Oh, You Knew This View Co-Host Was Going to Go There Regarding Marco...
The Democrats' Favorite Streamer Is Begging for a Defamation Lawsuit
Joe & Mika Display Platner Denialism; Time Magazine Zeroes in on the Big...
The Usual Suspects Are Attacking Queen Camilla for Meeting With J.K. Rowling
The FCC Chair Casts Doubt on ABC's Claim That 'The View' Is a...
Scott Jennings Says Clean Voter Rolls Are Just Common Sense
Gavin Newsom Got Testy With Reporters Who Asked About His Tax Returns
Two NYC Churches Were Firebombed, and Zohran Mamdani's Hasn't Said a Word
This Is the One Chart Democrats Won’t Want You to See
Garland Man Extradited From Qatar After Fleeing $1 Billion Fraud Charges
Six Charged in $20 Million Medicare, Medicare Fraud Scheme Involving NJ Pharmacy
Chinese National Sentenced to 70 Months for $2.2 Million Gift Card Laundering Scheme
Treasury Slaps Sanctions on Iran Supreme Leader's Personal Banker
Platner Officially Calls It Quits – But Exits With a Profane Far-Left Message
Charlotte Auto Theft Ring Leader Sentenced to 8 Years for Stealing Over 100...
Tipsheet

Video Released Explains Potential Postal Bailout

Video Released Explains Potential Postal Bailout

The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform has released a Web video, “Postal Crisis 101: The Postal Bailout,”demonstrating the way that a taxpayer funded bailout would continue the United States Postal Services' deficit budget by flooding the accounting books with false "overpayment."

Advertisement

The videos' timely release helps gain momentum going into a review of the The Issa-McCain-Ross Postal Reform Act of 2011, which will be in front of the Oversight Committee on Thursday at 10:30 AM. The video maps out the route of the bailout, from the treasury to the postal service and into the retirees' pension plans, demonstrating that a multi-billion dollar bailout would do nothing to cut future budgets or increase efficiency of the Postal Service, just merely delay the potential end of the USPS.

Along with preventing another billion dollar taxpayer bailout, the Postal Service Reform Act is a multifaceted plan, cutting costs by increasing efficiency, accountability, and responsibility to workers and customers.

Financial problems for USPS started when mail processing dropped 46 billion pieces in volume since its peak in 2006 due to the increase of electronic communication and online bill payment methods. The Commission on Postal Reorganization, established through the Reform Act, would be charged with the responsibility to locate where the Postal Service can make up for the loss of these profits by cutting costs through shutting down excessive branches and creating more efficient mail processing.

Advertisement

Related:

POSTAL SERVICE

There would also be an established "watchdog" to crack down on post offices that fall behind in payments, including "addressing expensive labor agreements." The presence of the American Postal Workers Union has thrown a wrench into the reform process in the past, but the act looks to create equality between USPS workers and federal workers, requiring workers to pay the same for health and life insurance as other federal workers.

The House Oversight Committee has an interactive website Save the Postal Service, which features facts and news about the Reform Act, and a live feed of the business meeting of the Oversight Committee will be available for streaming tomorrow during the review.

Blog Post by Emily Moore

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement