Tuesday, April 01, 2025
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More than 100 rural letter carriers gathered to rally against USPS privatization. (The Daily Yonder photo) |
Rural letter carriers from around the country gathered last week at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. to “rally in support of the U.S. Postal Service, which they said faces an increasing threat of privatization under President Donald Trump,” reports Julia Tilton for The Daily Yonder. “The rally was attended by members of Congress from both sides of the aisle.”
The event also announced the “launch of the NRLCA’s National Campaign to Protect the U.S. Postal Service from Privatization, which the union said is its top priority to preserve what it calls a ‘critical institution that serves rural America and the country at large,'” Tilton writes. “Approximately 51.3 million rural addresses would be disproportionately impacted by the privatization of the USPS, according to NRLCA National President Don Maston.”
Part of the USPS service mandate is to get mail and packages across the “last miles,” which can add to delivery expenses. Tilton explains, “It is unprofitable for private companies to deliver mail to the end of long dirt roads located 50 or 100 miles from the nearest post office, Maston said. Privatization would add surcharges to such rural deliveries, which include essential goods like prescription medications and documents like Social Security checks and ballots.”
Maston told the Yonder: “Rural Americans rely on rural carriers. In fact, the entire community relies on the rural carrier, and that sense of community would be taken away, and the disproportionately impacted group in the Postal Service would be rural carriers, rural Americans, and rural communities.”
Rally speakers “called for bipartisan support for House Resolution 70, a resolution in the House of Representatives that affirms the Postal Service’s role as a federal institution and opposes privatization,” Tilton adds. “Since being introduced at the end of January, the resolution has garnered 180 cosponsors. . . . After the rally, more than 100 rural postal workers headed to meetings with members of Congress to ask for their support in backing the USPS.”
That’s what they voted for let a billionaire cut their jobs while old Elon keeps getting taxpayers money faster than they can print it Hoopleheads.