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U.S. postmaster tells House committee he will resume cost-cutting after election

Published 08/24/2020, 11:31 AM
Updated 08/24/2020, 09:51 PM
© Reuters. U.S. Postmaster General DeJoy and USPS Board of Governors President Duncan testify at House Oversight Committee hearing on slowdowns at Postal Service on Capitol Hill in Washington

By Andy Sullivan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Postmaster Louis DeJoy told lawmakers on Monday that he planned to resume some cost-cutting measures that have factored in widespread service delays, defying Democratic lawmakers who have sought to block his changes.

DeJoy told lawmakers that he will push to improve on-time deliveries after the Nov. 3 election, an effort that he suspended last week after a public backlash. He also said he would keep in place a management reshuffle he implemented after assuming his job in June.

"These two changes, creating our new on-time transportation network and designing an engaged functional organizational structure, will be the catalyst for the significant improvements in cost, performance and growth," DeJoy told the House of Representatives Oversight Committee.

DeJoy has sought to assure Americans that widespread delays caused by his cost-cutting efforts would not cause their ballots to go uncounted in November, when up to half of U.S. voters could cast their ballots through the mail.

DeJoy, who has donated $2.7 million to President Donald Trump and other Republicans since 2016, has rejected charges of political interference. Trump has claimed, without evidence, that absentee voting is unreliable, even though he has voted that way himself.

DeJoy's push to improve on-time deliveries forced trucks to leave sorting facilities even if mail was still on the loading dock, leading to widespread delays nationwide.

Postal Service documents released by Democrats showed a drop in first-class mail service, largely occurring after he became postmaster in June.

"Whatever the cause of these massive delays, the American people want to go back to the way things were," Committee Chair Carolyn Maloney said.

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DeJoy has refused to bring back mail-sorting machines and mailboxes pulled from service in recent weeks, saying they were routine responses to changes in mail volume that were underway before he took office.

He said he was not responsible for some other service changes, such as reduced retail hours and overtime for Postal Service workers.

The White House has declined to say whether Trump will respect the results of the election if he loses.

Dozens of Democrats have called for DeJoy to be fired.

The House on Saturday voted to prevent DeJoy from taking action that would impede service until January, and also to provide $25 billion in funding. That legislation is not expected to advance in the Republican-controlled Senate and the White House has threatened to veto it. The Postal Service also opposes that legislation.

That came after the Senate on Friday confronted DeJoy with a chart prepared for postal customers in the Eastern region. It showed that service slumped in July, with the most profound declines in election battlegrounds like Northern Ohio, the Ohio Valley and Central Pennsylvania. A report from the Pacific region showed a similar trend.

DeJoy said Philadelphia and Detroit are among 20 "hotspots" around the country where service has been hurt by the pandemic. DeJoy and USPS did not disclose the other locations.

A USPS service report for single-piece first-class mail viewed by Reuters showed that some cities were already suffering significant disruption from COVID-19 when DeJoy took the helm.

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New York's on-time two-day delivery rate was 68.4%, while three-to-five-day was 53.6% for the quarter ended June 30. Detroit came in at 73.5% and 64.7%, respectively.

Latest comments

Because that's the only way to legally rig the election
That’s going to be pretty difficult from inside a federal prison.
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