Tag Archives: Postal Service

How Saving the Post Office Can Save You Money

By The Week

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The Week

What’s wrong with the post office?
It’s hemorrhaging money at the rate of about $25 million a day. The U.S. Postal Service, the nation’s second-biggest employer after Walmart, lost almost $16 billion in the last fiscal year. By next fall, it is projected to have less than three days’ worth of operating expenses on hand. (As an independent agency operating with federal oversight, the USPS can borrow money from the government to cover its losses but doesn’t get any direct funding.) To ward off reckoning day, Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe last month announced that Saturday delivery of regular mail would end in August, in order to save $2 billion a year. That plan is meeting stiff resistance in Congress, which has notified Donahoe that he lacks “the constitutional and statutory authority” to eliminate Saturday delivery. Dozens of House and Senate members are vowing to go to court, if necessary, to block any change in delivery frequency. Donahoe isn’t budging. “We plan to do what we said we were going to do,” he said.

Why is the USPS losing so much money?
First-class mail volume has dropped by more than 25 percent since 2006, as Americans embraced email and started paying bills and communicating with each other online. But more than two thirds of last year’s colossal losses were caused by pension obligations. In 2006, Congress and the Bush administration passed a law requiring the then-profitable Postal Service to prepay, over the course of just 10 years, 75 years’ worth of anticipated retiree health benefits. Fearing a future financial collapse and a taxpayer bailout, Republicans insisted on the provision to guarantee that the post office would meet its future obligations. No other government agency or private company, however, is required to fund future costs in this backbreaking way. The Postal Service has since made $49 billion in such payments, and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) has claimed that if the Postal Service were allowed to manage its own obligations, it “would be back in the black and posting profits.”

Would that solve the problem?
No. A more conventional pension-funding system might eliminate current losses, but with mail volume dropping dramatically every year in a digital world, the Postal Service would still be on the road to insolvency. That’s why, Donahoe says, the post office needs to cut costs across the board and alter its business model. Besides ending Saturday delivery, he wants to set up a new health-insurance system for employees, shut down 252 of the country’s 487 mail-processing centers, slow delivery times, reduce business hours at 13,000 post offices, and eliminate 220,000 of 522,000 postal jobs.

Is cost-cutting the best option?
Not according to members of Congress from rural districts, union representatives, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

My Top 2 Stocks: Amazon and Google

By Brian Stoffel, The Motley Fool

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The beginning of my investing experience is somewhat of a blur. Being an English major in college and a writing teacher by profession, I didn’t have much experience with finance, let alone stocks, at all. When I finally got interested — after finding the Fool to help me invest my retirement funds — my method was pretty haphazard.

It wasn’t until the Spring of 2010 that I finally started to realize the importance of developing an investment philosophy. After spending a lot of time reading about it, I decided that it would be best to have a concentrated portfolio with stocks that 1. displayed innovation, and 2. had huge sustainable advantages over the competition.

After diving through all the possibilities, I was able to make some bets I was confident in. As it stands now, my two top holdings in absolute dollars are prime examples of businesses with wide moats and innovative employees. Those two companies are Amazon and Google .

Netflix was actually a guide
While studying about sustainable competitive advantages, I remembered reading about how Netflix was able to fend off Wal-Mart when the latter wanted a piece of the DVD-to-consumer business.

In a story that’s not told too often, Netflix had a huge tactical advantage over Wal-Mart: the company had strategically placed its fulfillment centers within a stone’s throw of local U.S. Postal Service offices. Though that might seem like a small thing, the Wal-Mart’s DVD distribution centers were far fewer, and the turnaround time — as well as some special treatment for Netflix by the USPS — made a big difference in user experience.

Obviously, when streaming became the new paradigm, that changed things a bit for Netflix. But it got me thinking about the huge infrastructure that Amazon has. Currently, only about 10% of all purchases are made online in America. Though that number will never reach 100%, it shows how much room there is for growth.

