The big news today is the Postal Service. According to leftists, President Donald Trump is interfering with mail-in ballots by closing Post Office buildings and gathering up postal boxes. As usual, the truth is being manipulated to suit an agenda. The Postal Service has had problems for decades, and billions of dollars have been funneled into it to keep it solvent. There is no question that Congress should act to solve the problems of the Postal Service.
A new Postmaster General was hired, and he
has been making some changes. According to leftists, he is acting to sabotage
the 2020 election. David Ditch lists ten myths being spread by leftists and
explains why they are not true. Here are the first three myths and the final myth with Ditch’s explanations.
Myth No. 1: The Postal Service
is removing sorting machines to sabotage delivery.
Reality: The volume of mail has plunged in
recent decades…. [People are paying bills electronically. They send emails
instead of letters, thank you cards, birthday cards, etc.] The Postal Service has
been consolidating operations for years to reduce costs, a practice that
predates President Donald Trump.
Myth No. 2: The Postal Service is
removing collection boxes to block mail-in ballots.
Reality: The Postal Service has more than
141,000 blue collection boxes spread across the country. Those boxes are moved
regularly from low-demand to high-demand areas to maximize efficiency…. [These
movement will cease until after the 2020 election as a result of the myths.]
Myth No. 3: The Postal Service is
locking collection boxes to prevent public access.
Reality: Locked caps are sometimes put on
collection boxes in areas where there is a rash of mail theft. Employees place
the caps after the final pickup of the day and remove them in the morning,
since collection box theft is overwhelmingly done at night. This practice also predates
the Trump administration….
Myth No. 10: The Postal Service
loses money only because of unfair funding requirements.
Reality: The Postal Service is weighed down
by exceedingly high employee compensation costs, which averaged more than
$97,000 per worker in 2019. Part of that includes a retiree health plan, which
has obligations similar to a pension.
Bipartisan legislation passed in 2006
required that the Postal Service prefund the retiree health plan like a pension
plan, with money deposited as an employee earns future benefits. That’s
intended to ensure that there’s money to provide for the health coverage when
employees retire.
Unfortunately, the Postal Service has
failed to uphold its funding obligations, leaving the plan $69 billion in the
hole as of last fall.
Furthermore, the Postal Service would have
lost more than $4 billion in 2019 alone even if it had not paid a penny into
the health plan.
Claims that the health benefit prefunding
is “unfair” ignore the fact that retiree health benefits are uncommon
(especially outside government) and ignore the fact that postal employees are
entitled to the benefits.
Ditch continued by explaining that Congress
can choose among several options to solve the postal problems. (1) Let it
continue to “accumulate massive liabilities [and create] an even bigger
financial crisis.” (2) Turn “the Postal Service into a standard government
agency” – something Democrats want. (3) Pass “reforms that would enable the
Postal Service to raise revenue and lower costs, stabilizing its shaky
finances.” (4) Have “a robust debate about the future of the Postal Service and
whether its current structure makes sense.”
Meanwhile, Ditch suggested that people “stop spreading unfounded rumors about the Postal Service.” Using myths about the Postal Services for political gains is dishonest and prevents real solutions.
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