it. They can take their time with those.

But when they say packages they also mean small, first class packages, right? The first sentence threw me off a bit, where they say "not going to deliver first class mail on Saturdays anymore."
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#6 gilgar

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Posted 09 February 2013 - 10:27 PM

Should be fine as long as I can still get my packages. I was wondering about priority mail & media mail. I haven't seen them mentioned specifically. I'm guessing they'd be considered packages since they are typically boxes, but they can also be flats so who knows?
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