Postal Service Set To Default On Pension Payment For First Time, But Congress 
Could Easily Fix The Problem
By Guest Blogger  on Jul 19, 2012 at 10:35 am
In 2006, the Republican-led Congress passed an unnecessary law requiring 
the United States Postal Service to prefund its pension benefits for 75 
years through a $5.5 billion annual payment. The Postal Accountability and 
Enhancement Act of 2006 (PAEA) is the only one of its kind for a government 
agency. On August 1st of this year, the Post Office will likely default for the 
first time in its history on its 2011 pension payment. If 
Congress does not act, it will also default on its 2012 payment due 
September 30th. 
The requirement has drastically harmed the functions of the agency, 
which is used by almost every American. In July, USPS began closing 
offices around the country to meet the annual payment. By the time 
current downsizing plans are completed in 2014, Americans will see 229 
processing plants closed and 28,000 jobs lost. In June, ten USPS employees 
launched a multi-day hunger strike to protest the cuts. 
Without the pension payment, USPS would have a $1.5 billion surplus 
instead of a $20 billion shortfall. “[T]hese ongoing liquidity issues 
unnecessarily undermine confidence in the viability of the Postal 
Service among our customers,” said USPS spokesman David Partenheimer. 
Postal Service cuts also threaten to increase economic inequality. A Reuters 
analysis released in February found that America’s poorest communities “stand 
to suffer most if the struggling agency moves ahead with plans to shutter 
thousands of post offices.” 
A vast majority of postal offices under consideration for closure are located 
in rural areas, where poverty rates are higher than the 
national average. Nearly 90 percent of Americans without broadband access live 
in rural areas, making USPS 
cuts especially harmful to the pocketbooks of rural Americans.
Congressional Republicans have consistently pushed to downsize USPS. 
In 2011, Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) introduced legislation that would end 
to-the-door mail delivery and put USPS under a control board, moves 
which would lead to more layoffs and bust postal service unions. Such proposed 
“fixes” are a thinly-veiled Republican ploy to use the unnecessary PAEA 
requirement to attack public sector employment. 
In April, the Senate passed a bipartisan bill to stretch the pension payments 
over only 40 years, reducing the annual payment to $2.5 billion. The bill would 
also return $11 
billion to USPS that was overpaid into one of its pension funds. “The 
longer the House delays consideration of the bill, the longer the 
uncertainty about the Postal Service’s financial future remains,” said 
Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA), who co-sponsored the Senate bill. “This is 
irresponsible and unfair.” 
The House is currently preparing to leave for its August recess, making action 
to prevent a USPS default unlikely. 
– Ben Sherman

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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