Archive for the 'PRC' Category

PRC Publishes List of Suspended Post Offices

In response to a request from the Postal Regulatory Commission, the US Postal Service earlier this month provided the PRC with a list of suspended post offices, stations and branches that may be reviewed for closure.

While the USPS complied with the request, it asked the PRC to keep the list secret, claiming that releasing it would create “unnecessary concern and confusion for postal customers and their communities”.

The Commission disagreed, and released the list today. The USPS says it has 229 Post Offices and 137 Stations and branches whose operations are suspended, although it isn’t 100% positive- the USPS response says: “Despite significant effort, this list may still contain errors.” Read the rest of this entry »

Gamefly asks PRC to hurry up- postage dispute is eating into its profits

In a letter to Postal Regulatory Chairman Ruth Goldway, Gamefly CEO David Hodess has asked the PRC to expedite its consideration of Gamefly’s appeal against the USPS’s alleged discrimination against the company. Gamefly, which rents game DVDs by mail, claims that the USPS gives preferential treatment to Netflix:

I am writing to you to request that the Commission do what it can to expedite its decision in the GameFly complaint proceeding. GameFly frled this complaint nearly two years ago. Before that, GameFly spent 18 months working with the Postal Service in an attempt to resolve informally the issues on which the complaint was based.

I understand that the Commission has competing demands on its resources. Delay in resolving the case, however, is costly to GameFly. At the company’s current volume of approximately 1.2 million shipments per month, the difference between the two-ounce flats rate of $1.05 that GameFly must pay to avoid automated letter processing for most of its DVD mailers, and the one-ounce letter rate of $0.44 that Netflix pays to avoid automated letter processing of return mailers, amounts to about $730,000. This amount represents more than 100% of GameFly’s monthly net income in 2011.

Respectfully submitted,
David Hodess
President and CEO

NALC: PRC Refuses to Endorse Five-Day Delivery Plan

Commission’s findings bolster the NALC campaign to save Saturday service

March 24, 2011 — The Postal Regulatory Commission, an independent federal agency charged with overseeing USPS operations, issued an opinion today sharply critical of key aspects of the Postal Service’s proposal to eliminate Saturday delivery. The Commission embraced many of the criticisms of the plan expressed by the NALC in our year-long campaign to preserve six-day delivery and 25,000 letter carrier jobs.

“Thanks to the hard work of thousands of letter carriers who rang the alarm bell on the potential loss of Saturday delivery for citizens and small businesses all over America, and thanks to our hard-working staff and team of attorneys, Congress now has all the evidence it needs to conclude that ‘5-day is indeed the wrong way,’” NALC President Fredric V. Rolando said.

The three Republicans and two Democrats on the Commission agreed that the Postal Service overstated by $1.4 billion how much it would save each year by delivering mail only five days per week. In particular, the Commissioners found that USPS grossly overestimated — by more than three-quarters of a billion dollars — the savings it would achieve from its letter carrier workforce.

The bipartisan Commission also concluded that USPS underestimated — by hundreds of millions of dollars — how much revenue it would lose when customers, faced with no Saturday postal delivery, look to alternatives to get their messages and packages delivered.

The Commission’s independent analysis determined further that ending Saturday service would delay the delivery of 25 percent of all First-Class Mail and Priority Mail — almost all of it by two days.

Federal law requires the Postal Service to ask for an advisory opinion from the Postal Regulatory Commission whenever it seeks to make a nationwide change in its operations. The PRC’s opinion on USPS’s five-day plan is purely advisory; only Congress has the authority to permit USPS to drop Saturday delivery.

USPS filed its request for an opinion from the Commission last year, in March 2010. The PRC proceeded to conduct extensive hearings on the Postal Service’s plan over the course of several months, both in Washington and in locations around the country, soliciting the views of economists and other experts, as well as those of mailers, small-business owners, community newspaper publishers, business executives, local government officials and ordinary citizens.

NALC participated actively in all the proceedings. President Rolando testified forcefully against USPS’s plan at the Washington hearings, while other letter carriers expressed their opposition at the field hearings. NALC also enlisted the help of a pair of leading postal economists from Rutgers University and the University of Pennsylvania to explain to the Commission the faulty assumptions in the Postal Service’s plan.

All five Commissioners endorsed one joint opinion that pointed out major flaws in USPS’s projections, but this joint opinion expressed no ultimate view on whether Saturday delivery should be eliminated. Four of the Commissioners wrote their own separate opinions.

In her separate opinion, PRC Chair Ruth Goldway (D) announced her view that “eliminating Saturday delivery does not conform to the Nation’s postal policy.” She explained that with five-day delivery, Americans would pay the same postage but receive a lower level of service. She also noted that this reduction in service would be “particularly felt in remote and rural areas.”

Commissioner Nanci Langley (D) wrote that cutting Saturday delivery would diminish USPS’s “competitive advantage in the package delivery sector” and “forfeit the significant competitive advantage” that USPS now enjoys with six-day delivery. Even Commissioner Blair (R), while otherwise supportive of USPS’s plan, noted that it would “unduly impact” those mail users who are dependent on Saturday delivery, including community newspapers, customers who receive pharmaceuticals by mail and those in remote areas. He concluded that the burden is on USPS to show that a reduction in delivery days will “help, not hurt, its future financial viability.”

NALC argued in the hearings before the Commission that USPS grossly overestimated the savings it would achieve by going to five-day delivery. The Commissioners in their joint opinion agreed, noting that even with recent declines in mail volume, city carrier routes are generally at capacity and that overtime hours have recently risen. Squeezing the same amount of mail delivery into fewer days will mean USPS will have to create more routes, to keep within the 8-hour standard, increasing labor costs.

