Published: October 27, 2006 09:12 am
Workers protest USPS changes By Althea Peterson THE
NORMAN TRANSCRIPT (NORMAN, Okla.)
NORMAN, Okla. — They came
from Hawaii, New York, Illinois and Oklahoma, but they were
all united in calling for awareness.
Just off State
Highway 9, flag-waving and sign-holding employees and
community members called for awareness of proposed changes to
the United States Postal Service Thursday evening. The
picketing was in front of the USPS’ National Center for
Employee Development on State Highway 9.
Jane Duggan, a
maintenance craft director for the Michigan Postal Workers
Union from Detroit, said the picketing in Norman was just one
of many protests across the country. She said many towns would
lose their ZIP codes and post offices, as well as having
postal service delayed.
“Small towns are going to be
hit very hard,” Duggan said. “Citizens are upset that they
will not have their own postmark. It’s like losing the
identification of the town.”
“Strategic Transformation
Plan 2006-2010” involves “focusing on major cost drivers,
especially delivery operations,” according to the USPS Web
site.
This involves “consolidating mail sorting
facilities without proper public input,” according to the
American Postal Workers Union Web site.
“People will
have to travel a lot farther to mail packages,” Duggan said.
“People are concerned that this will affect the travel time,
taking two more days for mail to arrive.”
More than 30
picketers showed up at the event, some of whom walked over to
Highway 9 directly from the National Center for Employee
Development. The signs people marched with said “Don’t let our
mail service fall apart. The U.S. Postal Service is proposing
to close part of our local post office, which will reduce
service for individual citizens and small business. The USPS
was founded to serve all Americans, yet the plans to downsize
were developed behind closed doors, without community input
and without concern for community impact. Save Our
Service.”
“They say cut back, we say fight back,” the
picketers shouted.
A notice on the USPS site from James
C. Miller III and Postmaster General and CEO John E. Potter
reads: “We will promote growth by creating more value for
every customer. We will continue to reduce costs by improving
efficiency in all our operations and business processes… We
will achieve all this with an energized, customer-focused
workforce.”
Joe Frega, electronics technician from
Syracuse, N.Y., said protesters picketed not just because they
are concerned about employees losing jobs, but also about USPS
service cutting back in communities.
“We’re talking
about potentially tens of thousands of employees packing up
and relocating,” Frega said. “We’re not cattle that can be
pointed in a different direction. We have families and friends
we don’t want to leave.”
Frega said their goal was not
to change the mind of the USPS, but rather, inform local
elected officials about the proposed changes, so that they can
act on their behalf to stop the changes.
“We are over
300,000 strong,” Frega said. “That’s a pretty effective voting
block. We want to send a message that when someone hurts the
public through the postal service, that somebody notices, and
that’s us.”
Wallace Collins, Democratic nominee for
House District 45, was among the local picketers. He said he
supports the picketers, because of the importance of the
National Center for Employee Development to Norman and the
state of Oklahoma.
“As a citizen of Norman, I am
interested in keeping this facility here,” Collins said. “I
think it would be a detriment to the area to lose this
facility.”
For more information, visit usps.com or
apwu.org.
Althea Peterson writes for The Norman
(Okla) Transcript.
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