U. S. Postal Service Overview
Section 1—Postal Organization
The Postal Service is one of the largest civilian organizations, employing nearly 685,000 full-time
career employees and 100,000 part-time employees. With annual operating revenues of more than $75 billion, the
Postal Service delivers over 200 billion pieces of mail every year to more than 146 million delivery
points.
USPS has headquarters in Washington, D.C., but maintains postal facilities throughout the United
States, including nearly 37,000 post offices, stations, branches and contract units. The Postal Service
is governed by a nine-member Board of Governors, whose members are appointed by the President with
Senate confirmation. The nine Governors then select a Postmaster General, who becomes a member of the
Board. Those 10 select a Deputy Postmaster General, who also serves on the Board.
The nine Governors of the Postal Service are appointed for staggered nine-year terms and can be removed
only for cause. In addition, no more than five Governors may belong to the same political party. The
Postmaster General serves at the pleasure of the Governors for an indefinite period and is the Chief
Executive Officer of the Postal Service. The Deputy Postmaster General serves at the pleasure of the
Postmaster General and the Board.
The Board directs the exercise of the powers of the Postal Service, directs and controls its expenditures,
reviews its practices, conducts long-range planning, and sets policies on all postal matters. The Board
takes up matters such as service standards, capital investments and facilities projects exceeding $25
million. It also approves officer compensation.
Following are the current members of the Board of Governors:
Alan C. Kessler, Chairman
Carolyn Lewis Gallagher, Vice Chairman
Mickey D. Barnett, Member
James H. Bilbray, Member
Louis J. Giuliano, Member
Thurgood Marshall, Jr., Member
James C. Miller III, Member
Katherine C. Tobin, Member
Ellen C. Williams, Member
John E. Potter, Postmaster General and CEO
Patrick R. Donahoe, Deputy Postmaster General and COO
There are two general divisions within the Postal Service, each headed by a vice president. One division
is composed of processing and distribution sites, such as bulk mail centers and the second is composed
of 90 customer service districts managing all the post offices.
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Finances
The Postal Service announced in November 2002 that it had been overfunding its Civil Service Retirement
System (CSRS) account for 30 years and owed $5 billion, instead of $32 billion, to the fund. If Congress
approves a change in the Postal Service’s funding payment schedule, it will have to pay $2.9
billion less into the CSRS fund for 2002 and $2.6 billion less for the next several years than it thought
it would. The post office’s financing formula includes 30-year and 15-year amortization schedules
aimed at covering retirement costs linked to postal employee pay raises and cost-of-living adjustments
(COLAs). Postmaster General John E. Potter said the reduction in pension contributions would be used
to pay down the debt and keep postal rates steady until 2006.
A review team led by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) discovered that the USPS had been overpaying
the billions of dollars. It found the statutory formula that sets the rate for pension payments was
out of whack, in part because of higher-than-anticipated yields on pension investments. The Postal
Service paid $152.1 billion into CSRS to cover annuities for postal workers and was due to pay $91.5
billion more in future payments, under the formula. That figure, it turned out, was $71 billion higher
than the amount needed to cover the cost of future postal retirements, officials said.
The Postal Service subsequently announced that it had a surplus of $27 billion. Potter stressed that
the agency would continue to cut costs, consolidate mail-handling plants and urge Congress to permit
more flexibility in the processing and pricing of mail.
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Section 2—Labor Unions and Employee Organizations
An overwhelming majority of postal employees belong to either labor unions or one of the management
or supervisory organizations. The 1970 Postal Reorganization Act authorized collective bargaining on
wages and working conditions under laws applying to the private sector and provided for binding arbitration
if an impasse persists 180 days after the start of bargaining. The ability of many postal employees
to bargain over their pay rates is a right that is not enjoyed by other federal employees, although
postal workers, like other federal employees, are still barred from striking.
Four large postal unions represent most postal workers and negotiate for them during
collective bargaining. They are:
- The American Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO, representing more than 330,000 postal
workers and retirees. APWU represents USPS workers in the clerk, maintenance and motor vehicle crafts.
- The National Association of Letter Carriers, AFL-CIO, representing about 300,000
active and retired members, of which more than 214,000 are active city delivery
carriers.
- The National Rural Letter Carriers Association, representing 112,700 postal workers - active and retired.
- The National Postal Mail Handlers Union, representing more than 50,000 mail handlers.
In addition to the four major unions, there are smaller unions representing postal inspectors and
postal nurses.
Three management associations represent postal supervisors and postmasters. These associations cannot
bargain over pay issues like the unions but they do negotiate over other working conditions. The associations
are:
- The National Association of Postal Supervisors. NAPS represents 35,000 active
and retired supervisors and managers.
- The National Association of Postmasters of the United States. NAPUS represents
more than 42,000 active and retired postmasters and officers in charge.
- The National League of Postmasters. The League represents 27,000 active and retired
postmasters.
