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Tuesday, September 06, 2011

Bailout for the Post Office?

On Wednesday Thursday, President Obama is scheduled to give a speech on jobs and the economy.  The timing of this speech coincides with news that the post office is set to default on a $5.5 billion dollar payment to their retiree health benefits fund.  The possible default emerges because what has been a possibility for many years has finally come to fruition: the post office has run out of money and is basically bankrupt.  Given the political climate, however, I can think of no worse time for any entity to need a bailout, even one as heavily regulated as the U.S. Post Office.  

In my mind, the upcoming jobs speech is an added complication for post office officials.  President Obama, by some reports, may be planning to ask for what is essentially another stimulus including, for example, infrastructure investments, payroll tax cuts, and extensions in unemployment benefits.  But I wonder if the post office, which also needs a bailout of sorts, will fall victim to the nasty politics that are sure to follow in the wake of the President’s speech if he does ask for these things.  In fact, there has not been bipartisan support for some of the proposals we have heard thus far about how to make the post office solvent again, and I suspect that, like the debt ceiling negotiations, the post office will become another political pawn that each side will try to use for its own political gain.  Maybe I am wrong, but who knew that raising the debt ceiling could become as politicized as it did?  It will be interesting to see how all of this unfolds in the coming weeks.            

With that, I wrap up my last post.  Thanks again to Dan for letting me hang around for a little while!  It has been a blast.  

 

Posted by Franita Tolson on September 6, 2011 at 10:10 AM | Permalink

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Comments

1) if the post offices close, how will we know where we live?
2) if the post offices close, how will the taxing authorities know where we live?
3) if the post offices close, who will maintain the intricate zip code system by which the selective service, the census, the INS, and every other government agency relies upon to find anyone?
4) does anyone really think that electronic PDAs can replace physical addresses, especially in an age when fewer and fewer people are buying homes and staying in them?
5) if we uproot the population from physical addresses and post offices, then it necessarily follows that the Federal Government would have to insist on a National Identity Card with a locatable chip--but this exceeds the enumerated powers of Article I of the US Constitution, whereas the Postal Power is specifically enumerated in Article I.

For many years, the five main members of the Presidential Cabinet included State, War, Navy, Treasury and Postmaster General, at least to 1900.

Ron Howard

Posted by: ron howard | Sep 7, 2011 9:59:04 PM

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