“Save America’s Postal Service” logo on front.
APWU, NALC, NPMHU & NRLCA logos on the back with “United September 27, 2011” message.
Indianapolis Area Local #130
159 E PROSPECT ST.
INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA 46203-2053
317-634-1783
“Save America’s Postal Service” logo on front.
APWU, NALC, NPMHU & NRLCA logos on the back with “United September 27, 2011” message.
Indianapolis Area Local #130
159 E PROSPECT ST.
INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA 46203-2053
317-634-1783
Want your little one’s to receive a letter or card from Santa? Just write them a letter from Santa, put it in a stamped envelope addressed to your little one and mail them in a larger envelope to:![]()
North Pole Holiday Cancelation
Postmaster
4141 Postmark Dr.
Anchorage, AK 99530-9998
The larger envelope will be opened, the sealed envelopes inside will be postmarked with a special ‘North Pole’ postmark and mailed back to your little one.
You can send postcards too.
The service is free (except for your stamps…remember to put the correct postage on the large envelope and all the envelopes inside) but be sure to mail your envelopes so that they will arrive in Alaska by Dec., 10. Be sure to use stamps and not pre-stamped envelopes or metered postage.
Happy Holidays
GlennDL
IndyInfo Article: October/December Issue under the title “The Postal Crisis: The Issues”
see also previous post/article here: “The Postal Crisis: The Issues”
| Is It the Recession? Whenever the Postmaster addresses Congress, makes a video or gives an interview it is sometimes hard to tell if he’s trying to save the post office or sell it off. Blame it on the recession, low volume or the internet one minute then blame it on labor cost, manpower the next.
It is interesting that everything the Postal Service is asking Congress for and everything that the Congressional right-wing is advocating for has been on their agenda over the last 10-30 years! Apparently the recession driven drop in volume is a convenient catalyst to their public argument that the post office is poor performing, bloated and wasteful in spite of the fact that it is the only successful self-sustaining government entity in this countries history. As problematic as some of the items mentioned above are they do not require the dismantling of the Postal Service, nor do they warrant the attacks on postal workers and their collective bargaining rights. The post office can weather those storms and continue on. It Is Not The Recession. To understand how we got here, where things have gotten so bad so quickly, you need to strain your memory and remember all the bad decisions and choices upper management has made since you have been at the Post Office. You then have to look at all of the political attacks that have occurred through the Presidents Commission on Postal Reform, Senate Bill 1507, etc. and most importantly the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006 (PAEA). |
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| Now compare how things have changed:
Now add the observations above, your knowledge of the inaccuracy and misleading statements from politicians and consider this: How Privatization Works:
Sound familiar? |
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Since President Ronald Reagan floated the ideal of Postal Privatization it has been out there, it has not gone away it has just gone unnoticed. It has been the great conspiracy to unionist and the mythical 'boogie-man' to skeptical postal workers, but the threat is real. Most postal workers see little logic in the ideal that any private company would want to take over any of the non-revenue producing postal operations. It doesn't make since to privatize when the majority of operations would have to go back on the tax roles as the few revenue producing operations were sold off. But it doesn't have to make since it just has to make money for the special interest. An uninformed public would be none-the-wiser. |
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While some privatization of some government services does make since most of it is a smoke screen for creating profit opportunities at the expense of government services. The privatization of the postal service would not necessarily be a case of revenue generating operations being sold off to profiteers and the postal workers who survived the lay-offs being moved to non-revenue operation as government paid postal employees. The ideal that corporate America could not find a way to make money off of the non-revenue generating operations such as transportation and plant operations is short sighted. Evidence of how it could be done is already in existence, it’s called sub-contracting. The privatization of the postal service could create an industry that would rival the military industrial complex of the cold-war era. Postal employees who are gambling on surviving the take-down of the post office are going to be in for the same shock that tax payers will realize when the dust settles. I have gone through privatization before (as a city employee), but I don't have a crystal ball, so I can't say exactly what will happen. I can only speculate what might happen and tell you that while the above is a worst case scenario I can guarantee you that privatization is never fair, seldom predictable and always politically motivated. The threat is real and all you have to do to see it is look at the logic and implementation of the PAEA, its devastating effect on our revenue and the never ending right-wing assault on unions, public employees and the Postal Service. While I am willing to go deeper into the motives behind privatization and other ways it could play out those are arguments for another article at another time. The Attacks Continue: H.R.2309 On September 21, 2011 the House Postal Subcommittee passed H.R.2309 out of the subcommittee. The vote was 8-5 with all 8 Republicans voting for the bill (including Rep. Dan Burton (R-IN)) and 5 Democrats voting against. The bill was co-Sponsored by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Darrell Issa (R-CA) and the sub-committee chair Rep. Dennis Ross (R-FL) both Republicans. Passage of the original bill would have had a devastating effect on the Postal Service as we know it and would do little to fix the main source of the Postal Services woes, the PAEA of 2006. But to make matters worse prior to the vote Rep. Issa amended the bill to include even more controversial provisions than the original bill. That amended provision grants authority to a newly-established control board to carry out layoffs, overriding the no-layoff protection contained in postal union contracts. |
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The bill also creates two unelected entities that would have the authority to carry out lay-offs, cut pay and reduce benefits. These entities would circumvent Congressional oversight and our collective bargaining rights, i.e., the contract. see also: |
Beginning Nov. 23, 2011, mandatory overtime will end for many APWU-represented employees.
