|
 PUBLISHED BY MOSHOLU PRESERVATION CORPORATION
| Vol.
19, No. 22 |
Nov.16 - Nov. 29,
2006 |



Union Says Bronx Loses in Mail
Consolidation
By LAURA SAYER
While
consolidation that would take mail processing from the Bronx to lower the
United States Postal Service has not officially announced the
Manhattan, the local union and the larger Bronx community, including
Congressman Eliot Engel, have already united against its consequences.
In the consolidation, which the USPS says is not imminent but
definitely being discussed, mail normally processed at the General Post
Office, at 149th Street and the Grand Concourse, also known as the
Detached Mail Unit and Hail New York Truck Transfer Center, will now be
trucked to the Morgan Processing and Distribution Center, at 29th Street
and 9th Avenue.
The General Post Office building in the Bronx would
remain open for window service, but the entire borough’s mail would be
processed downtown, adding truck traffic to an already congested area,
said Chuck Zlatkin, vice president of the New York Metro Area Postal
Workers Union.
“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” Engel told postal
workers at a rally against the consolidation recently.
“My office
already receives complaints of poor mail service,” Engel added later in a
statement. “Moving mail processing out of the Bronx will only make it
worse.”
Since the union was notified on Dec. 20, 2005, the “study,”
as it is referred to by the USPS, has grown from 40 communities to 139
facing similar cutbacks, Zlatkin said.
Pat McGovern, a USPS
spokesperson, said the study is now under review in Washington, and is
still far from becoming a reality.
“But, the Morgan facility has
already set aside space for the machines,” Zlatkin said.
As a
result of the relocation of these processes, “the entire borough’s mail
will be delayed,” Zlatkin said.
The USPS, however, does not expect
delays, McGovern said. “The distance between the two facilities is
approximately 10 miles,” she said. “There are rumors of mail being delayed
something like two days. It’s unreasonable for them to speculate that
because the distance is so small.”
The Union claims that 450 Bronx
postal workers will lose their jobs, because “the machines will move to
Morgan, but the people won’t,” Zlatkin said.
McGovern countered
that no postal workers would lose their jobs, and the relocation process
would occur under the national protocol already agreed upon by the USPS
and the union.
“The operation has fewer than 500,” McGovern said,
“but as to how – if this even happens – they’d be redistributed, I
couldn’t begin to speculate.”
Although the potential move is
unpopular with the union, McGovern said it is nothing new, or different,
as far as USPS operations are concerned.
“When I was transferred
from Queens, I wasn’t happy about it at first,” McGovern said, recalling
how she was relocated to Manhattan in 1992. “I was like, ‘Oh no, I’m going
to have to pay for the train.’ But it’s not so bad now.”
The
consolidation is part of the USPS’s response to the changing ways people
communicate, she said. Now it’s more through the Internet and via e-mail.
“The type of mail we process has changed,” she said. “We’re really
just going along with the changes that the public is putting upon
us.”
First class mail is being replaced more and more by what
Zlatkin calls “magazines and such that most people call ‘junk
mail.’”
“They call it a cost saving measure,” Zlatkin said. But
rates will go up in 2007 for the general public – with stamps up 3 cents a
piece – while subsidies will go to big corporate mailers facing fewer
drop-off points. He said he wonders who is really “saving” in the
relocation.
“A lot of people depend on that mail – older people,
who can’t get out as much like to be able to order from catalogs and
things, handicapped people, and people who just don’t have the time,”
McGovern said in defense of junk mail.
Increasing technology used
in mail processing also contributes to the consolidation, McGovern said.
“No one sits and looks at each individual piece of mail, and the ‘read
rate’ of the machines has improved significantly over the years, which
leads to more facilities with excess time,” she explained. “Rather than
having two locations with excess time, it makes more economic sense to
combine operations.”
In any case, McGovern said, postal patrons
will be given an opportunity to voice their concerns before anything is
finalized.
Meanwhile, the Bronx Coalition to Save Our Post Office,
made up of the New York Metro Area Postal Workers Union and other
community organizations, is holding its own community forum on Saturday,
Nov.18 at noon, in the Lincoln Hospital Auditorium, 234 E. 149th St.
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