WASHINGTON -- The U.S. Postal Service is on the verge of financial collapse and should eliminate Saturday delivery, close thousands of local post offices, restructure its health plan and lay off 120,000 workers to survive, according to Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe.
Donahoe asked lawmakers to allow him to make "radical" changes to the centuries-old institution so it could avoid defaulting on its obligations. At a Senate hearing Tuesday, he said the Postal Service is all but certain to miss a $5.5 billion payment to its retiree health fund due at the end of the month. And that only begins the trouble, he said, warning that the postal system is heading toward a $10 billion net loss this fiscal year and is near its borrowing limit.
With operating cash running out quickly, trucks, mail processing centers and mail delivery could come to a halt by this time next year, Donahoe said.
"Failure to act could be catastrophic," Donahoe told members of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, which oversees the postal service.
The new proposals reflect heightened desperation at an agency that has been on the decline for years. The rise of email has dramatically curbed demand for old-fashioned letters, while competitive delivery companies have put the squeeze on the post office's business model. Last year, the post office delivered 171 billion pieces of mail, down 20 percent from just four years earlier. Volume is on track to fall an additional 2 percent this year.
But Donahoe put the blame for the current crisis on federal laws and labor agreements that he said unduly restrict his agency's ability to adapt and promise more than the postal service can deliver. Labor costs amount to 80 percent of the postal service's expenses, and current contracts contain a no-layoff provision. Changes to the frequency of service or delivery areas require federal legislation.
The postmaster's request arrived just as lawmakers returned from a summer break and appeared prepared to pick up where they left off -- in a fierce partisan battle over government spending and job creation. The post office crisis is likely to get thrown into the mix.
Democrats and Republicans are quick to express their support for postal services, but even the short-term measures under discussion are likely to find opposition.
The proposed changes to mail service likely will draw the broadest opposition. Representatives of the newspaper and magazine industry, both dependent on mail subscribers, told Congress to act carefully in eliminating Saturday delivery and post offices.
"We are concerned that rural America is being thrown overboard by a postal system too eager to lavish its assets onto highly competitive urban areas," Tonda Rush, director of public policy at the National Newspaper Association, said in a statement. "Within this context, the loss of Saturday residential delivery would be a major blow."
Postal unions also oppose much of Donahoe's plan.
The unions have seen the ranks of postal service employees fall by 130,000 already in the past four years. The layoffs Donahoe has proposed would amount to roughly one-fifth of the workforce.
They come just months after the current contracts were negotiated.