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Pushing the Envelope Blog

Mending Post Office Suspensions

Date: 06/26/23 | Category: Post Offices & Retail Network

The Postal Service operates more than 31,000 retail facilities across the country. This is a huge network, larger than Subway, McDonald’s, or Starbucks. With so many facilities, it’s only natural that serious problems will occasionally interfere with operations.

What happens when a retail unit is severely damaged by a natural disaster, major fire, or building collapse? What if it can’t operate because there aren’t enough qualified personnel or its lease is unexpectedly terminated?

In these cases, the Postal Service may temporarily suspend service. These temporary suspensions are intended to be just that – temporary. The Postal Service is supposed to determine whether to reopen the post office at its original location, find a new location, or start the process of permanently closing the facility.

Over the years, Postal Service stakeholders grew concerned that a large backlog of suspended post offices had accumulated without any permanent resolution. Starting in fiscal year (FY) 2020, the Postal Regulatory Commission required the Postal Service to provide detailed plans to resolve the suspensions. While the Postal Service has made some progress reducing the list, more suspensions occur every year. As of the end of FY 2022, 381 post offices remained suspended.

Our auditors examined the suspension process and reviewed the data for suspended post offices, visiting 25 of the oldest facilities on the list. We found problems with the reliability of the data. The suspension status information was incorrect at all of the post offices the auditors visited. In addition, the Postal Service did not have full documentation of its past efforts to resolve suspensions, in part because responsibility for reducing the backlog had shifted to a different group. We made three recommendations to improve the process, and the Postal Service agreed. You can read more in our report.

Have you experienced a post office suspension in your area? How would you improve the suspension process?

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Mike Oxlong
Jun 26, 2023
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Protracted suspensions happen for want of labor: either the labor to staff the office or the labor to repair the physical plant is lacking. This problem is far from limited to the post office; the restaurant sector famously struggled with this during the Covid years.

One solution to this problem would be to increase the supply of labor - convince the townspeople to have more kids than there are unfilled jobs. That takes time, though - even if you succeed in causing a baby boom, the kids can't start filling those jobs for well over a decade.

The other solution is to reduce the need for labor. Automate aa far as possible all routine tasks (especially delivery, which takes up the bulk of USPS's workforce); save scarce human hands for custom jobs like repairing historic buildings or helping out elderly people at the post office who don't know how to print shipping labels. Standardize equipment. We're already seeing this in the restaurant sector with automated deep fryers and such.

Ultimately, if autonomous vehicles performed the daily deliveries, there would be plenty of labor available from the existing workforce to staff these offices - and that goal is attainable.