Key Vote NO on the Postal Service Reform Act, H.R. 3076

On behalf of FreedomWorks’ activist community, I urge you to contact your senators and ask them to vote NO on the Postal Service Reform Act, H.R. 3076. At its core, the Postal Service Reform Act is a $58 billion taxpayer bailout for the fiscally-insolvent United States Postal Service (USPS).

The Postal Service Reform Act would repeal a requirement in 5 U.S. Code 8909a(d) that the USPS make annual payments to the Retiree Health Benefits Fund, from which benefits are paid to retired workers.

In December 2006, Congress passed the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act, which included a provision that required the U.S. Postal Service to make annual payments to the Retiree Health Benefits Fund. Congress set a specific dollar amount to be paid on September 30 of each year between 2007 and 2016. After that time, annual payments would be based on a formula. The reason Congress took such a step was because the Retiree Health Benefits Fund faced, a “roughly $60 billion” in unfunded obligations at the time.

This change was made explicitly because the previous pay-as-you-go system was failing. Repealing this change would simply return USPS to that old system.

The U.S. Postal Service made these annual payments required by the 2006 law through 2010 but has since simply defied the law. Naturally, the Retiree Health Benefits Fund has grown more unsustainable since then. In August 2018, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a report noting that “[t]he financial outlook of the Postal Service Retiree Health Benefits Fund (RHB Fund) is poor.” Recently, the Retiree Health Benefits Fund faced an unfunded liability of $70 billion. According to the GAO, the Office of Personnel Management projected that the fund would be depleted in FY 2030 if the U.S. Postal Service did not make statutorily required contributions.

Make no mistake about it. The Postal Service Reform Act sets the stage for a taxpayer-funded bailout of the Retiree Health Benefits Fund. There are serious and fiscal proposals to address the issues that face the U.S. Postal Service. The bill being voted on this week is not one of them.

Erasing the USPS’s debts will not stop the red ink from bleeding on its books. Fiscally damaging practices, like underpricing USPS packages by $1.46, are sure to continue in perpetuity unless something is done. The fiscal relief that the Postal Service seeks would do nothing more than force everyone else to pay for the collateral damage.

As if it weren’t enough, the Postal Service Reform Act also mandates the creation of an integrated network for the delivery of market-dominant and competitive products. Essentially, it gives the USPS the authority to bundle expenses and earnings of its package business alongside its letter mail service. An integrated network would make it impossible to track where the USPS earns its money and where it does not.

This bill absolves the USPS from doing its job to manage costs and revenues responsibly and enables shady accounting mechanisms that do nothing to fix their troubled financial and accounting shortfalls.

FreedomWorks will count the vote for H.R. 3076 on our 2022 Congressional Scorecard and reserves the right to score any amendments, motions, or other related votes. The scorecard is used to determine eligibility for the FreedomFighter Award, which recognizes Members of the House and Senate who consistently vote to support economic freedom and individual liberty.

Sincerely,

Adam Brandon,
President, FreedomWorks