As e-commerce becomes more commonplace, customer service will be a key differentiator in deciding who wins the most customers. Currently, Amazon and its subsidiaries currently have over 69 fulfillment centers in the world, and the company has started locating them near urban centers. This insures that when Amazon customers hit “Buy,” they’ll be getting their products delivered to their doors faster than with anyone else.

When you consider the astronomical price the company is paying to build, staff, and automate these centers, you get an idea for how it would be nearly impossible for a competitor to come in and offer better customer service. Throw in the innovation factor — remember, the company invented the e-reader — you’ve got a recipe for success.

Currently, Amazon comprises 12.2% of all my real-life stock holdings, and is beating the market by a healthy 30%. Though I think every investor should own a piece of Amazon, I would suggest buying in stages, as today’s prices are quite high by most standard metrics.

Where’s the competition?<br …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Pitney Bowes to Focus on Simplifying the Complex for Mailers at 2013 National Postal Forum

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Pitney Bowes to Focus on Simplifying the Complex for Mailers at 2013 National Postal Forum

STAMFORD, Conn.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– At the upcoming 2013 National Postal Forum, Pitney Bowes Inc. (NYS: PBI) will showcase its latest technologies and services that help mailers simplify the complex challenges they face in doing business. The Forum runs from March 17-20, 2013 at Moscone Center West in San Francisco, California. Pitney Bowes will exhibit at Booth #728.

The Forum is the largest annual gathering of mailing industry executives and companies. The 2013 event will take place against the backdrop of ongoing changes in the mailing industry landscape, and the U.S. Postal Service‘s recent move to require all mail to include an Intelligent Mail® barcode in order to qualify for automation pricing.

In considering the upcoming convention, Pitney Bowes President and CEO Marc Lautenbach said, “There is a tremendous amount of change across the industry, and National Postal Forum is the perfect time for mailers to come together to discuss important topics and explore opportunities to enhance their communications, build stronger client relationships and grow their businesses.”

At Pitney Bowes‘s booth, large, enterprise organizations will see innovative solutions including:

  • New DFWorks® Full Service IMb® Postal Manifesting software, for operations that presort mail before printing, and SortEngine™ Full Service IMb® Sorter Operations Software, for operations that sort finished mailpieces, can help mailers meet the USPS’s Full Service IMb® submission requirements with dynamic manifest, pallet and tray tag creation.
  • A range of mail services solutions including First-Class Mail® and Direct Mail Solutions for Standard Mail® can help organizations reduce mailing costs, increase direct mail response rates, and meet postal compliance such as the new Intelligent Mail® Barcode requirements.
  • White Paper Factory™ Solutions can eliminate preprinted forms and envelopes, streamline print and mail processes, and lower operational and postage costs, while adding greater value to each mailpiece.
  • SendSuite® Live, the first scalable, web-based shipping management solution designed for the desktop, mailroom, or warehouse, can help customers simplify the shipping process, eliminate the confusion of managing shipping costs, provide visibility into their shipping operation, and enable greater efficiencies by integrating into e-commerce platforms.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Berkeley Councilman Proposes Email Tax To Save Post Office

By The Huffington Post News Editors

If the post office is going to go down, perhaps it should at least go down with a fight.

Gordon Wozniak, a city councilman in Berkeley, Calif., has proposed an email tax to provide much-needed revenue to the ailing U.S. Postal Service, local blog Berkleyside reports. The idea comes amid efforts to avoid the sale of a local post office building due to the service’s flagging revenue, both locally and on the national scale: In its latest budget year, the U.S. Postal Service lost more than $15 billion.

“There should be something like a bit tax,” Wozniak said, according to CBS Berkeley. “I mean a bit tax could be a cent per-gigabit and they would still make, probably, billions of dollars a year… And there should be, also, a very tiny tax on email.”

