No Saturday Mail?

Chevy57

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USPS to propose 5-day mail schedule, major cuts

Snail mail might soon get even slower.

The U.S. Postal Service plans to propose Tuesday an adjusted mail service schedule, which will likely cut Saturday delivery. The agency will also suggest closing some branches and expanding its use of self-service kiosks in grocery stores and other popular retail spots, as part of its effort to work its way out of a mountain of debt.

USPS posted a $3.8 billion loss in its 2009 fiscal year, the latest in a multiyear string of whopping losses. Mail volume was down 12.7% for the year, a trend the agency expects to continue over the next decade as more consumers opt for online bill payments and message delivery.

The Post Office was $10 billion in debt as of Sept. 30 -- not far off from its $15 billion debt limit, which the agency expects to hit in its 2011 fiscal year.

The challenges hurting USPS's bottom line are reflective of a "macro change in society," Postmaster General Jack Potter said at a press conference Monday previewing the proposed changes. "All posts around the world are challenged, just as we are, by the diversion of hard copy to electronic medium."

The Post Office, an independent government agency, does not receive taxpayer dollars and is funded entirely by its own revenue. However, the Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 constrains the agency's operations. It prohibits USPS from closing small branches based soled on economic factors, and prevents the agency from expanding its services beyond postal delivery.

Post offices in some countries, including Italy and Japan, have boosted their sales by offering ancillary services, like banking. But unless Congress steps in, USPS cannot expand beyond the postal-mail realm.

USPS has already begun taking the axe to its budget. The agency made $6 billion in cuts last year, reducing its workforce by about 40,000 employees and chopping overtime hours, transportation costs and other expenses. Congress passed legislation allowing the organization to cut retiree health benefit payments by $4 billion.

Despite those measures, the agency still expects a net loss of $7.8 billion in fiscal 2010.

USPS employs about 600,000 workers, about half of whom will be eligible to retire in the next 10 years. Potter said the agency has historically overpaid into its pension fund, and would reap significant savings if it stopped prefunding its retiree health benefits.

The Post Office plans to announce the specifics of its proposed new business model on Tuesday. Its plans will then go before Congress for review. A significant postal price hike is also under consideration, although the price most consumers care about -- the rate for a first-class stamp -- is locked in at 44 cents for 2010.

"At the end of the day, I'm convinced that if we make the changes that are necessary, we can continue to provide universal service for America for decades to come," Potter said. "We can turn back from the red to the black, but there are some very significant changes that are going to have to be made."

USPS to propose 5-day mail schedule, major cuts - Yahoo! Finance
 
That's right....no Saturday mail here. And the mail service still stinks....the cost of 1 stamp is outrageous also....Newspapers and the Postal Service....slowly saying..."goodbye"....
 
They should keep Saturday delivery. Instead they should deliver half of their routes on MWF and the other half on TTHS. Cuts labor, fuel usage, mileage on vehicles and carbon emissions in half while delaying mail by one day at the most.
 
They should keep Saturday delivery. Instead they should deliver half of their routes on MWF and the other half on TTHS. Cuts labor, fuel usage, mileage on vehicles and carbon emissions in half while delaying mail by one day at the most.

It also cut jobs too.
 
Here, it's Monday to Friday. It makes sense to cut the Saturday delivery to save costs. Plus Monday to Friday are considered "Business Days" while the weekends aren't. So why should the mail carriers deliver on the weekends?

Just my two cents.
 
Indeed, from my experience, that most business are use on Monday and Friday, not expect to receive on Saturday. I don't feel that much different. Of course, it would cause the problem on habit for anyone who try send mail on Saturday for bills on due. heh

Of course, other sense that more bills are thry online, on phone or grocery store that offer to pay that way
 
hhmmm.... for saturday - they should deliver only to commercial places, not residential. I don't think anything will be changed for major cities and major metropolitan area.
 
Indeed, from my experience, that most business are use on Monday and Friday, not expect to receive on Saturday. I don't feel that much different. Of course, it would cause the problem on habit for anyone who try send mail on Saturday for bills on due. heh

Of course, other sense that more bills are thry online, on phone or grocery store that offer to pay that way

People still pay bills by mail??:shock:
 
hhmmm.... for saturday - they should deliver only to commercial places, not residential. I don't think anything will be changed for major cities and major metropolitan area.

if you ask me, I think it will waste even more gas to go from here to there when you can deliver all other mails while you are at it. And you don't know know if a person have a home business or not so how can you tell if their mail is strictly business and strictly personal?
 
Indeed, from my experience, that most business are use on Monday and Friday, not expect to receive on Saturday. I don't feel that much different. Of course, it would cause the problem on habit for anyone who try send mail on Saturday for bills on due. heh

Of course, other sense that more bills are thry online, on phone or grocery store that offer to pay that way

Post offices don't need to be closed but if they don't want to deliver mail on saturday, maybe people can pick it up themselves... but then again, they may not want the long line.
 
hhmmm.... for saturday - they should deliver only to commercial places, not residential. I don't think anything will be changed for major cities and major metropolitan area.

My home in NM has no mail delivery.....Everbody has to go to the PO
 
I was serious about every other day for delivery......Not like getting your bill or Magazine on Wednesday instead of Tuesday is going to make a big difference

You would also eliminate half the vehicles needed to do the job
 
Longer it takes for me to get my bills the better! :D

In all honesty like Banjo said. Saturday day is not considered a business day and also email is mainly used for general mail. Even online billing.
 
lol let's see....

old farts, tech-illiterate people, people with no CC, poor people, and paranoid people

Or people who became paranoid because they lost trust in online billing

We still mail our bills, no reasons though. it's just easy to know it is being paid.
 
if you ask me, I think it will waste even more gas to go from here to there when you can deliver all other mails while you are at it. And you don't know know if a person have a home business or not so how can you tell if their mail is strictly business and strictly personal?

well notice that I said commercial place. home business is not a commercial place. it's residential. Saturday mails would go to stores, malls, etc. The town has designated zones.
 
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