The report called on the Postal Service to work with Congress and other organizations to develop and implement a restructuring plan.
The post office issued a statement saying: “The GAO High Risk List announcement accurately reflects our current financial reality. Securing the fiscal stability of the Postal Service will require continued review of retiree health benefit prefunding, as well as gaining flexibility within the law to move toward five-day delivery, to adjust our network as needed, to develop new products the market requires and to work with our unions, mailers, stakeholders and Congress to meet the challenges ahead.’’
The Mailers Council, which represents businesses and organizations that mail large volumes of material, supported the action.
Pending legislation in the House and Senate would offer short-term help, but “that can only postpone the inevitable insolvency of the Postal Service. We firmly believe the Postal Service will be unable to meet its financial obligations in the near future without fundamental structural change,’’ council executive director Robert C. McLean said.
Congress is considering a bill to change how the post office funds its retiree health benefits that could save $2 billion annually.
The post office also filed a petition with the independent Postal Regulatory Commission indicating that managers are looking at closing many post offices to save money.
In addition, Postmaster General John Potter has asked Congress for permission to reduce mail deliveries from six days a week to five.
Last year, mail volume fell by 9.5 billion pieces to a total of 203 billion pieces. It is expected to fall by 28 billion pieces this year to a total of 175 billion pieces.
The GAO report said the key short-term goal is to cut expenses quickly enough to offset mail volume and revenue declines to avoid running out of cash to pay its expenses. Postal officials have said the agency could run out of cash in September.
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