Election 2020

Discussion in 'Free Speech Alley' started by Tiger in NC, Jul 26, 2020.

  1. Winston1

    Winston1 Founding Member

    All of you know my opinion of Trump but that doesn’t mean I accept lies about his actions. (Yes I know most of you think I lie about him all the time:) but I don’t. ) One that’s going around now is about the postal service. The democrats and media are all up in arms about the removal of machinery required to sort the mail. While accurate in a narrow sense it’s false. The reduction in machines is due to the reduction in 1st class mail which has declined by half since 2001. The reduction in machines was initiated under Obama.
    Here’s why the Postal Service wanted to remove hundreds of mail-sorting machines

    This week, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy pulled back on a host of cost-saving measures at the U.S. Postal Service after a public outcry over delivery delays and the potential to upset mail-in voting come November. Of particular concern was the removal of hundreds of mail-sorting machines.

    According to a grievance filed by the American Postal Workers Union and obtained by The Washington Post, the Postal Service was poised to decommission 671 of the massive machines, about 10 percent of its inventory, and capable of sorting 21.4 million pieces of paper mail per hour. The Postal Service, by comparison, processes as much as 500 million items each day.

    But Postal Service officials and industry insiders say the removals were part of a long-range plan, one that reflects Americans’ diminishing use for letters and growing reliance on package delivery.

    The 671 machines slated for removal were scattered across 49 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. The removals correlated closely with population: States with more people and, hence, a larger USPS footprint had more machines taken out. California had the greatest number, 76, followed by Florida (59), Texas (58) New York (52) and Ohio (34). Alaska is the only state with no machines on the list.

    According to data provided by the union, 618 of the 671 machines were to be disconnected by Aug. 1.

    While the Postmaster General’s announcement gave no indication whether previously disconnected machines were to be reinstated, emails obtained by The Washington Post show that Kevin Couch, a director of maintenance operations at the USPS, sent word to the agency’s maintenance managers on Tuesday afternoon that “they are not to reconnect/reinstall machines that have previously been disconnected without approval from HQ Maintenance, no matter what direction they are getting from their plant manager.”

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, after speaking with DeJoy on Wednesday, said in a statement that he “frankly admitted that he had no intention of replacing the sorting machines, blue mailboxes and other key mail infrastructure that have been removed.” Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer, meanwhile, has asked the postmaster general for a “specific, written document” that itemized the effects of DeJoy’s decision and whether machines would be reinstated.

    In Grand Rapids, Mich., reporter Heather Walker with WOOD-TV said that sorting machines were still being dismantled as of Wednesday morning, but the work had stopped by the afternoon.

    Data published in USPS reports submitted annually to the Postal Regulatory Commission show the agency typically decommissions dozens, sometimes hundreds, of machines each year. However, they also show that this year’s reductions in sorting capacity are larger than they were in prior years.

    In 2018, for instance, the agency decommissioned about 3 percent of its Delivery Bar Code Sorters, or 125 machines. In 2019, it was 5 percent, or 186 machines. The 671 on this year’s list amounted to about 13 percent.

    The agency “routinely moves equipment around its network as necessary to match changing mail and package volumes,” the Postal Service said in a statement. “Package volume is up, but mail volume continues to decline.”

    The machines can label and sort tens of thousands of letters, bills and ballots, each hour. They include:

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    Facer Canceller Systems, which label incoming mail with bar codes that allow workers to track items through processing.

    Bar Code Sorters, among the most common machines, sort labeled letter-size mail into Zip codes and even into delivery sequence for letter carriers.

    The Flat Sorting Machines and Flat Sequencing Machines, or FSS’s, perform similar tasks on larger-size paper mail, though they have run into trouble. A 2018 report by the Postal Service inspector general found that a decline in “flat” mail — paper mail larger than letter-size envelopes — made it difficult for the agency to hit its goals. Some mail handlers also say they find the expensive machines unreliable and prefer to sort flats by hand.

    Some postal workers worry that losing some of the machines could spell delays.

    “Those machines have done more to create efficiency than any other machine in the past couple decades,” said one letter carrier in Los Angeles, who asked not to be named out of fear of reprisal. “If the mail volumes have declined enough to justify [removals], then, fine, but you’ve also created less room for error if some of these machines break down.

    “And these machines are old,” the carrier said. “I have to imagine you’re creating a pretty slim margin for error if you’re removing machines, even if mail volumes have decreased.”

