WASHINGTON (PAI) -- The nation's four postal employee unions are
uniting to sponsor yet another mass protest, on November 14, against
Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe's planned January 2015 shutdown of 82
more distribution centers. And the Mail Handlers/ Laborers formally notified the Postal Service the union believes the closings break its contract.
Centered around the theme of "Stop delaying America's mail!" the
unions timed the protest for the last meeting of the Postal Board of
Governors for this year, said Letter Carriers President Fredric Rolando, who just won re-election to a new term in his union's top job.
"The Postal Service is set to make severe cuts in mail delivery
service that, if implemented, would cause hardships for customers, drive
away business, and cause incalculable harm to its reputation," he said.
A report by the non-partisan Government Accountability Office (GAO), released October 27, backed Rolando. It said Donahoe's past closings slowed 25 percent of first-class mail.
The Letter Carriers said closing 82 more mail-processing centers
would slow the mail so much that overnight mail delivery even within the
same city or town would likely disappear.
"This plan would sacrifice service while failing to address the real
causes of the Postal Service's financial problems," Rolando said,
speaking for himself, Postal Workers President Mark Dimondstein, Mail Handlers President John Hegarty and Rural Letter Carriers President Jeannette Dwyer.
Donahoe's closings are part of his scheme to eliminate the USPS
deficit. He also wants to end Saturday service, let 100,000 workers go
by attrition, fire another 100,000, replace full-time unionized
well-paid postal worker jobs with part-timers and subcontract out USPS
functions to minimum-wage non-union workers at Staples and, APWU adds,
Walmart.
And Donahoe demands elimination of door-to-door delivery. All the
moves, Dimondstein says, are part of Donahoe's scheme for "creeping
privatization" of the Postal Service. Privatization is also a goal of congressional Republicans.
The unions reply the red ink Donahoe cites is due to a 2006 "postal
reform" pushed through a Republican-run Congress by GOP President George
W. Bush that reform orders USPS to pay $5.5 billion yearly to pre-fund
future retirees' health care benefits. As a result, the USPS runs a
billion-dollar profit on operations now that the Great Recession is
over, but the health care mandate turns it into a multi-billion dollar
loss.
The NALC and APWU both voted "no confidence" in Donahoe earlier this
year. Both demand he resign - or be fired - in favor of a Postmaster
General committed to a positive future for the Postal Service.
Donahoe has also given the back of his hand to union proposals, in legislation by Sen. Bernie Sanders, Ind.-Vt., to let the Postal Service enter new and profitable business lines and to eliminate the health care pre-payment.
The day of action is designed to highlight both the impact of
Donahoe's planned cuts and to promote the alternative plans, the four
unions say. Donahoe's cuts since 2012 have cut service, the unions and
GAO add.
Donahoe's new cuts are "so severe that they will forever damage the
U.S. Postal Service," the unions said in a letter to their locals,
urging them to start mobilizing members for November 14. "On January 5,
the USPS is slated to lower 'service standards' to virtually eliminate
overnight delivery - including first-class mail from one address to
another within the same city or town. All mail throughout the country
will be delayed," it adds.
"Beginning January 5, 82 Mail Processing and Distribution Centers are
scheduled to close. These cuts will cause hardships for customers,
drive away business, cause irreparable harm to the U.S. Postal Service,
and lead to massive schedule changes and reassignments for employees.
They are part of a flawed management strategy that unnecessarily
sacrificed service and failed to address the cause of the Postal
Service's manufactured financial crisis."
The GAO report
backs the unions' letter to locals. Even before she got it, one senator
who sought the report, Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D., launched an online
petition against further USPS cuts. The other, Senate Government Affairs
Committee Chairman Thomas Carper, D-Del., used the report as a reason
to again push a postal "reform" measure the unions call unacceptable.
Carper's plan tracks well with Donahoe's demands, they point out.
"Revised delivery standards have increased delivery time for some
first-class mail and periodicals, notably by reducing mail with a 1-day
standard," GAO said. "USPS revised its standard to maintain 1-day
delivery for intra-Sectional Center Facility (SCF) mail, but not for
inter-SCF mail. SCFs serve as the processing and distribution centers
for post offices in a designated geographic area," GAO said. Those are
the facilities Donahoe wants to close.
"USPS also revised its delivery standards for 2-day delivery. Mail
must now be within a 6-hour drive between the applicable processing
facilities rather than within a 12-hour drive time to meet the 2-day
delivery standard; mail sent outside the 2-day delivery area shifted to a
3-day delivery standard," GAO said.
"USPS estimated that about one quarter of first-class mail volume was
affected by the changes in delivery standards. Further, the percentage
of single-piece and bulk first-class mail with a 1-day delivery standard
decreased from 2012 to 2014, while the percentage with a 3-5 day
delivery standard increased. USPS also eliminated 1-day delivery
standards for periodicals, which generally shifted to a 2-day standard."
All this made such a mess of the mail that the Mail Handlers formally
notified Donahoe's minions last month that USPS' 82 planned closures
break the union's contract. They formally filed a nationwide grievance
and requested arbitration.
The closures "violate the mail processing guidelines" in the USPS'
own handbook, which are "incorporated by reference" into the NMPHU
contract, its September 18 letter said.
"The handbook requires USPS to take certain actions, conduct various
studies, accept and consider various opinions and hold certain public
meetings" before implementing such closings. Those procedures last at
least six months, and USPS has followed none of them, the union said.
The national unions are involved only in the last of the nine steps
in such actions, NMPHU reminded the USPS brass. But the first step must
be based on current data, and USPS is using numbers from when it started
the last round of closings in 2011. And the procedures call for
bottom-up consultations, with public notice at the very beginning and
accountability throughout, it added.
"The current plans to close or consolidate the 82 processing
facilities are based on untimely processes resulting in essentially
meaningless studies and reports. Implementation would violate" pertinent
sections of the handbook "and the National Agreement."
Source : http://peoplesworld.org/postal-unions-plan-national-protests-vs-closings/
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