http://abclocal.go.com/wtvd/story?section=news/national_world&id=9532969I know it will take more than a few changes for them to run a profit, but I don't get why the government won't let them stop Saturday delivery. The postal service is pretty much pointless because of the phone and internet. Plus you can always use FedEx and UPS to ship parcel too. That's what NC State does with season tickets.
5/9/2014 10:48:18 PM
5/9/2014 11:02:36 PM
5/9/2014 11:19:17 PM
Those motherless fucks utterly destroyed an insured package I sent home to myself from overseas, then refused to pay the claim unless I could produce a receipt to prove its value. I couldn't; it was from a street vendor in Doha.That was 2010; I haven't sent anything USPS except stamped envelopes ever since, and can't wait for that whole damned organization to bite the dust. Fuck them.
5/9/2014 11:46:43 PM
5/9/2014 11:56:51 PM
They need to eliminate the bureaucracy on how the postal service operates, give the managers free reign. This applies to all government entities too, IMO. Their business model shouldn't be dictated by law.
5/10/2014 12:50:28 AM
Why is everyone assuming the postal service is supposed to make a profit?
5/10/2014 1:03:52 AM
^^ why is that?(I just wanna see you write it)
5/10/2014 1:30:43 AM
ha i know what you're thinking... but regulations to safeguard against wrongdoing, and having congress stick their fingers through all levels of management are different things.I used to work for the state, and the same thing happened... Maybe the postal service doesn't operate this way at all, but at the state level, there literally has to be a legislative vote to approve specific salary adjustments to low-level employees. A department could be cutting people left and right, while a pot of cash is sitting there, because legislative rules prohibit it from being reallocated. If the government is going to have organizations to run its functions, it must be able to trust the people managing them. There of course will be abuses, as with all organizations, but that's why you have strict penalties for wrong doing.This is the subject of a book (that i haven't read-- i just saw the interview with the author) out now called "why government Fails So Often and how it can do better." Government doesn't not-work any more than businesses, the differences are it impacts many peoples' lives, and congress is too ineffective to fix things quickly. There needs to be less bureaucracy.
5/10/2014 2:07:41 AM
5/10/2014 11:19:22 AM
I'm going to bite on this and ask... when do you think the USPS makes the most money? They presumedbly have the same overhead costs and similar staffing levels year round (being a fed employee esp. a usps fed employee ensures this) and during the last two months of the year they probably make a ton more revenue compared to fixed costs.Also, is there some assumption by OP that all profitable companies have profitable first quarters?
5/10/2014 6:48:23 PM
people saying that ups and fedex make a profit should note they heavily leverage the usps because they deliver to unprofitable places like montana because they are required to.
5/10/2014 9:31:28 PM
Shit should be on every other day delivery for residential addresses mon-sat, daily delivery m-f available to businesses that apply for it, or else they get every other business day. grant daily based on volume, as these are revenue generators for the postal service , or for demonstrated business need.Daily pickup from the blue postal boxes as it currently is.You'll get bills/letters no more than one day later. I really don't see any cases where this will cause any harm to the parties involved.Parcel delivery, you could probably make a case for daily delivery, as they will need this to compete with ups and FedEx.(Frankly, I'd be for twice weekly residential delivery)
5/10/2014 10:28:17 PM
Some quick googling, there's about 300,000 postal carriers, they make an average wage of 50,000/year....I'd estimate that you could cut that number to 200,000 carriers by doing residential every other day, and only certain businesses daily. That might be conservative, to be honest, but you might need some more sorting, and trucks might fill faster, so halving the amount would be foolish. Either way...You'd save 5 billion annually in wages alone. Ignoring benefits and payroll taxes...(taxes alone would be over 500 million)The postal service drives 1.2 billion miles a year, say they can reduce that by 1/4 (you'd lose some efficiencies by having carriers out every day), and we figure the cost per mile in fuel and vehicle wear is $0.50 (a reasonable estimate)... You'd save another 150 million annually.[Edited on May 10, 2014 at 10:42 PM. Reason : .]
5/10/2014 10:41:22 PM
5/11/2014 1:04:49 AM
in a month, i get maybe two items in the mail that don't go directly in the trash
5/11/2014 8:28:33 AM
What would be the economical effect of cutting 100,000 people being paid 50k out of the work force?
5/11/2014 9:34:00 AM
http://www.glassdoor.com/Salary/US-Postal-Service-Salaries-E3032.htmWow never knew that mailmen got paid that much.. I kinda figured it was like most government jobs where you are in it for the benefits...
5/11/2014 9:55:17 AM
If UPS and FedEx had to deal with all the congressional interference that the USPS does, they'd lose $2B a year too. It would not be difficult to fix the postal service, if Congress would let them (ie reduce the # of delivery days, pricing flexibility, and drop service to unprofitable areas).
5/11/2014 10:42:56 AM
5/11/2014 12:24:48 PM
There are not enough PO boxes to serve all the people on a delivery route. So your idea is to buy more land and build more post offices, and then on top of that, instead of a few people going to all the houses in a ZIP code, have everyone walk/drive to the post office to get their mail? That seems like it'd be wasteful and would piss a lot of people off.[Edited on May 11, 2014 at 3:46 PM. Reason : .]
5/11/2014 3:45:08 PM
5/11/2014 5:15:26 PM
Let's be serious guys. You can mail a letter any where in the US to anywhere else in the US for 50 cents. It's not really a profitable business model.
5/11/2014 5:54:11 PM
^^^I agree that would be a problem. I was just kind of tossing ideas out there. Like I said, they need to up the rates for sending stuff to the middle of no where, or maybe charge the people for keeping their optional mail box.
5/11/2014 5:58:15 PM
5/11/2014 6:52:12 PM
^We the people have a vote, but for some reason we sure don't seem to get what we want. I don't know of anyone who was happy with the government shut down circus earlier this year. If the government and USPO want to up rates, or make some major changes then there is nothing that can be done about it. So what if the voters in certain areas aren't happy, just make the changes like with everything else in the world.
5/11/2014 7:02:41 PM
5/11/2014 8:48:12 PM
5/11/2014 9:57:48 PM
^That is something that I have thought about too. I think I heard that the USPS isn't hiring anymore though, or at least very little. They are just going to let the attrition happen and not replace anyone who retires, or quits.
5/12/2014 10:30:24 PM
There are neighborhoods in Charlotte that still do door delivery. Wonder how much they'd save by giving these folks street mailboxes and driving that shit.
5/13/2014 11:09:38 AM
5/13/2014 1:25:56 PM
congress forced them to fund a giant retiree healthcare war chest (a few hundred billion dollars) and resists their efforts to cut service to underutilized branches. it seems like you are agreeing with me that they are not supposed to be profitable. the postal service is called out specifically in the Constitution to "establish post offices and post roads." Nothing about that implies they should be a profit-driven institution, and the USPS was a government-funded (i.e. taxpayer funded) organization until the Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 which mandates that it be revenue-neutral and not profitable (the reorganization act was done to make it operate more like a private business, to limit unions and strikes).[Edited on May 13, 2014 at 1:43 PM. Reason : .]
5/13/2014 1:39:31 PM
http://about.usps.com/who-we-are/financials/annual-reports/fy2010/ar2010_4_002.htm
5/13/2014 1:45:23 PM
5/13/2014 2:19:37 PM
PRA 1970 forces them to be revenue neutral and not profitable
5/13/2014 2:20:46 PM