Beware of USPS

Reimbursed

Last Tues I shipped a rifle from Alaska to Oregon to have some work done on it. The rifle had guaranteed Thursday delivery or money back. It arrived on Friday and the Post Office promptly refunded me my shipping costs in cash.

At least they made good on the guarantee!
 
The costs of government subsidies. whether in the form of direct payments, tax breaks, or cheap borrowing are ultimately all borne by the taxpayer. In addition, because the USPS is a serial losing enterprise, it will eventually require a major bailout which will also be borne by the taxpayer. Not looking for a debate, I'm out. J

US Postal Service: Over $47 Billion In Losses In The Past Decade And Counting

by Tyler Durden Aug 11, 2014 12:09 PM

Curious what pure, unadulterated government efficiency in practice, if not in theory, looks like? Then the following chart of USPS operating profits, pardon, losses over the past decade should be sufficient. The punchline: having generated revenues of nearly $700 billion in the past 40 quarters, the USPS has been bleeding red ink more or less consistently since 2006, and has now generated just over $47 billion in operating losses over the past ten years.

USPS%20P%26L.jpg

It gets better.

From the WSJ: "The USPS said its total liabilities were $67.16 billion at the end of the period, compared with $23.16 billion in assets."

That means the net capital deficiency, or "cost", to keep the USPS alive, amounts to some $44 billion as of this moment (which includes $3.1 billion in contributions from the US government and a $47 billion deficit since the 1971 reorganization).

Continuing: "The Postal Service reached its $15 billion credit limit with the Treasury Department in 2012. Under law, the USPS must pay its own way. It doesn't receive an annual taxpayer subsidy, but is reimbursed by Congress for some services such as delivering mail to the blind and overseas voters. The agency is saddled with a congressional mandate that requires it to prefund more than $5.5 billion annually for health benefits for future retirees. The service said Monday that it won't be able to make its required $5.7 billion payment by Sept. 30."

In other words, more pension accruals that will never be paid out until, finally, the administration has no option but to make the payment on behalf of the postal service (thank you PBGC).

Finally, one may ask: why doesn't this bloated, anachronistic, money-losing zombie just go away and make way for the far more efficient and nimble private sector? After all, there are countless companies which could step in and do what the USPS does for a fraction of the cost?

Simple. The answer:

489,727 career employees.
137,037 non-career employees.

Or, as they are better known in D.C., voters.

The USPS by law is required to do business in unprofitable areas and charge the same as in profitable areas - and they have a board which sets the price of what they can charge. Name a private company which is mandated by congress to do business in every town and city which has a post office. There aren't any because they would go bankrupt in a hurry.

It's a service. If they privatized it and congress let them run it however they wanted large regions of the nation would have no mail service, the cost of postage would skyrocket and in big cities you would have multiple companies delivering to your house and mail fraud would be rampant.
 
So my shaft was returned to me after two and half weeks yesterday. When you see how the package looks it's amazing it was not damaged (I had it bubble wrapped inside). I'm not sure why they returned it since the buyers address was clearly shown on the address label. It's not true that it remained "unclaimed". There was never an attempted delivery made. Maybe they were just embarrassed to deliver an obviously mishandled package. You can see where someone at the post office tried to tape up the damaged tube.
 

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:frown:



You need to send Priority and not in a round tube that can easily roll off a conveyor belt.


I love my USPS! Shipped thousands of pool cues with no problems.



:thumbup:



.
 
:frown:



You need to send Priority and not in a round tube that can easily roll off a conveyor belt.


I love my USPS! Shipped thousands of pool cues with no problems.



:thumbup:



.

Thanks, I got that message a while back, early in this thread. By the way, do you see where it says insured? I could make a claim against them but why bother. I'm happy to have recovered a very good shaft (Jacoby Hybrid).
 
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Two years ago I ordered a 2 by 4 It's George case from Omega. Given the price of the item I was watching the tracking of the package. I'm lucky that I work at a pretty flexible place that's nine miles from my home, so when I saw that the item was listed as "delivered" I jumped in my car and drove home to put it in the house. When I arrived I saw the box had about an eight inch gash in it and was not covered by any kind of plastic on a day when they were calling for severe thunderstorms all afternoon. Long story short: it's good I went home. At 4 p.m. we were dumped on with rain for two solid hours and that case would have been ruined.
 
I stopped using USPS years ago. use UPS and Fedex and their customer service is good!
 
No offense meant but sending anything of value less than prioity Mail is NOT wise...

ALWAYS send PRIORITY MAIL with INSURANCE if sending a cue - or anything of value.

USPS is the best route to go - I ship with them on a daily basis but if you cut corners you set yourself up to lose your item or possibly worse - spend the extra money to make sure it gets sent priority
 
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I shipped the same shaft again via Priority Mail on April 8 and it was delivered two days later on April 10 (I did add insurance). Lesson learned!
 
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