Mail center employees rally against job losses

Mail center employees rally against job losses

ANDREW SHURTLEFF — THE DAILY PROGRESS

Postal workers picket outside the U.S. Post Office on U.S. 29 against plans to consolidate the mail processing distribution center in Albemarle County with a Richmond plant.

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More than 50 postal workers from the Charlottesville region rallied alongside U.S. 29 on Sunday to protest the possible closure of the Albemarle County Airport Road mail processing center.

“Every day I come to work and work hard,” said Tom Thorpe, a Charlottesville resident and postal worker since 1988. “I’m close to retirement. But I might have to move.”

Several postal workers said they are worried about losing their jobs or being forced to relocate to Richmond. They are also concerned that the quality of mail delivery would sharply decline in the Charlottesville area.

Many of the postal workers carried picket signs that read “SOS” — an acronym for “Save Our Service” — and such slogans as “Keep the Service in C’Ville” and “Don’t Close Down Our Post Office.” The Charlottesville Area Local 1657 of the American Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO, organized Sunday’s protest in front of the main post office on U.S. 29.

A U.S. Postal Service study recommended in October that the Charlottes-ville-area mail processing facility should be closed and its operations consolidated at a new facility outside Richmond to save costs and boost efficiency.

“The study results support consolidating some mail processing operations that are currently being performed at the Charlottesville [plant] by taking advantage of available processing capacity at the Richmond [plant] in order to increase efficiency and improve productivity,” postal officials said in an Oct. 30 statement.

The move would result in a annual savings of $10.4 million and would have “minimal impact” on services, such as mail delivery times, retail services and hours of operation in the Charlottesville region, according to postal service documents.

The Albemarle mail processing facility has 181 jobs. The proposed consolidation of the facility with the Richmond-area facility — located in Sandston — would result in a net decrease of 68 jobs.

A public hearing on the possible changes is scheduled for 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Martin Luther King Jr. Performing Arts Center at Charlottesville High School.

The postal service has been struggling with an “acute financial crisis,” according to documents that will presented at Wednes-day’s meeting. Partly contributing to the postal service’s financial woes are of the growth in electronic communication, the ongoing economic recession and a decline in first-class mail volume, the documents show.

The postal service saw a 29 percent drop in first-class single volume mail between fiscal 1998 and 2008.

In the third quarter of fiscal 2009, the service lost $2.4 billion. Preliminary figures showed in late October that the service may finish the fiscal year as much as $7 billion in the red.

According to the postal service documents, the proposed consolidation reduces costs, improves efficiency and “puts the right people in the right place with the right resources.”

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Flag Comment Posted by antiboyd on November 17, 2009 at 12:18 am

Quite honestly, the USPS as currently configured, is not needed. Had it been a private concern standing on its own, it would have developed a diversified strategy, and possibly have survived. There is still, for example, a Western Union.

What I don’t understand is the large investment in bricks and mortar and equipment on Airport Road, so quickly being unneeded—and the horrible service endured by this area despite constant reconfiguration of the delivery and sorting systems.

My advice is that the USPS be privatized, or shut down by 2012.

Flag Comment Posted by Bob on November 16, 2009 at 11:16 pm

How much would you work for when a small screw up (which would be overlooked anywhere else) is a federal crime carrying fines and/or jail time?

Working for the USPS isn’t much different than working at the Walmart distribution center. Everything’s measured down to the second.

Other than management (which is non-union) there is very little dead wood.

For the record the USPS is not run by Government Appointees. 

The only appointees are on the “Board of Governors” and only 9 of the 11 positions are appointed by a President and confirmed by congress.  Further they have very little to do with the day to day operations.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Postal_Service#Current_operations

Flag Comment Posted by saltydog on November 16, 2009 at 11:46 am

Seems to be a theme… overpaid union workers and the business losing money…

I wonder if there is a correlation.

Maybe what we should do is let the USPS run an ad in the Hook, describing the jobs and let people reverse bid to see how much less they will do the same job for.

I would imagine there would be lots of people lined up to take the jobs at 50% of what these folks are paid now.

The most stressful thing about working for the post office is having to put up with all the dead wood, the union rules and the incompetent government appointees running the thing.

If you work there and are upset, blame the union for making such unreasonable demands for the last 50 years.

Flag Comment Posted by BigAl on November 16, 2009 at 8:15 am

I’ll bet the Pony Express workers protested when the railroads came along, to no avail.

I’ll bet the railroad workers protested when air travel/air mail came along, to no avail.

Now the postal workers protest when the internet comes along and the express delivery services eat their lunch…to no avail.

Victims of progress are the collateral damage of progress, but progress will always, always, always triumph. There’s no logical argument to be made for maintaining a beefy postal service.

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