Saturday, April 19, 2014

USPS Liberation Portal: Protest Noon–1pm, Sat., April 19: MainPostOffice, ...

USPS Liberation Portal: Protest Noon–1pm, Sat., April 19: MainPostOffice, ...: Portland Communities and Postal Workers United                contact:  Jamie Partridge 503-752-5112 cpwunited1@gmail.com       ...

Protest Noon–1pm, Sat., April 19: MainPostOffice, 715 NW Hoyt

Portland Communities and Postal Workers United                contact:  Jamie Partridge 503-752-5112
cpwunited1@gmail.com                                                                    
                                                                                                                       
April 19, 2014 –
Press Advisory
To contact US Postal Service management:
-Brenda Jackson, transportation manager (trucking), 503-294-2402
            -Lisa Shear, senior plant manager (mail handling and mail processing), 503-294-2206
            -T. Kim Anderson, Portland district manager,503-294-2500

Postal privatization protest at Main Office

What: “Creative Action” in post office lobby
When: Noon – 1pm, Saturday, April 19
Where: Main Post Office, 715 NW Hoyt (at Broadway)

“Postal truckers are losing their jobs to a profiteering, private corporation,” declared Jamie Partridge, a retired postal worker with Portland Communities and Postal Workers United.  “We protest the privatization of the public postal service.  We oppose the destruction of family wage, union jobs and the delay of the people’s mail.”

Portland postal truckers are being put on standby while the private, non-postal, non-union Dill's Star/ LAPO trucking company takes their work.  Dill's is headquartered in Vancouver, Washington.

“This privatization and union-busting is being carried out in the name of a phony financial emergency,” said Rev. John Schwiebert, one of the protesters planning the action.  “The security, safety, and timely delivery of the mail are all at risk.  Rural communities, seniors and the disabled, small businesses and low-income communities are hit the hardest.  Postal management needs to stop and reverse these closures, cuts, and subcontracts which are sending our beloved postal service into a death spiral.”

PCPWU is demanding that postal management reveal why a padded, no-bid contract was signed with a bankrupt company, which did not have the proper equipment, which had been rejected in the past for “poor performance and equipment deficiencies”, which was recently convicted of major labor law violations, and which is costing the USPS more to move the mail than if the postal service were to use postal employees.


(attached – letter to postal management)

Attachments:
untitled-[1.1].plain 3 k  [ text/plain ]  Download  |  View
140417 to Mgmt re trucking.pdf 252 k  [ application/pdf ]  Download

Friday, April 11, 2014

The Postal Service should remain a vital public service



  • Saturday, April 19 at 12:00pm - 1:00pm  at the Main Post Office in Portland Oregon...

    Join the "postal protectors" in sending a message to postal management that the Postal Service should remain a vital public service owned by the people rather than by profit-hungry private corporations. Bring a dollar to buy stamps. We'll supply the postcards, chants, songs, signs, banners and snacks.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Stop Privatization of the People's Postal Service April 19

Join the "postal protectors" in sending a message to postal management that the Post Service should remain a vital public service owned by the people rather than by profit-hungry private corporations. Bring a dollar to buy stamps. We'll supply the postcards, chants, songs, signs, banners and snacks.

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Privatizing Post Office Continues


Movement Towards Privatizing Post Office Continues

Around 8,800 post offices have already cut some hours during the past year and one half, 300 have scheduled public meetings and 3,900 have not scheduled a meeting or implemented any such changes. “If implementation continues at the current rate (about a hundred a month), some 600 of these post offices will have their hours reduced during the spring and summer,” SavethePostOffice says. To see an interactive map showing post offices planning to reduce services, click here.

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Save Our Postal Service: Stop Staples Privatization: Organize!


Staples logo
ON APRIL 24, a national day of actionSTOP STAPLESwill target the nation’s largest office
supply chain.


Staples has contracted with the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) to staff post offices installed within their stores. In pilot openings last fall, 82 post offices were launched inside Staples stores with low-paid, nonunion, non-postal workers (the average Staples worker makes $18,000 per year.
If the pilots are “successful,” the USPS plans to open post offices inside every one of the 1,600 Staples stores nationwide, beginning this September.



The postal service claims it is expanding service to postal customers by providing retail outlets in Staples stores, which are open evenings and on Sundays. The APWU, which represents postal retail workers, would accept the Staples deal if union-represented, highly trained, accountable and uniformed postal workers staffed the offices.




Friday, April 4, 2014

2014 Labor Notes Conference Update


"I'm at the Labor Notes Conference this weekend in Chicago; a couple of hundred of us from the conference will be joining the Staples picket tomorrow!
http://www.apwu.org/news/forthepress/pressrel140404-staples-chicago.htm
Hundreds of Chicago Postal Workers, Joined by Labor and Community Activists, Protest Outsourcing...
APWU.ORG

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

The Post Office is a public institution linked with protection of a free press.


The Postal Service Is a Civic Institution, Not a Business

Yet the critiques and suggestions offered as solutions for what ails the Postal Service see the problem only in terms of commercial and financial concerns.
Alexis Madrigal

         The U.S. Senate is debating proposals to reform the U.S. Postal Service
and change the way the USPS does business in order to make it more
profitable. Among other proposals are cutting Saturday delivery, closing half of its processing centers, shutting down dozens of local post offices and laying off thousands of workers.


These reductions in delivery services are ill-advised and will not address the fundamental problem: Congress assumes that this vital government service will somehow become profitable.

         In the midst of a long decline in the volume of mail, the Postal Service -- as a public institution with universal service throughout the United States -- has a difficult road ahead.

_________________________________________________________________________________

"Yet the critiques and suggestions offered as solutions for what ails the Postal Service see the problem only in terms of commercial and financial concerns. The circumstances of the Post Office's founding suggest a far broader and more important mission: guaranteeing the sanctity of civic participation and political debate.