    The Postal Service has been streamlining its sorting equipment since the 2000s, when mail volume began to decline. The machine cuts often coincide with facility consolidations. A 2018 report from the Postal Service inspector general found that a “network rationalization plan” that involved facility consolidations and machine removals saved the agency $91 million, a hefty savings, but short of the $1.6 billion projected. The equipment reductions did, however, create valuable floor space for package processing.

    Mailing groups have hailed the reductions, saying the Postal Service has long held onto excess capacity that has slowed operations and inflated the cost of service.

    “As a general rule, our members believe that the Postal Service should be doing everything it can to encourage entry of commercial mail as deep into its network as it can, and to bypass postal operations to the maximum extent possible,” said Michael Plunkett, president and chief executive of PostCom, a national postal commerce advocacy group. “The more times the Postal Service has to handle it, the longer it stays in the Postal Service and network, then the more expensive it is. And honestly, the lower the service quality, the more times the Postal Service has to handle a piece of mail.”

    But union officials say the middle of a pandemic is the wrong time to remove equipment. Previous cuts mean the remaining ones are pressed into service more often and routinely need maintenance that isn’t always regularly performed.

    “I’m always hearing from mechanics and technicians all over the country that they’ve cut down on maintenance windows,” said Randy Zelnick, a retired USPS machine technician who runs the 21st Century Postal Worker blog. “And the demands come down on them. The bosses will say, ‘Get these machines back up and running.’ Well, if they let them do the maintenance, it never would have broken down. But it’s their right to mismanage.

    “The sad part is that we have a ton of pride of ownership,” he added. “We have mechanics who get assigned a few machines, and they like to keep them humming.”

    Jacob Bogage writes about business and technology for The Post, where he has worked since 2015. He previously covered the automotive and manufacturing industries and wrote for the Sports section.

    Christopher Ingraham writes about all things data. He previously worked at the Brookings Institution and the Pew Research Center.

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  2. APPTiger

    APPTiger still unable to post Geaux Tigers!

    Postal Union endorsed Biden. No way mail in voting will be fair. They are fully in bed with the Democrat party. All about losing people and losing revenue at the top. As usual, they only care about the worker when it hits their pockets.They are years behind in streamlining their operations and hate the new postmaster because he is not one of them.This article is a justification for that foot dragging.
     
  3. tirk

    tirk im the lyrical jessie james

    That guy is amazing.
     
    shane0911 and GiantDuckFan like this.
  4. Bengal B

    Bengal B Founding Member

    No for the hard part. Talk taint into being rational
     
  5. APPTiger

    APPTiger still unable to post Geaux Tigers!

    shane0911 and kcal like this.
  6. Winston1

    Winston1 Founding Member

    @shane0911 @LSUpride123 @Frogleg its interesting you react with such anger and don’t address the fact that so many formerly in Trump’s inner circle are now endorsing Biden or are against Trump in some way. Maybe they truly know what they’ve been talking about and that scares you because if it’s true you’ve been played. I’m sorry but you have. Try to read and listen to those who have said these things. Listen to his sisters one of whom is a retired federal judge.
    Being mad at me accomplishes nothing. You should know by know I’ll continue to call both Trump and the democrats on their betrayal of our country.
     
  7. Jmg

    Jmg Veteran Member

    do you more specific policy criticisms? like do you hate corporate tax cuts that grow the economy and allow the poor and marginalized to get jobs?
     
    shane0911 likes this.
  8. shane0911

    shane0911 Helping lost idiots find their village

    Well but his sister hates him, has for a very long time so yeah, when there is an ax to grind it just doesn't seem credible.

    You and anyone else that votes for Joe Biden is an absolute fool. You want to vote Jorgensen be my guest, write in Fred Flinstone I'm ok with that. You can even stay home if you want but if you are going to bring up "knowing what we know" and "being played" and in the same breath mention bumbling biden then you are the one truly being duped.
     
    APPTiger likes this.
  9. Winston1

    Winston1 Founding Member

    I’ve provided details for years. It’s a waste of time as those who will not listen won’t learn.
     
  10. Frogleg

    Frogleg Registered Best

    i don't recall being angry? I will say i don't put much stock in what people selling books and partisan, establishment bureaucrats say. By any reasonable measure Trump has delivered a more prosperous America, a more peaceful world, and has a lot of the swamp dwelling leaches running for cover.

    Deep down inside you know Trump is working hard for American prosperity and world peace. Vote Trump 2020.
     

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