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stillcool

(34,407 posts)
3. that's the plan...
Fri Aug 21, 2020, 07:45 PM
Aug 2020

they've been chipping away, and now they have taken out the sledgehammer.

How Susan Collins engineered the postal service disaster she’s now protesting
Published 1 min ago on August 19, 2020By Eric Cortellessa, The Washington Monthly

https://www.rawstory.com/2020/08/how-susan-collins-engineered-the-postal-service-disaster-shes-now-protesting/
As it turns out, Collins is actually one of the members of Congress most responsible for the Postal Service’s devastation. Long before DeJoy started manipulating the USPS, Collins was at the forefront of a bill that crippled the agency’s finances.

In 2005, she sponsored and introduced legislation, the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act (PAEA), that required the USPS to pre-pay the next 50 years worth of health and retirement benefits for all of its employees—a rule that no other federal agency must follow. As chair of the Senate oversight panel at the time, she shepherded the bill’s passage, along with her House GOP counterpart Tom Davis, during a lame-duck session of Congress. It passed by a voice vote without any objections—a maneuver that gave members little time to consider what they were doing.

To meet the mandate for prefunding USPS’s health and retirement benefits, the measure required the Postal Service to place roughly $5.5 billion into a pension fund every year between 2007 and 2016, followed by sizable additional payments, making it impossible for the institution to run a profit. To make it even harder for the USPS to make money, the law prohibited the agency from any new activities outside of delivering mail. In an essay for the Washington Monthly last year, New Jersey Congressman Bill Pascrell, who voted for the bill, called it “one of the worst pieces of legislation Congress has passed in a generation.”


That’s because it saddled the institution with debt that no other government agency—or private company—is responsible for. At the same time, it effectively blocked the USPS from taking advantage of new opportunities to provide services and garner revenue when it needed to make up for losses stemming from declines in first-class mail due to the rise of the Internet and email.

Now, the post currently has $160.9 billion in debt, of which $119.3 billion is the result of pre-funding retiree benefits. That was by design. As Pascrell wrote, “To argue that the Postal Service needs to be privatized, conservatives need to show that it is dysfunctional, and there’s no better way to do that than by weighing the agency down with impossible financial obligations.”

Recommendations

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Was his lying really obvious, or is it just me? Walleye Aug 2020 #1
+100000000000 progressive nobody Aug 2020 #5
He lied his ass off the entire time onecaliberal Aug 2020 #2
that's the plan... stillcool Aug 2020 #3
YEP!!! progressive nobody Aug 2020 #6
You do realize 201 House Democrats voted for the Bill, not one against it. Hoyt Aug 2020 #12
and does that change something? stillcool Aug 2020 #14
A bunch of Democrats sponsored the legislation. Surely you don't Hoyt Aug 2020 #15
I don't know what their intent was.. stillcool Aug 2020 #16
Yes they will. SheltieLover Aug 2020 #4
DeJoy has actually opened himself up to legal jeopardy as a result OnDoutside Aug 2020 #7
I can't believe CNN and MSNBC didn't show it. progressive nobody Aug 2020 #8
As long as they cover the one on Monday then I'm good. But yes, OnDoutside Aug 2020 #10
They should. progressive nobody Aug 2020 #11
They showed some because I saw it. Hoyt Aug 2020 #13
Yep, bust out. meadowlander Aug 2020 #9
Tht's what I was thinking. SharonAnn Aug 2020 #17
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Listening to DeJoy today ...»Reply #3