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View Full Version : USPS raising stamps to 39 cents!!! ...OMD!!!


Admin
04-10-2005, 05:23 AM
Postal Service Seeks 2-Cent Stamp Increase

WASHINGTON (AP) - The post office wants an extra 2-cents-worth for its stamps. However, at the same time Friday that the agency proposed the stamp price increase, it also invited Congress to eliminate the need for it. The proposal sent to the independent Postal Rate Commission calls for increases to take effect early next year.

They would boost first class stamps from 37 cents to 39 cents, increase post cards from 23 cents to 24 cents and raise other postal prices similarly.

In announcing the rate proposal the Postal Service said it is needed only because a 2003 law requires the agency to place $3.1 billion annually in an escrow account.

Postal officials have been urging Congress to drop that requirement and said they will withdraw the rate request if Congress does so.

Postage rates last went up June 30, 2002, rising from 34 cents to 37 cents for a typical first class letter.

Congress mandated the escrow requirement in 2003 when it passed a law reducing the amount of money the agency has to pay into its retirement system, which auditors said was being overfunded. Instead Congress ordered the money to be put into the escrow fund.

Elimination of that fund has been included in bills that would make other changes in postal operations, but Congress has not acted on the proposals.


``To continue to require the Postal Service to hold these funds in an escrow or other account would simply continue the overpayment and unfairly burden postal ratepayers,'' the post office's governing board said in a letter to Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, chairwoman of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.


Now that the post office has formally asked for a 5.4 percent increase, the Postal Rate Commission will hold hearings and collect information before ruling on the proposal. That process can take as long as 10 months, meaning that if the rate increase is approved it wouldn't take effect until early next year.


While electronic communications such as the Internet have taken some business from the post office, there has been an increase in advertising mail. Officials have said that were it not for the escrow requirement the agency would not need to seek an increase for at least another year.


Overall the post office had $68.9 billion in income last year and $65.8 billion in expenses. The agency handled more than 206 billion items last year, a number it expects to grow slightly. While first class mail will continue to decline, the agency expects advertising mail to grow and, for the first time, to exceed the number of first class items this year.


Rate changes in the proposal include:


First class: Increase 2 cents to 39 cents for first ounce, increase 1 cent to 24 cents for each additional ounce.


Post cards: Increase 1 cent to 24 cents.


Express mail: Increase lowest charge from $10.70 to $11.30.


Priority mail: Increase minimum charge from $3.85 to $4.05.


Parcel post: Raise lowest rate from $2.81 to $2.96.


Certified mail: Boost from $2.30 to $2.40.


Insurance: Raise minimum from $1.30 to $1.35.


Money order: Increase from 90 cents to 95 cents.


Registered mail: Raise from $7.50 to $12.75.


On the Net:


U.S. Postal Service: http://www.usps.com


Postal Rate Commission: http://www.prc.gov

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Dayuuum!

Holla

MndBdySoul
04-10-2005, 11:45 AM
Fuck the mail.

I use online billpay(free) through my bank.

Birthdays, holiday's, etc =Yahoo e-greetings.

I'm cheap. What can I say.

ERinger
04-10-2005, 11:50 AM
Damn! First gas now stamps. At this rate I'll be paying all my bill on the net, and sending e-cards for special ocassions. It's getting too expensive to live in this country.

seductive_tee
04-11-2005, 07:26 AM
I hardly use stamps.....but it's not shocking.

Admin
04-15-2005, 07:19 AM
*Big Worm will be hit, since he ships orders alot...
Holla

seductive_tee
04-15-2005, 07:53 AM
wait, this does affect as well when it comes to shipping.

Pamalicious
04-15-2005, 07:59 AM
There is also the clause that non-profits if they are personalizing mail will be charged first class rate.

Every non-profit in the country has banned together and sent the USPS some MAIL so they can get an understanding of the volume of mail we are talking.

it was fun getting like 2,000 pieces of mail together to send them a little package. We mail out over 40 million pieces of mail a year they need to QUIT!

Andre98
04-16-2005, 10:06 AM
I think it should be more. They should make it 45 cents with a clause that it can't be raised for ten years. That would give them a real big cash infusion, and they can once and for all get on level ground and work on streamlining operations.

I don't see how any text only communication is not emailed. It just doesnt make sense. But then again, I guess the spam phenonmenon has made the spam filters throw out legit mail as well. And the more we email, the more the postal service has to squeeze those that do still mail.

The spammers that can afford to snail mail know you at least will have to take the paper out of your box, guaranteeing that it will pass under your eyes at least for a second. You see the letters lately saying "Do not discard" LMAO!

Maybe it can be paralleled to reading as opposed to watching movies.... stay with me now.... the process of sitting down and writing out checks, mailing payments for bills.... does it promote better fiscal responsibility? I remember when I got my first checking account fresh out of school, and sat down to crank out the rent, ulities, etc... I think it served to remind me how important those bucks were. Now, I use the phone and web payments when I am hard up against the deadline, for those f*ckers that charge late fees, but I keep the checkbook handy, and like taking a bill from the box to the kitchen table and firing off a check ASAP.

The only thing I dont like about the mail is the dope that delivers to the house walks across my lawn and the patch of garden because the walkway comes up from the other side. He also delivers wrong mail too often... the house numbers skip more than the usual two from house to house... but damn, a regular mailman should be used to that. I got my neighbor's tax check! I be crossing my fingers that a neighbor doesn't get my occasional XX mail order.