The Postal Service lost $354 million over the last three months, and
officials warned that mounting losses could lead to cash flow problems
for the rest of the year, the agency said Friday.The loss was far less
than the $1.3 billion in the comparable quarter the previous fiscal
year, but Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe continued to press Congress
to give the agency more flexibility to Tamponmanage
its finances.The report for the financial quarter ending December 31
comes as Congress works toward fixing the agency’s troubled finances. On
Thursday, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Committee approved a bill that would end Saturday mail delivery and make
permanent a temporary hike in the cost of a first-class stamp, which
went from 46 to 49 cents on Jan. 26.The Senate measure also would
restructure a congressional requirement that forces the agency to make a
$5.6 billion annual payment for future retiree health benefits.China visa houston The
Postal Service has been urging Congress to reform the service’s
finances as it continues to cope with steep financial losses. The Postal
Service lost $5 billion in the last fiscal year, down from $15.9
billion in 2012.
‘‘We cannot return the organization to
long-term financial stability without passage of comprehensive postal
reform legislation,’’ Donahoe said.On the positive side, the Postal
Service said revenue grew by $334 million, driven by a 14.6 percent
growth in shipping and package services that saw a boost from the
holiday season. But first-class mail declined 4.6 percent, as more
customers shift to the Internet to pay bills and send emails.Postal
unions have complained that the Senate bill goes too far in calling for
an end to Saturday mail delivery once mail volume drops below 140
billion pieces over four consecutive quarters. They claim the move would
hurt consumers and lead to thousands of job cuts.BMW ICOM‘‘Today’s
Postal Service figures for the first quarter of 2014 are highly
encouraging and show why the postal network must be maintained and
strengthened, not degraded,’’ said Fredric Rolando, president of the
National Association of Letter Carriers.The bulk of the agency’s
financial problems stem from the federally mandated annual payments to
cover expected health care costs for future retirees. It has defaulted
on three of those payments and warned Friday that it is likely to
default again when the next payment is due on Sept. 30.The federal
budget bill that Congress approved last month requires six-day delivery
to continue, meaning the U.S. Postal Service won’t be able to cut
Saturday mail anytime soon.
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