Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Post office wants to cut a delivery day
The postmaster general told Congress that the post office could be forced to cut a delivery day because of massive deficits. The post office is asking lawmakers to lift the requirement that they deliver mail six days a week. They have looked at skipping a day when the mail flow would be light, such as Tuesday. The post office was $2.8 billion in the red last year and could experience a net loss of $6 billion or more this fiscal year. "It is possible that the cost of six-day delivery may simply prove to be unaffordable...I reluctantly request that Congress remove the annual appropriation bill rider, first added in 1983, that requires the Postal Service to deliver mail six days each week," said Potter, the postmaster general. A study made by the Postal Service study estimates that they could save $3.5 billion by cutting a day. Potter also has asked Congress to ease the requirement that it makes advance payments into a fund for future health benefits for retirees. I would not mind if the post office went from a six-day to five-day delivery if it was on a day when mail flow is light. Do you think Congress should let them cut a delivery day?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
I'm afraid that if we cut a delivery day, people will become more dependent on email and electronic means of communication. This might be an impetus for the halt of traditional means of communication, like mail and newspapers and such. I hope that we don't cut a day so that we can slow down our transfer from old ways of communication to the fast, new ones.
Why is it a bad thing to switch over to more easy and effective means of communication? First of all, I don't think that the cut of one day for delivery would make that much of a difference at all. Personally I think it would positively affect our society because of the amounts of paper that could be saved, not to mention the pollution that results from all the many hundreds of mail trucks that go around on that day!
Post a Comment