WASHINGTON – A proposed compromise that could end Saturday mail delivery is falling flat with unions while getting the support of a Senate committee chairman leading a push to advance stalled legislation.
Discussions involve letting the U.S. Postal Service end Saturday mail delivery if mail volume or revenue drops below a specified level, Sen. Tom Carper, the Delaware Democrat who leads the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said Thursday.
The idea is meeting resistance from postal unions, which want to keep Saturday delivery and the jobs that go with it. Legislation that would relieve the money-losing service of billions of dollars in annual health care and pension obligations along with allowing other changes is stalled in Congress.
Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe proposed ending Saturday delivery without congressional approval before his board overruled him in April, following an opinion by the Government Accountability Office that he lacked that authority. Congress first required mail deliveries six days a week in 1981.
The service is open to Carper's idea, spokesman David Partenheimer said.
"This is a very interesting and creative solution that Chairman Carper's developed and could be part of a comprehensive legislative package to resolve our financial situation," he said.
A postal bill passed by the Senate last year didn't allow an end to Saturday delivery, which has been part of proposed House legislation that hasn't come to a vote in the full chamber in either of the past two years.
Jeanette Dwyer, president of the National Rural Letter Carriers' Association, said her union opposes any idea that may end Saturday mail delivery.