Read More…

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Worst Depreciating Vehicles, McLaren P1, Tesla Model S: Today's Car News

Today at The Car Connection, Elon Musk said The New York Times review cost Tesla $100 million, and Chrysler issued a recall for the 2013 200 and Dodge Avenger. There’s a new muscle car stamp being offered by the U.S. Postal Service, and McLaren revealed the P1 supercar. All this and more in today’s car news, right here on The Car Connection. We… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at The Car Connection

Lance Armstrong Whistleblower Lawsuit: Department Of Justice Lobbied By USADA To Join Suit

By The Huffington Post News Editors

AUSTIN, Texas — The head of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency lobbied Attorney General Eric Holder for the Justice Department to join a whistle-blower lawsuit against Lance Armstrong on the same day the cyclist confessed in an interview to performance-enhancing drug use.

USADA chief executive Travis Tygart wrote Holder on Jan. 14, urging him to join the civil case and telling Holder that “fraud and other crimes were committed” by Armstrong and other members of his former U.S. Postal Service teams.

Read More…
More on Lance Armstrong

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

First Class Mail is Doomed. Get Over it.

By Mark Rogowsky, Contributor

By now, most of you are aware the U.S. Postal Service has decided to stop asking and start doing: It will end Saturday mail service, effective August 5 — unless Congress stops it. What might be less obvious is that it has been asking for permission to do that since 2009, during which time total mail volume has fallen more than 5% and First-Class volume has drop by more than 12%. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Is The U.S. Postal Service The World's Most Efficient?

By Adam Ozimek, Contributor

The news the USPS will stop delivering mail on saturdays has prompted some post office naval gazing, and with it has come a claim I have seen made before: that the U.S. Postal Service is the most efficient in the world. The proof given is a study by economists Chong, La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, and Shleifer from 2012. What they did was mail letters to 10 fake addresses in 159 countries and see how long it took them to be returned, and what percentage of them are returned. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Postal Service Lost $1.3 Billion Over Quarter

By Breaking News

USPS Logo SC Postal Service lost $1.3 billion over quarter

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Postal Service lost $1.3 billion in the final three months of last year, despite a blizzard of campaign advertising for the fall political elections and a big holiday mail and shipping season.

The loss announced Friday was far less than the $3.3 billion in the comparable quarter the previous fiscal year, but still showed the effects of a continued decline in first-class mailing as customers continue to flock to the Internet for emailing, bill paying and the like.

In releasing their financial report, postal officials pleaded anew with Congress to give them the flexibility to better manage the agency — including to free it from a mandate that they prepay for expected retiree health care costs.

Considering its operations alone, the agency actually made $100 million delivering the mail — earning $17.7 billion in revenue against $17.6 billion in operating expenses. But the health care funding and some other expenses pushed it to a net loss.

“We can’t continue to operate on a precipice,” the service’s Chief Financial Officer Joe Corbett said in a conference call for reporters.

Read more at Official Wire. By Pauline Jelinek.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Most of Us Want the Post Office to Kill Saturday Delivery? Really?

By Rich Smith, The Motley Fool

Postman

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According to U.S. Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe, 7 out of every 10 Americans polled say they like the idea of the U.S. Postal Service eliminating Saturday mail delivery in order to cut $2 billion a year off of the Post Office‘s budget.

And so … that’s just what he’s going to do.

Donahoe announced on Wednesday that rather than wait for Congress to propose a solution to the USPS‘s fiscal problems, he’s going to order the service to halt Saturday letter deliveries beginning this August….

Most of Us Want the Post Office to Kill Saturday Delivery? Really? originally appeared on DailyFinance.com on 2013-02-08T06:00:00Z.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Postal service honors Rosa Parks with new stamp

The U.S. Postal Service has issued a Rosa Parks stamp on what would have been the late civil rights icon’s 100th birthday.

The Rosa Parks Forever Stamp went on sale Monday, and an oversized version was unveiled during the National Day of Courage celebration at The Henry Ford museum in Dearborn.

The stamp bears an artist’s rendering of a 1950s-era photo of Parks.

Deputy Postmaster General Ronald Stroman described Parks as being “the epitome of courage.”

Parks was arrested in 1955 for refusing to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Alabama, bus to a white man, an act that helped bring the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to prominence.

Stroman and others later took a seat on the Rosa Parks bus, which is on permanent display inside the museum.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News