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Section 3—Postal Pay General Salary Structures
There are two general types of salary structures used by the postal service, as well as a specialized
structure for rural letter carriers.
The two general salary structures are:
- PS-Postal Service salary structure. Applicable to bargaining unit personnel (clerks,
carriers, etc.) except rural letter carriers, mailhandlers, nurses, and postal
police officers.
- EAS-Executive and Administrative Salary structure. Applicable to executives,
professionals, supervisors, postmasters, and technical, administrative and clerical
non-bargaining employees. Salary grades in the schedule range from EAS-1 through
EAS-26. Postmasters whose offices are open less than 40 hours per week are on a
separate schedule.
The pay period for all employees begins on Saturday and covers a 2-week period ending on Friday.
Employees are paid every 2 weeks following the end of the pay period.
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Section 4—Postal Employee Benefits
Postal employees generally receive the same benefits as other federal employees with a few exceptions.
Retirement—Postal Service career employees, like federal career employees,
are covered by one of three retirement systems administered by OPM: the Federal Employees Retirement
System (FERS), the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) and by CSRS Offset. FERS is a retirement
system with both defined benefit and defined contribution components. Under FERS, employees receive
retirement benefits from a federal retirement annuity, Social Security, and the Thrift Savings Plan.
The FERS annuity benefit, while also based on an employee’s high-three average salary and years
of service, produces a smaller benefit than CSRS does. CSRS is a defined benefit retirement system.
Annuity benefits are based on an employee’s high-three average salary and years of service. CSRS
Offset is similar to CSRS but requires Social Security contributions. Upon Social Security eligibility,
the CSRS annuity is reduced by any Social Security benefit resulting from periods of CSRS Offset service,
to produce a benefit equivalent to what would have been received under CSRS.
Health Insurance—The Postal Service participates in the Federal Employees
Health Benefits Program and all postal employees can receive health insurance coverage through that
plan with the cost split between the Postal Service and the worker. For most federal employees the
split is determined by Congress. However, postal unions negotiate the actual split as part of the collective
bargaining agreements, so postal workers often pay a different amount than other federal workers, and
postal workers from different unions may pay different amounts. Postal employees should review the
health benefits section of the Almanac for complete information on how the FEHBP works, premium amounts
and plan contact information.
Life Insurance—The Postal Service offers life insurance coverage through the
Federal Employees Life Insurance Program. However, while other federal employees must pay part of the
cost of the basic coverage, the Postal Service pays the entire premium amount for its active employees.
There are additional options for purchasing more insurance through the FEGLI program. Postal employees
should review the life insurance section in the Almanac for more details.
Flexible Spending Accounts—Employees can use Flexible Spending Accounts (FSAs)
to pay for certain health care and dependent care expenses with contributions made through pretax payroll
deductions. FSAs were first offered in 1992 to certain non-bargaining unit employees and now include
all employees. Employees experience tax savings as well, which vary according to the individual’s
contribution amounts and marginal tax rates.
Thrift Savings Plan—Postal employees may participate in the Thrift Savings
Plan (TSP), which is administered by the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board. The rules for
TSP participation differ depending on the employee’s retirement system. For FERS employees, the
Postal Service contributes one percent of basic pay to TSP, fully matches employee contributions up
to 3 percent of basic pay, and matches one-half of employee contributions from 3 to 5 percent of basic
pay. The Postal Service does not match CSRS or CSRS-Offset employee contributions to the TSP.
Leave—Postal Service employees are provided both sick and annual leave at
the same rate as other federal sector employees. However, postal employees have a higher annual leave
carryover limit than their federal sector counterparts. Earned annual leave may be donated to other
career or transitional Postal Service employees who have exhausted their own leave and have a serious
health problem. The Postal Service allows the use of 80 hours of accrued sick leave for dependent care
under a policy available to all career employees.
Family and Medical Leave—Postal employees are covered by the 1993 Family and
Medical Leave Act, which provides time off for employees who are dealing with serious health conditions.
The law provides that eligible employees can take up to 12 workweeks of leave within a Postal Service
leave year for the following: birth or adoption of a child, taking in a child for foster care, caring
for a family member with a serious health condition, or dealing with the employee’s own serious
health condition. Time taken for family and medical leave can be taken as annual leave, sick leave,
leave without pay or a combination of those.
Holidays—The Postal Service observes the 10 designated federal holidays each
year. They are: New Year’s Day, January 1; Martin Luther King Jr.’s Birthday, third Monday
in January; Presidents’
Day, third Monday in February; Memorial Day, last Monday in May; Independence Day,
July 4; Labor Day, first Monday in September; Columbus Day, second Monday in October;
Veterans Day, November 11; Thanksgiving Day, fourth Thursday in November; Christmas
Day, December 25.
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For More Information about United States Postal Service workplace
practices and policies, see the current
edition of the Federal Employees Almanac.
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