
"The postal service which relies on stamps and service fees rather than tax dollars to deliver mail six days a week to every address in the country would run out of cash for employees and vendors by February next year. The agency has operated with a financial shortfall almost every fiscal year since 2007, as people and businesses have moved toward paperless billing and digital communication, forgoing first-class mail."
"Steiner, who is scheduled to testify before Congress this month, has called for changes to a federal law that caps the agency's borrowing at $15bn. The former CEO of the nation's largest waste-management company and a former member of the FedEx board of directors who took over the postal service last July has also said that USPS needs to boost revenue by expanding a nationwide last-mile delivery network."
"I do not believe that the postal service should be privatized or that it should become an appropriated part of the federal government. I believe in the current structure of the postal service as a self-financing, independent entity of the executive branch."
The US Postal Service faces a critical financial crisis and will deplete its cash reserves by February 2026 without congressional action to increase its borrowing limit. The agency has operated at a deficit nearly every year since 2007 due to declining first-class mail volume as customers shift to digital communication and paperless billing. USPS currently borrows from the US Treasury to cover operational shortfalls. Postmaster General David Steiner, who previously led a major waste-management company and served on FedEx's board, proposes expanding last-mile delivery services to boost revenue. He opposes privatization or restructuring USPS as a federal appropriation, advocating instead for maintaining its current structure as a self-financing independent entity.
#usps-financial-crisis #borrowing-cap-legislation #last-mile-delivery-expansion #postal-service-reform #mail-volume-decline
Read at www.theguardian.com
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