US Postal Service wants to raise first class postage a full nickel.
Ten percent is well beyond inflation.
Mired in red ink, the United States Postal Service is warning it will lose as much as $18.2 billion a year by 2015 unless Congress grants it leeway to eliminate Saturday delivery, slow first-class mail by one day and raise the price of a postage stamp by as much as 5 cents.And the interesting thing is that the rate increase and service increase will affect folks least able to afford it.
In a letter to Congress, Patrick Donahoe, the postmaster general, described an updated five-year cost-cutting plan put together in coordination with a Wall Street adviser, Evercore Partners. It reiterates many of the mail agency’s proposals to switch to a five-day delivery schedule, raise stamp prices and close about 252 mail-processing centers and 3,700 local post offices.
And again, note: the 5-cent increase comes on top of the service cuts. This certainly suggests the US Postal Service is in bigger trouble than the average American is led to believe. And, of course, this is a 5-year plan, so perhaps it's only a penny increase/year over five years.
I suppose if we cut the payroll tax cut a bit more, "we" can offset the cost of postage with the tax cut.
5/45 --> 11% and remember, the postage was already raised one cent just last month. And I forget. Is first class one ounce letter stamp now 45 cents?
I think the postal service should go to a monday, wednesday, friday delivery. People will and can adjust.
ReplyDeleteI agree.
DeleteBut this is now a political issue ("the Ed Schultz issue") and this can will be kicked down the road: no new hiring, increased price of stamps, an occasional post office closing in fly-over country where votes are not important. I don't anticipate much visible change for years.
the cost of first class postage just increased by 1 cent in the month of Jan 2012..If you purchase forever stamps these maybe the best inflation hedge a person can get..
ReplyDeleteAlso it tells me that the US Postal service KNOW that gas will be $ 5.00
It's hard to believe that it will soon cost 50 cents to send a note to someone. Hallmark may end up being one of the bigger losers. No, I guess most folks buy Hallmark cards and hand them to the addressee.
Delete