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Show Me the Mail!

By Ezday On April 2, 2009 Under Business & Economy
mail carriers

It’s no longer show me the money, but show me the mail. Come rain, sleet, or snow, the mail must go! Or does that motto not work any more? The Postal Service has withstood challenges from the telegraph and telephone. It has adapted to stagecoaches, railroads, airplanes and other innovations that quickened the pace of American life; however, the economic crunch and digital mail may be forcing the postal service to change its operations. 

The temperature is 12 degrees below zero. Snow crunches under Shawn Carter’s boots. Yet the 13-year veteran mail carrier trudges on, as he does every day, delivering various forms of paper to 400 homes and businesses.

“My bag doesn’t feel any lighter,” says Carter, 35, warmed by five layers of clothing. “But I know things are changing.”

These days, the check isn’t in the mail. It’s increasingly on the Internet — and that’s bad news for the U.S. Postal Service. Electronic communication and a withering economy have pushed the Postal Service into its worst financial crisis since Benjamin Franklin founded the institution in 1775.

The Postal Service has lost $7.9 billion in the past two years. It has borrowed money to pay its bills. Mail volume fell 4.5% last year and the Postal Service expects a bigger drop this year. Last week, the agency asked Congress for permission to consider reducing delivery from six days a week to five. Say what? Can we live without mail six days out of the week? But, that is one day without a BILL!  :-)

Most Americans realize the Postal Service they’ve known for generations has to change. A new USA TODAY/Gallup Poll indicates that most support cutting back mail services — closing post offices, trimming deliveries from six days a week to five — rather than raising stamp prices or using taxpayers’ money for a bailout. “We have to make adjustments quickly to keep the ship afloat,” Postmaster General John Potter says. “We have to weather the storm of the bad economy first and figure out how traditional mail fits into an electronic world.”

The Postal Service’s biggest challenge: the cost of providing health care to current and future retirees. Its $53 billion obligation is greater than those of the Big Three automakers. The service owes its retiree health fund $7.4 billion this year. Ah, now we’re back to the economic issue and that’s surely not getting any better.  :-(



By: Ernie Fitzpatrick

About the Author:

As a spiritual-futurist, I interpret current events in light of possible macro-universal forces at play leading up to 2012, but not limited to it.