Title: THE REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT
1THE REPORT OF THE PRESIDENTS POSTAL COMMISSION
- Bruce Moyer
- NAPS Legislative Counsel
2Postal Commission Report
- What Does It Say?
- Whats Likely to Happen Next?
- Where Does NAPS Stand?
- What Should I Do?
3Why a Postal Commission?
- Mailers urged Bush to name Commission
- Big postage increase looming/bailout?
- Potential political liability for White House
- Precedent Kappel Commission, 1970 Act
- Would push responsibility to Congress
- Established Dec. 11, 2002 EO 13278
4Commission Structure Process
- Nine-member, bipartisan commission
- Co-chairs James Johnson and Harry Pearce
- Short Life (7 months) - July 31 report due
- Mission to ensure the efficient operation of
the USPS while minimizing the financial exposure
of the American taxpayers - Four subcommittees
5 Commission Structure Process
- Nine public meetings (70 witnesses / NAPS)
- Public comment process
- Outside consultant reports
- Visits to postal facilities
- Subcommittee/co-chair recommendations
- Report issued July 31 posted on website
6NAPS Recommendations To Postal Commission (Feb.
2003)
- Preserve six-day delivery and monopoly
- Retain USPS control of upstream mail processing
facilities - Consolidate some post offices
- Reduce workplace grievances
- Expand pay-for-performance to all levels
- Give USPS greater flexibility to set prices
- Reduce Inspector General expenses
7Embracing the Future Making the Tough Choices
to Preserve Universal Mail Service
- Serious-minded, balanced report
- 15-20 year horizon
- Universal mail service at risk
- Ambitious overhaul of USPS required
- Tough choices without modernization
- Biggest threat Being too timid, incremental
-
8Overall Findings/Recommendations
- Universal postal service is at risk
- USPS should remain a public institution
- Postal monopoly clarify and narrow it over time
- Core value Universal mail service
- Best corporate leadership business practices
- Broader oversight, simplified rate-setting
- Overhaul of 1950s era postal network
9Universal Service at Risk The Primary
Challenges
- Rising operating costs vs. declining First-Class
volume - Electronic diversion is accelerating volume
decline - Bill payment most vulnerable subcategory
- Labor/infrastructure costs are outpacing revenue
growth - Stagnant revenues significant barrier to
breaking-even - Postal law (archaic ratemaking) predates the
internet - Entrenched interests no postal reform in 30
years -
10Universal Service at Risk A New Business Model
- Realign and redeploy USPS with
- Sophisticated technology
- Experienced and capable leadership
- Skilled workforce
- Additional partners
- Aggressive productivity, cost-savings strategies
11Core Modern Purpose of USPS
- Delivery of high-quality, essential
- postal services
- To all persons and communities
- By the most cost-effective and efficient means
possible - At affordable and, where appropriate, uniform
rates.
12Modernize, Not Privatize
- Entire privatization poses substantial risks
- Remain independent federal organization
- Retain self-sustaining mandate
- Adopt best practices throughout organization
- Maintain but clarify (and review) monopoly
- Extend monopoly to envelopes falling within
weight (12-oz.) and price (6X 1st-class stamp)
limits - Retain sole access to customer mailboxes
13Goal Affordable Universal Service
- Product coverage delivery of only traditional
governmental mail products and services - Uniform rates (but reviewed)
- Six-day delivery
- Retail access beyond post offices
- More private sector partners
- Logistics and delivery
- Retail
- Worksharing
-
14Best-Execution, Business Leadership
- USPS 11th on Fortune 500 (66B in revenues)
- 2nd largest American employer
- Empowered, accountable managers
- Strong, strategic Board of Directors, focused on
oversight, accountability big picture - Enhanced oversight/financial transparency
- SEC financial reporting requirements
15Expanded Accountability and Public Oversight
- Powerful Postal Regulatory Board (PRB)
- Would replace Postal Regulatory Commission
- Broad authority over
- Rates and cross-subsidies
- Monopoly
- Financial transparency
- Universal service
- Service standards
- Retained earnings
- Employee pay comparability
16Expanded Accountability and Public Oversight
- Simplify the Rate-Setting Process
- Establish after-the-fact review of
non-competitive products - Must fall within rate ceilings based on
inflation/productivity - Incentive-based regulatory system
- Reduce from 18-months to 2-months
- Reexamine size/cost of Inspector General
17Smaller, Stronger Postal Network
- Current network aging, too large,
cost-inefficient - Rationalize the network
- Most tangible/important deliverable of
Transformation - Rightsizing and Standardization Strategy
- Reduce high, fixed infrastructure costs
- Consolidate plants
- Close low-volume post offices unnecessary for USO
- End-to-end network standardization common
footprint - Improve service consistency, efficiencies,
productivity - Leverage private sector worksharing,
outsourcing, NSAs - Improve real estate and procurement efforts
- Pursue intelligent mail applications
18Postal Network Optimization Commission (P-NOC)
- Defense base closure-like commission for plants
but not for post offices - Commission gives latitude to USPS leadership
to make tough closure decisions - Reality Insulates USPS from Hill interference
and gives Hill political cover - Two rounds of consolidations/closures (more
possible) - 9 members (8 selected by President 1 by unions)
- Establishment would require Congressional
approval
19P-NOC Process
- USPS sets decision-making criteria
- 4-month commission process
- Public meetings to hear from affected communities
- Presidential approval of list
- Congressional approval assumed, unless specific
rejection of entire list - USPS implementation within 12 months
- Employee soft-landing/facility transition
assistance
20Low-Activity Post Offices
- Not covered by P-NOC process
- Close, unless necessary for USO
- Give USPS disposal flexibility
- Repeal economic ban on PO closures and avoid
limitations in appropriations laws - Tradeoff Expand retail access (24/7)
- USPS sale or transfer of property to locals
-
21Creating a Leaner Workforce and
Controlling Costs
- The critical issue for controlling future USPS
costs - PRB pay comparability to cover wages and
benefits - Two-tiered system for current and future craft
workers - No layoff protection for future employees
- Shorten collective bargaining use med/arb
LBFO - Bargain for retirement and retiree FEHBP benefits
- Repeal USPS responsibility for military pensions
- Expand pay-for-performance to craft/Reduce
grievances - Increase executive compensation - repeal salary
cap - Rein in workers compensation liabilities
- Realign and reduce management ranks
22What Does All This Mean?Whats Likely to Happen
Next?
- Overall reaction solid, serious report
- Commission adopted most NAPS recommendations
- The ball now is in Congress court White House
off-hook - Most recommended changes require Congressional OK
- No postal crisis makes legislative action
uncertain - Entrenched interests may continue to block reform
- Unions oppose all changes in bargaining, economic
security - Piecemeal reform possible
- Postal governance, ratesetting flexibility
- USPS discretion on plant consolidation remains
23Where Does NAPS Stand?President Palladino
Statement
- Useful report that validates serious challenges
to mail, governmental character, and need to
modernize - Support for rate flexibility, expansion of
pay-for-performance and closure of low-volume
POs - Opposition to powerful PRB, pay comparability
authority - Opposition to P-NOC
- Should include post offices within review
authority - Or continue to vest closure authority in PMG
- Commitment to work with Congress and USPS for
responsible postal reform
24What Should I Do?
- Educate Congress about NAPS views
- Contact Members local office and Washington
- Dont wait until the LTS!
- Arrange Congressional visits to your facility
- Stay informed Read NAPS Legislative News
- www.naps.org