Granted USPS has had some other financial problems. But despite those problems Senator Sanders noted that they would have posted a profit in the last quarter were it not for the imposed burden above. Sanders has introduced legislation to fix the real problems and eliminate the regressively-created problem to make USPS financially viable once more. The following is from his Bernie Buzz Post:
August 12, 2013
BURLINGTON, Vt., Aug. 12 – With revenue
rebounding, the U.S. Postal Service would have posted a profit for the
past three months without an unprecedented requirement that it sink $5.5
billion a year into future retiree health care, Sen. Bernie Sanders
(I-Vt.) said today.
The latest quarterly report on Postal Service finances
showed a $740 million loss, but all of that red ink would have been
eliminated and a $660 million profit would have been posted had the
Postal Service not been forced to sink money into a system that already
has set aside enough to meet the health care needs of retirees for
decades to come.
“The good news is that the Postal Service made a profit
except for the unfair, onerous burden that no other company or agency is
required to pay,” said Sanders. “The Postal Service has experienced
financial problems and changes need to be made to bring it into the 21st
century, but I am convinced that proposals to slow down mail delivery
and provide less service are the wrong way to go,” Sanders added.
Sanders was referring to legislation that would hamstring
the Postal Service by clearing the way to end Saturday mail service,
significantly slow down delivery, close more processing plants and
eliminate door-to-door deliveries.
Sanders on Feb. 13 introduced legislation, which now has
28 cosponsors, to modernize the Postal Service, save Saturday mail and
repeal the crippling law responsible for at least 80 percent of the mail
system’s funding woes. Similar legislation introduced in the House by
Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.) now has 166 cosponsors.
The legislation by Sanders and DeFazio also would let the
Postal Service look for innovative ways to attract more customers by
taking advantage of email and Internet services, for example. A
commission made up of successful business innovators, small business and
labor leaders would make additional recommendations on ways the Postal
Service could generate new revenue. The bill also would reinstate
overnight delivery standards to speed mail delivery and prevent
shutdowns of mail sorting centers. Safeguards also would be put in place
to protect rural post offices.
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