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Saturday Mail Delivery to End, Postal Service Announces

The U.S. Postal Service announced it will end Saturday mail delivery by Aug. 1. Speak out: How will this affect you?

 

Calling the six-days-per-week mail delivery business model “no longer sustainable,” the U.S. Postal Service Wednesday morning announced it will eliminate Saturday delivery of mail by Aug. 1.

The plan to change delivery from six days a week to five would only affect first-class mail.

Packages, mail-order medicines, priority and express mail would still be delivered on Saturdays, and local post offices will remain open for business Saturdays. This includes local post offices in Algonquin, at 801 West Algonquin Road, and in Crystal Lake, at 301 East Congress Parkway. 

According to the U.S. Postal Service, the reasons for nixing Saturday delivery have to do with continued economic struggles and the increasing use of the Internet for communications and bill paying by consumers.

The U.S. Postal Service is also the only federal agency required to pre-fund health benefits for retirees, and those costs are escalating quickly.

“Our current business model of delivering mail six days a week is no longer sustainable. We must change in order to remain an integral part of the American community for decades to come," according to information posted on the U.S. Postal website.

The announcement comes after years of the postal service trying to get congressional approval for a five-day mail delivery schedule, according to an Associated Press article.

The AP reports that it is not immediately clear how the U.S. Postal Service, which is an independent agency but still under congressional control, will eliminate Saturday delivery without the OK from Congress. 

Saturday is the lightest mail delivery day by volume and many businesses are closed on Saturdays, according to the U.S. Postal Service. However, many residents receive print magazines and ads on Saturdays in the mail that may be shifted to another day.

A Rasmussen poll on mail delivery in 2012 showed “Three-out-of-four Americans (75 percent) would prefer the U.S. Postal Service cut mail delivery to five days a week rather than receive government subsidies to cover ongoing losses.”

A USA Today/Gallup poll in 2010 found the majority of U.S. residents surveyed were ok with eliminating Saturday delivery.

The March 2010 telephone survey of 999 adults revealed people age 55 and older were more likely than younger people to have used the mail to pay a bill or send a letter in the past two weeks.

Speak out: How will this change affect you? Will you miss getting mail on Saturdays?

Related Topics: Post Office, Saturday Delivery, and United State Post Office

Dan Arenov

9:42 am on Wednesday, February 6, 2013

The USPS loses $25,000,000 every single day.

What needs to happen is for this to be privatized. Add Amtrak to the same conversation...why should we continue to be on the hook for poorly run entities? The US Gov't does not do a good job running businesses. Let it go to entrepreneurs.

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Dan Arenov

9:45 am on Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Also, maybe you live by a nice post office that is staffed by people who care and have good customer service skills, but having been around the country a little bit, i will say that my experience with USPS workers (not mail carriers, but office staff) is that they are lazy, don't hustle and don't give a rat's ass about you or your time.

Stereotypical of gov't workers. Period.

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