Sep 08 2014 – WASHINGTON – Chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Tom Carper (D-Del.) and Ranking Member Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) sent a letter to Senate Appropriations Committee late Friday to caution the Members about implementing a moratorium on postal facility closures and urge support for the bipartisan, comprehensive the Postal Reform Act of 2014, which was passed out of committee earlier this year.
“We understand that a number of senators have asked that you include language in appropriations legislation this fall that would prevent the U. S. Postal Service from closing or consolidating any mail processing facilities in 2015. We strongly disagree with that request and urge you to reject it. Instead of actually fixing the problem and providing a roadmap to a strong and vital Postal Service in the 21st Century, that approach will further undermine customer confidence and ensure that the Postal Service continues to twist in the wind, facing an uncertain future that could ultimately hasten its demise.”
“This is not the time for more kicking the can down the road. This is not the time for more wing and a prayer. Instead, we urge you to work with us to pass the thoughtful and comprehensive reforms that are embodied in S. 1486. They will not only preserve mail delivery standards and delay or prevent plant closures, they will serve to modernize the Postal Service and ensure that it has the tools and resources to thrive in the Digital Age of this 21st Century.”
In the letter, Senators Carper and Coburn urge their colleagues to support the bipartisan Postal Reform Act in order to ensure a better future for the United States Postal Service (USPS), which has been struggling financially for years and will continue to do so without comprehensive reform from Congress. The Postal Reform Act is a balanced solution to the Postal Service’s financial crisis that would keep postal operations and service standards, protect millions of mailing industry jobs, and enable USPS to serve the American public for years to come.
Read more about the bipartisan Postal Reform Act of 2014 here.
The full text of the letter is below:
September 5, 2014
The Honorable Barbara Mikulski The Honorable Richard Shelby
Chairman Vice Chairman
Committee on Appropriations Committee on Appropriations
S-128 Capitol S-146A Capitol
Washington, DC 20510 Washington, DC 20510
The Honorable Tom Udall The Honorable Mike Johanns
Chairman Vice Chairman
Subcommittee on Financial Services Subcommittee on Financial Services
and General Government and General Government
110 Hart Senate Office Building 404 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510 Washington, DC 20510
Dear Colleagues:
We understand that a number of senators have asked that you include language in appropriations legislation this fall that would prevent the U. S. Postal Service from closing or consolidating any mail processing facilities in 2015. We strongly disagree with that request and urge you to reject it. Instead of actually fixing the problem and providing a roadmap to a strong and vital Postal Service in the 21st Century, that approach will further undermine customer confidence and ensure that the Postal Service continues to twist in the wind, facing an uncertain future that could ultimately hasten its demise.
Earlier this year, a clear majority of our committee voted to report legislation to the full Senate that will actually fix this problem. That bill, S. 1486, the Postal Reform Act, will enable the Postal Service to return to profitability; repay the $15 billion it owes to the U.S. Treasury; largely eliminate its $45 billion liability for retiree health care; and replace its aging fleet of 190,000 vehicles with energy-efficient vehicles equipped with the latest technology and sized to handle the continuing growth in packages and parcels. Our bill also makes it possible to replace antiquated mail processing equipment in hundreds of centers across America, while introducing new technology that will enhance the service in tens of thousands of post offices and for millions of postal customers throughout our nation. Our committee’s bill will make permanent the temporary rate increase approved by the Postal Regulatory Commission and implemented earlier this year, making it the Postal Service’s new revenue baseline. If we truly want to also enable the Postal Service to provide and expand innovative new services nationwide and create substantial new revenues from a unique distribution network that’s 200 years old, there’s a way to do it. Join us in enacting S. 1486 this year.
For the past half-dozen years or more the Postal Service has largely sought to cut its way back to profitability, seeking to right-size the enterprise as the Internet has dramatically changed the way we communicate with one another, pay our bills and shop. Headcount has been reduced through attrition from 788,000 to 491,000 since 2000. The number of mail processing centers is down from nearly 675 in 2006 to 320 today. And, the hours of thousands of rural post offices have been trimmed to four or six hours a day. It’s time to help the Postal Service move beyond a culture of cutting and begin to embrace a culture of innovation and growth. We can help them do that and give them the tools they needs – not just to survive – but to prosper in the years to come.
We’re not going to get there by adopting the approach suggested in the letter that half of our colleagues sent to you. This is not the time for more kicking the can down the road. This is not the time for more wing and a prayer. Instead, we urge you to work with us to pass the thoughtful and comprehensive reforms that are embodied in S. 1486. They will not only preserve mail delivery standards and delay or prevent plant closures, they will serve to modernize the Postal Service and ensure that it has the tools and resources to thrive in the Digital Age of this 21st Century.
Thank you very much for your thoughtful consideration of the heartfelt views presented in this letter. We earnestly look forward to working with each of you to restore the confidence of the American people in our U.S. Postal Service and to protect the 8 million American jobs that depend on a strong and vibrant Postal Service.
With best personal regards, we are
Sincerely yours,
Thomas R. Carper
Chairman
Tom A. Coburn, M.D.
Ranking Member
nothing is going to change yet we continue to talk about the same thing over and over and over…..some congressman supports this thing….. some congressman doesn’t…..”you need to contact them now” either for or against…. bla bla bla bla
Carper and Coburn talk the same BS and bring nothing new to the table and that’s Y nothing gets done.Get rid of both and replace them with Senators with some insight on what the real problem in the PO which is our leader Donhoe!
Carper was once ballyhooed as a friend of letter carriers but didn’t take long to show his real colors and team up with that venomous crackpot Tom Coburn. The last thing a Republican cares about is the “American people” unless that person is super rich and funding his or her campaign. Carper is a closet Republican passing himself off as non-partisan. I’m all for cooperation, God knows we need it, but the darling public whom these reptiles seem to be so concerned about must never be a bargaining tool, nor should their ability to work and achieve a decent standard of living be compromised because some greedy bastard GOP legislator and his owners in the big businesses, banks and Wall Street want everything for themselves.
I can’t understand why hard working people barely scraping out a meager living allow themselves to be manipulated by FOX News and all the GOP shills into surrendering their best chances to ever have a dime to their name, decent insurance or a retirement. But thanks to the radical Christian right, who are suckers because the GOP claims to be pious and pro-life, when in reality they’re the most successful whores in history and couldn’t give a shit about abortion, and idiots who only understand hate, racism and guns, the Republicans stay alive. Well, give it ten or twenty years when Latinos are the majority and hate the GOP, and that party of the rich and hateful may just go belly up. Hope the Postal Service survives, and it could get a good start by firing Donahoe.
Senator, This proposed legislation is totally unnecessary! In 2006 you co sponsored the Postal Destruction And Dismantiling Act The more you do, the faster the Postal Service sinks. Just eliminate the prefunding! Now I know that is just to simple for congress to do. Our great leaders will do every thing in their power to screw up the Postal Service as much as possible! Just thank the leaders in Washington,Deceitful.
That’s RIGHT!!!!
Senator Carper, Please change your party to the Republican Party. Your actions only further the goals of the Republicans to dismantle and privitize the US Postal Service. You can wish for s. 1486 to be acted on and even passed by the Senate, but without Congress passing legislation there will be no compromise bill. The Republican Congress is getting what they want through inaction, much the same way the Senate gets what it wants by not acting on ObamaCare.(Which last count has Congress repealing it 15 times) The inactions of Senators and the Congress do not serve America, they shouldn’t get paid to do nothing.