In accordance with the 2010-2015 Collective Bargaining Agreement, full-time regular career Clerk Craft and Motor Vehicle Craft employees who work in an installation and functional area with Non-Traditional Full-Time assignments cannot be required to work overtime (except in an emergency), unless they are on the Overtime Desired List. If just one clerk in any station or branch occupies a NTFT duty assignment, clerks working in Function 4 throughout the installation cannot be required to work mandatory overtime unless they are on the OTDL. If only one clerk in mail processing occupies a NTFT duty assignment, then no non-OTDL clerks in Function 1 can be required to work mandatory overtime.
There is no “December exception” for this mandatory overtime prohibition.
“Emergencies” are defined in Article 3 as, “An unforeseen circumstance or a combination of circumstances which calls for immediate action in a situation which is not expected to be of a recurring nature.”
Summary of NOTES FROM THE SENATE COMMITTEE ON HOMELAND SECURITY AND GOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS
MARKUP OF S. 1789 click here to see expanded notes
Comments (take them or leave them)
Amendments adopted:
Motion to require congressional oversight of postal contracts.
Amendment: On the transparency of contracts between the USPS and contractors. I was told I can't look at the contracts the USPS has with UPS and Fedex. The only person who can see the contracts is the House subcommittee chairman with postal oversight responsibility. This is offensive to the Senate. This amendment very simply that UPS cannot enter into a contract with the USPS without Senate oversight.
+++The Levin amendment to require congressional oversight of all postal contracts was adopted.
Pryor: Motion to require the Postal Service to explain its rationale for not adhering to a PRC advisory opinion.
+++The Pryor amendment to require the Postal Service to explain its rationale for not adhering to a PRC advisory opinion was adopted.
Moran: Motion to suspend the closing of post offices until the establishment of retail service standards is established.
+++The Moran-Tester-Collins-Pryor-Begich-McCaskill amendment to suspend the closing of post offices until the establishment of retail service standards is adopted (i.e., including consideration of alternative service provisions).
Akaka: Motion to strike section 103 (relating to Medicare coverage for Postal Service Medicare eligible annuitants).
+++The Akaka motion to strike section 103 (relating to Medicare coverage for Postal Service Medicare eligible annuitants) was adopted.
Amendments NOT Adopted
McCain: Motion to authorize the USPS to move to five-day delivery.
- - - The McCain amendment to permit five-day delivery was not adopted.
Akaka: Motion to strike provisions regarding FECA (workers compensation)
- - -The Akaka amendment to strike provisions regarding FECA (workers compensation) was not adopted.
Paul: Motion to end the mailbox monopoly and allow customers to choose who can deposit mail. The mail box is private property and the owner decides how is should be used.
- - - The Paul amendment to affirm private property rights over the mailbox was defeated.
Amendments Withdrawn (may be re-introduced):
Johnson: Motion to strike additional service credits.
(Motion withdrawn by the sponsor(Johnson?) for later possible consideration.)
Begich: Motion to clarify the meaning of comparability in the law for arbitration.
(Motion withdrawn by the sponsor for later possible consideration.)
Begich: Motion to state that in Title 39 there should be no limits on the factors to be considered in arbitration.
(Motion withdrawn by the sponsor for later possible consideration.)
The Postal Crisis: Manufactured Myth
Legislation in Regards to the Postal Service:
UPDATE:
Senate Committee To Vote On 21st Century Postal Service Act
The Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs will begin its mark up on Nov. 9 of 21st Century Postal Reform Act (S. 1789).
The bill, introduced by Sens. Joseph I. Lieberman (I-CT), Susan Collins (R-ME), Thomas Carper (D-DE) and Scott Brown (R-MA) on Nov. 2, provides short-term financial relief to the USPS, but also would inflict long-term damage to the nation’s mail system.
The bill would return overpayments made to the Federal Employees Retirement System, but it would not return overpayments to the Civil Service Retirement System.
Although the bill does not include several of the most odious parts of a bill pending in the House (H.R. 2309), by failing to provide more substantial financial relief, it would force the USPS to dismantle its network and impose severe cuts in service to the American people.
APWU News Bulletin 27-2011, Nov. 4, 2011
from the NALC:
from: APWU Web News Article 125-2011, Nov. 2, 2011
Legislative and Political Director Myke Reid said the union is analyzing the legislation (S. 1789).
[Click here to read a section-by-section summary.] [Click here to read a general summary.]
Four U.S. senators unveiled postal legislation on Nov. 2 that will have important implications for APWU members. Sens. Joseph I. Lieberman (I-CT), Susan Collins (R-ME), Thomas Carper (D-DE) and Scott Brown (R-MA) outlined major provisions of the 21st Century Postal Service Act [PDF], which combines features of earlier legislation sponsored by Sen. Carper and Sen. Collins.
WASHINGTON — A bipartisan group of senators will announce plans to reform and bring savings to the United States Postal Service tomorrow, November 2 at 11:30am. Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Joe Lieberman, ID-Conn., Ranking Member Susan Collins, R-Maine, Federal Financial Management Subcommittee Chairman Tom Carper, D-Del., and Ranking Member Scott Brown, R-Mass., will unveil their compromise agreement to pull the USPS from the brink of financial failure.
When:
Wednesday, November 2, 11:30 a.m.
Update: Postcom.org has posted some details of what the bill will contain
The following are just some of the details that have been reported regarding tomorrow’s announcement of a Senate bi-partisan approach to postal reform:
