On Monday, August 24, after the $25 billion USPS had already passed, the House held its first public hearing with Postmaster General DeJoy to discuss the state of the organization and whether the USPS needs the additional funding to handle the increase in mail-in ballots during the 2020 election. DeJoy said “We have plenty of operating capital right now to get through November”. This statement was made knowing that the $25 billion bill that had passed the House has not been signed into law, meaning that the USPS will be able to handle the mail-in ballots in their current financial state.
Click here to read more about my questioning of Postmaster General DeJoy.
An argument I have heard is that the USPS does not have the resources to handle the additional wave of mail-in ballots expected in the 2020 Presidential election. The USPS delivers 433 million pieces of mail per day, that means that from October 1 to the election on November 3, 34 days, the USPS will process 14.7 billion pieces of mail. If the same number of people vote in the 2020 election as did in the 2016 Presidential election, 139 million, and 100 percent use mail-in ballots, the USPS would see a volume increase of 0.9 percent spread out over the course of those 34 days.
Additionally, I have heard negative reactions to the news that the USPS has retired several sorting machines. In response to this, the USPS has told me that since 2016, the volume of letter mail has dropped by 29 percent and the volume of flat mail (large envelopes, magazines, catalogues, etc.) has dropped by 32 percent. During the same time period, letter sorting equipment was reduced accordingly, 27 percent for letters and 25 percent for flats. In April 2020, an evaluation of letter and flat sorting machines revealed that the USPS was only using 32 percent of total available letter sorting machine hours and 38 percent for flat sorting machines.
The USPS is a vital Constitutional service that I fully support. After speaking with the Postmaster General and receiving information directly from the USPS, that they were not in dire need of additional funding based on the expected increase in mail-in ballots for the 2020 election.