The Commissioners rejected USPS’s notion that it could “absorb” the mountains of mail that would accumulate on Mondays without any significant increase in letter carrier hours. They explained that office time would rise since carriers would have to spend more time sorting the mail. They also explained that there would be an increase in street time: “There are limits on how much mail can go in a carrier’s satchel, and how much mail can be relayed at any one time … Volume directly affects how much time a carrier spends fingering mail on the street, sorting it into cluster boxes, or sorting mail into banks of apartment mailboxes.” The resulting increased work hours, the Commissioners concluded, would eat into the savings USPS projects from its five-day proposal.

The Commission also criticized the Postal Service’s conclusion, based on a survey it conducted of mail customers, that its revenue loss from cutting Saturday delivery would be minimal. NALC argued at the hearing that USPS put its thumb on the scale by asking survey respondents to give their best estimate of how much less they would use the Postal Service if Saturday delivery were cut, and then reducing the answers it received by a so-called “likelihood” factor. The Commission took USPS to task for such statistical game-playing.

Although the Commission’s opinion is not binding, and although the Commissioners reached no unanimity on whether to give USPS’s plan the thumbs up or thumbs down, its findings that USPS’s projections are seriously flawed will help Congress and the general public understand what a serious mistake it would be to eliminate Saturday delivery.

Latest News | NALC reacts to PRC report.

Letter carriers union applauds regulators’ decision on Saturday mail delivery

March 24, 2011: The National Association of Letter Carriers is gratified by the Postal Regulatory Commission’s decision not to recommend a shift to five-day-a-week mail delivery. Such a drastic move would inconvenience millions of Americans, including many who count on being able to get prescription medicines on Saturday; it would damage small businesses for which Saturday is an important workday; and it would have an inordinate impact on rural areas.

“We need to strengthen our only truly national communications network, not dismantle it,” NALC President Fredric Rolando said. He noted that the PRC’s advisory findings carry weight with Congress.

Read the rest of this entry »

PMG Reacts To PRC Decision On Five-Day Mail Delivery

We have received the Commission’s advisory opinion on our proposal to move to a five-day delivery schedule. We have been awaiting the document and look forward to studying the views expressed by the Commissioners. Five-day delivery is an integral part of our action plan for the future.

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PRC issues advisory opinion on ending Saturday delivery

The Postal Regulatory Commission has issued its long awaited advisory opinion on the US Postal Service’s proposal to do away with Saturday delivery. The opinion doesn’t make a yes or no recommendation, but in 211 pages of testimony and analysis, suggests that some of the postal service’s estimates of cost savings are over-estimated, while service impacts are sometimes under-stated. Read the rest of this entry »

California APWU local calls on Obama to name a Democrat to the PRC

The APWU local in Oakland California has started a campaign to encourage President Obama to name another Democrat to the Postal Reglatory Commission. The PRC currently has three Republican and two Democratic members. Two of the Republicans’ terms have expired, however, so Obama could replace one of them with a Democrat- by law, the Commission can only have three commissioners from the same political party:

Call for Action

PRC tells NAPUS it’s too soon to review post office closing plans

In a letter to the National Association of Postmasters of the United States (NAPUS), PRC Chair Ruth Goldway has told the PMs that since the USPS hasn’t produced a plan for it’s proposed closing of 2,000 post offices, “it would be premature to open a docket at this time for this matter”. Goldway, however, also told the group that “While the Postal Service has not submitted a request for us to review any plans nor have we seen the updated process, we have had some initial conversations with the Postal Service and believe the Service is making changes in its procedures to accommodate the Commission’s recommendations that were raised in the Hacker Valley case and the station and branch consolidation initiative.” Read the rest of this entry »

USPS Seeks Competitive Classification for Commercial First-Class Mail Parcels

WASHINGTON, Feb. 24 — The U.S. Postal Service issued the following news release:

Recognizing that all parcel delivery services operate in a competitive environment, the U.S. Postal Service today asked the Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC) to reclassify Commercial First-Class Mail Parcels as a competitive product.

Today’s filing is a formal request to move Commercial First-Class Mail Parcels from the market-dominant product list, and add "Lightweight Commercial Parcels" to the competitive product list.

The filing proposal does not affect retail single-piece First-Class Mail Parcels.

"This product serves a highly competitive marketplace, with many participants offering similar products," said Gary Reblin, vice president, Domestic Products. "By moving to a competitive product classification, we have greater flexibility to make this offering more attractive to commercial shippers."

Commercial First-Class Mail Parcels are largely used for fulfillment purposes by businesses selling lightweight merchandise. Starting April 17, qualifying customers will receive Commercial Base pricing for parcels weighing 13 ounces or less and can receive Commercial Plus pricing for parcels weighing less than one pound.

The reclassification proposal follows a similar request filed Aug. 16 with the PRC to move some Standard Mail Parcels from the market-dominant category to the competitive product list.

Separately, the Postal Service filed a request today with the PRC to introduce "Adult Signature," a new competitive service allowing customers to request the verified signature of an adult upon delivery.

USPS files brief in workshare discount litigation

The US Postal Service claims the Postal Regulatory Commission overstepped its authority in September when it issued an “Order Adopting Analytical Principles Regarding Workshare Discount Methodology“, which it intended to use as a framework for assessing the validity of proposed worksharing discounts. The USPS appealed the PRC’s action to the DC Appeals Court, and has filed its initial brief: Read the rest of this entry »