Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Opinion

Peter Roff

USPS Goes Postal on Obama After Post Office Crack

August 18, 2009 03:31 PM ET | Peter Roff | Permanent Link | Print

By Peter Roff, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

President Barack Obama's not-so-subtle dig at the U.S. Postal Service—"UPS and FedEx are doing just fine. ... It's the Post Office that's always having problems"—has sent his cheerful relations with America's postal unions to the dead letter office. The remark, a reminder of how Obama tends to stumble when he gets off script, was made during an August 11 town hall on healthcare in Portsmouth, N.H., as the president tried in vain to defend the inclusion of a "public option" alternative in his reform package.

Ted Keating, the president of the powerful and politically well-connected National Association of Postal Supervisors, was one of those who took offense, taking the president to task in an August 14 letter for using the post office as a "scapegoat" and for failing to account for the overtime, management, and work-hour reductions the USPS has made over the last year.

The paper went on to note that Obama's comparison of the private companies with the post office did not take into account the lack of a level playing field between the entities. "The Postal Service has to contend with unions, lawmakers and the Postal Regulatory Commission and as a result, can't raise prices or close facilities on a whim the way its private-sector counterparts can when mail volume plunges," the paper said—which, while a robust defense of the post office, is not exactly helpful in the context of the president's vision for healthcare reform.

It probably comes as a surprise to UPS to learn it does not, in fact, have to deal with unions. Or that the system is so heavily weighted in favor of private companies when the post office does not have to pay taxes on its income or on its planes, trucks, vans and postal buildings, unlike UPS, FedEx, and the rest of the private delivery companies. It also overlooks the fact that the post office sets a mandatory minimum price that a private shipper can charge for parcel and express mail services that, by law, is higher than what the post office charges.

Obama's use of the postal service as an example of a failing government enterprise was "a kick in the chest," Keating said in his letter, a portion of which was reprinted in the Federal Times. "Employees of the Postal Service are largely represented by unions and management associations, all of whom strongly supported your candidacy last year. For our support we do not expect any special consideration. However, we would like to be treated fairly and not have our current situation misrepresented, especially by the Commander-in-Chief," Keating continued.

Indeed.

Tags: Postal Service | Barack Obama

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Reader Comments

Postal Disservice

I go to my local Post Office about twice a year, if that... I deeply resent it every time. Why?

I got really tired of molasses-slow sumo wrestlers with little to offer but unpleasant attitude, faulty machines and overall bad customer experience on their overpriced offerings. Why are the lines always long, the employees always slow and technologically-inept, the supervisors always idle, self-serving and unhelpful?

For years now, FedEx got my vote for parcels, email for my letters, and the internet for my bill payments. For stamps, if ever needed any, I go to Walgreens. All the "service" I get daily from the USPS is the pile of junk mail that kills the trees we all so desperately need instead of this dated and unfunny joke, the USPS. They are the whores of commercial interests and their relentless marketing, while pretending to be a vital service to the end-customer. What a tired old song that is...

I don't care to soil my mind with all the inside details leading to their present situation, but the symptoms of a moribund enterprise are clear. The sooner it becomes a sad memory, the better. They've brought it onto themselves: the bloated unions, the top management, the local "supervisors", the yearly raise in rates, the constantly worsening customer service.

Reap the rewards while you can, fellas, and then Good riddance! Too bad so many will have a nice, cushy pension that so many more in this society would deserve more justly.

post office going broke but still giving plenty oooof ot to certain employees

They claim the US Postal Service is going broke but why is it the the men in Melville Long Island getting plenty of overtime by the Union. Some of the employees are working 6-7 days a week and 2 hours at least of overtime 3 days a week. I think this should be investigated by the post master. The employees are claiming they went in overtime and got payed for doing nothing . This is really unfair to the customers that have to pay the increase while the employees are in there and getting payed overtime for readin the newspaper. Why is the union in Melville Ny calling them in to work if there is no mail for them to work overtime. That Post Office has three shifts that means the mail should be covered by the next shift not overtime employees.

post office going broke but still giving plenty oooof ot to certain employees

They claim the US Postal Service is going broke but why is it the the men in Melville Long Island getting plenty of overtime by the Union. Some of the employees are working 6-7 days a week and 2 hours at least of overtime 3 days a week. I think this should be investigated by the post master. The employees are claiming they went in overtime and got payed for doing nothing . This is really unfair to the customers that have to pay the increase while the employees are in there and getting payed overtime for readin the newspaper. Why is the union in Melville Ny calling them in to work if there is no mail for them to work overtime. That Post Office has three shifts that means the mail should be covered by the next shift not overtime employees.

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Peter Roff is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. A former senior political writer for United Press International, he is currently a senior fellow at the Institute for Liberty and at Let Freedom Ring, a non-partisan public policy organization. His writing has also appeared on Fox News' Fox Forum.

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