The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) plans to implement significant budgetary measures and workforce reductions, as detailed in a recent letter from Postmaster General Louis DeJoy to Congress. The plans involve cutting 10,000 USPS employees and billions in operating costs, with assistance from Elon Musk‘s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). This initiative aims to address ongoing financial challenges within the $78 billion-a-year agency.
The agreement includes collaboration with the General Services Administration (GSA) to identify further efficiencies. The letter outlines several USPS issues, such as mismanagement of retirement assets and challenges related to regulatory compliance. DeJoy emphasized the complexity of the agency’s problems, highlighting the need for ongoing reform.
The National Pulse reported last April that DeJoy sought a new stamp price increase after raising the cost of a first-class stamp three times in less than two years to stymie the USPS’s ongoing revenue problems. DeJoy said the hike was needed after the then-Biden government ditched USPS reforms enacted during President Donald J. Trump’s first term in office.
Currently, USPS employs approximately 640,000 workers and plans to initiate a voluntary early retirement program to manage the workforce reduction. The agency has previously undertaken significant cost-cutting measures, including reducing 30,000 employees in 2021. These efforts aim to adapt to the decline in first-class mail usage, though calls for USPS privatization and potential control by the Commerce Department have been a point of contention.
Brian L. Renfroe, President of the National Association of Letter Carriers, expressed openness to addressing USPS’s challenges but stood against privatization efforts. Renfroe emphasized preserving jobs and maintaining universal postal service as essential priorities.