Dear Comrades,
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Postal Service said on Wednesday that it is abandoning for now its plan to close thousands of post offices in rural locations and instead will shorten their hours of operation.
              The change represents a victory for U.S. lawmakers
 and rural communities who created a backlash against the cash-strapped 
agency last summer when it began considering more than 3,600 post 
offices for closure this year.
              Rather than 
shuttering offices starting next week, when a self-imposed moratorium on
 closings was set to end, the plan is to cut the operating hours of 
13,000 locations with little traffic to between two and six hours a day.
              "We've listened to 
our customers in rural America and we've heard them loud and clear - 
they want to keep their post offices open," said Postmaster General 
Patrick Donahoe. "There's no plan for closings at this point."
              The new plan would 
save more money - roughly $500 million annually compared to $200 million
 under the old plan - and could placate some lawmakers in Washington who
 have been critical of the virtually bankrupt agency as it pushes for 
other controversial changes, such as ending Saturday mail or raising 
postage rates.
              But lawmakers 
cautioned that removing the threat of thousands of closings should not 
dissuade Congress from urgently passing legislation to staunch the USPS's annual losses of billions of dollars.
              The Postal Service,
 which relies on sales of stamps and other products rather than taxpayer
 dollars, has been losing billions of dollars each year as Americans 
increasingly communicate online.
Barring drastic changes, many of which require 
congressional action, officials have said the mail agency could face 
annual losses of $18 billion by 2015.
              The Senate
 passed legislation last month that allows the USPS to end Saturday mail
 delivery after two years, restructures a massive annual payment for 
future retiree health benefits, and lets it use a surplus of about $11 
billion in a retirement account to offer retirement incentives to older 
workers.
              House of 
Representatives leaders have not scheduled a vote on postal legislation,
 and a bill from Republican Darrell Issa that passed his Oversight 
Committee more than six months ago is significantly different from the 
Senate version.
              One of the major differences between the bills was how to handle post office closings.
 The Senate bill put in place additional protections for rural 
locations, such as requiring the agency to look at Internet access in 
each community.
              During debate on 
the Senate floor, some senators said the bill did not go far enough and 
called for a longer moratorium on post office closings. Others favored 
the House approach, which tasks an oversight group with deciding which 
locations to close.
              The Postal 
Service's move to keep post offices open at reduced hours could 
eliminate that controversial debate among lawmakers, said Art Sackler of
 the Coalition for a 21st Century Postal Service, a group that 
represents business mailers.
"I think that's a step in the right direction, both 
from the standpoint of serving the public and from removing a real choke
 point on getting the legislation that is so urgently needed," Sackler 
said. "The path is clearer to getting a bill done here."
              The Postal Service is now seeking regulatory approval for the new rural post office strategy, which would not be completely implemented until September 2014.
LEGISLATIVE HOPE
              Lawmakers repeated calls on Wednesday to pass legislation to help return the Postal Service to profitability.
"Stopgap, piecemeal measures like the proposal offered 
today only address a small part of the problem and will not keep the 
Postal Service from an imminent collapse," Senator Thomas Carper, a 
Democrat, said in a statement.
              But some lawmakers said the Postal Service's decision may lessen a sense of urgency to pass a postal overhaul.
              Previously the USPS
 had agreed to a moratorium through May 15 on the closing of post 
offices and processing facilities. As that date approached, a bipartisan
 group of lawmakers hoped to use the impending closures to drum up 
support in the House for the Senate-passed postal bill.
Democratic Representative Peter Welch, who planned to 
reach out to lawmakers facing closures in their districts, said the 
Postal Service's plan removes a deadline to act.
              "It does seem the brinkmanship style here in Congress often requires a drop-dead deadline," Welch said.
Lawmakers had criticized the agency for focusing on 
small, money-losing post offices without considering factors such as 
community impact or Internet access.
              A Reuters 
investigation determined that about one-third of the offices facing 
closure were located in areas with limited or no wired broadband.
The Postal Service has announced plans to contract with
 local general stores to offer some services and to use more rural 
letter carriers, who serve as a post office on wheels, in areas where 
they close.
              Communities can choose to use these "village post offices" in conjunction with fewer hours at their post offices.
The Postal Service also said it was offering more than 21,000 postmasters a buy-out to retire by the end of July.
              The Postal Service 
will make an announcement next week about its earlier plan to close more
 than 200 mail processing centers.
              (Editing by Anthony Boadle and Philip Barbara)
http://in.news.yahoo.com/u-drops-plan-close-rural-post-offices-190209240--sector.html 
 
 