...Shortly after Lexington and Concord in April 1775, the Continental Congress took up a post office as one of the earliest institutions of national reach -- making the U.S. Post Office older than the Navy, the Marines, and the Declaration of Independence.

...The delegates to the Constitutional Convention of 1787 saw the operation of information channels as a core function of government: the power "to establish post offices and post roads" is one of the explicitly named grants included among the enumerated powers of Congress.

...Understanding the core mission of the Post Office -- as part of a communications infrastructure for political debate and civic participation -- should lead us to reframe the questions we ask about the future of the USPS. Making changes to the USPS's structure are clearly necessary in order to ensure its ability to meet its obligations. But the historical context should lead us to ask much larger questions about government's role in protecting the free circulation of information.  

In the 18th century, the government committed itself to guaranteeing the free flow of information throughout the nation as part of a project to ensure mass participation in civic life, linking the Post Office with the protection of a free press. The decline in mail volume points to a certain inevitability about the commercial success of the USPS. But more broadly we must carefully consider the value of publicly owned, freely available channels of communication. Should the Post Office cease to exist, we will lose the last public guarantor of free communication in the United States. 
"


theatlantic.com/national/archive/2012/04/the-postal-service-is-a-civic-institution-not-a-business/256306/
___________________________________________________________________________

     

A New Postal Alliance!

A new postal unity
Retired letter carrier Jamie Partridge reports on a new alliance that aims to combine the rank-and-file power of all four postal workers' unions.
Gathered in Chicago for the APWU national day of action in 2012 (Carole Ramsden | SW)Gathered in Chicago for the APWU national day of action in 2012 (Carole Ramsden | SW)

"THE U.S. Postal Service is under unprecedented attack...The four postal unions stand together to end the attack." The mid-March proclamation of "A Postal Union Alliance" might seem just common sense to the outside observer, but to rank-and-file postal workers and their allies, it was a huge breath of fresh air.



Since the solidarity pickets and joint bargaining of the years following the 1970 strike, the American Postal Workers Union (APWU), National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC), National Postal Mail Hhttp://socialistworker.org/2014/03/25/a-new-postal-workers-unityhttp://socialistworker.org/2014/03/25/a-new-postal-workers-unityandlers Union (NPMHU) and National Rural Letter Carriers Association (NRLCA) have been moving apart, with separate contracts, bargaining and timelines, different legislative priorities and separate mobilizations.
(details:  
http://uspsactivismresource.blogspot.com/2014/03/a-new-postal-alliance.html)

Postal management has effectively "whipsawed" the unions against each other, reducing the workforce by one-third, dismantling half the mail-processing plants, and contracting out postal trucking, janitorial and mail handling piecemeal.



Now, thanks to a new activist APWU leadership, intent on unifying and mobilizing all postal workers, a detailed unity statement has been signed and a unified national day of action declared for April 24.



The last time the postal unions staged a unified national day of action was in 2011, in response to the postmaster general's announcement that he would close half the mail plants and half the post offices. Since that time, however, the APWU and the NALC have been divided on legislative strategy, supporting competing amendments to postal legislation and coming down on opposite sides of the 2012 bill that passed in the Senate.



In 2012, the APWU called for a national day of action, which was not supported by the NALC. In 2013, the NALC called for a national day of action, which was not supported by the APWU. Meanwhile, the PMG "consolidated" half the mail plants and eliminated full-service hours at half the post offices.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

ON APRIL 24, a national day of action--STOP STAPLES--will target the nation's largest office supply chain.



Staples has contracted with the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) to staff post offices installed within their stores. In pilot openings last fall, 82 post offices were launched inside Staples stores with low-paid, nonunion, non-postal workers (the average Staples worker makes $18,000 per year. If the pilots are "successful," the USPS plans to open post offices inside every one of the 1,600 Staples stores nationwide, beginning this September.



The postal service claims it is expanding service to postal customers by providing retail outlets in Staples stores, which are open evenings and on Sundays. The APWU, which represents postal retail workers, would accept the Staples deal if union-represented, highly trained, accountable and uniformed postal workers staffed the offices.



But the USPS-Staples deal is not about service or a secure, stable workforce. The USPS has reduced the hours or closed half the public post offices in the nation over the last two years. Some 1,200 public post offices are within two miles of a Staples store. This deal is about shifting postal service from the public to the private sector.



The proclamation of postal union unity details a number of new agreements. The unions commit to work together to maintain six-day and home delivery, which is threatened by current congressional bills scheduled for vote.



"Protect and restore service standards and mail processing facilities" is a pledge to re-open closed plants and "End the corporate welfare of excessive pre-sort discounts" refers to the decades-old outsourcing of mail processing. Both of these commitments are new for the NALC.



The proclamation further pledges a common front for postal reform legislation, joint actions, unity with other unions in defense of all workers, maximum cooperation in the next round of contract negotiations, and an alliance with the American people in defense of the public postal service.



Read whole story:  
socialistworker.org/2014/03/25/a-new-postal-workers-unity

Return to TPA...  http://www.ThePortlandAlliance.org/2014/March/

More information: http://www.ThePortlandAlliance.org/postoffice

Friday, February 21, 2014

SAVE OUR POST OFFICE


On Feb. 18th we delivered over 128,000 petitions to Sen. Jon Tester (D) MT. from the Save Our Post Office movement.  The post office is showing signs of slowing down on its downsizing.  However we believe that is because 2014 is an election year.  We must keep pressing forward.  Please sign and share our petition for the state of Missouri as we are targeting them next. 
As always keep sending your letters and cards to SAVE OUR POST OFFICE, P.O. Box 5041, Terre Haute, IN 47805
Thank you!