AP/ July 6, 2010, 3:10 PM

Post Office To Hike Stamp Price to 46 Cents

The post office wants to increase the price of a stamp by 2 cents to 46 cents starting in January. The agency has been battered by massive losses and declining mail volume and faces a financial crisis.

Postal officials announced a wide-ranging series of proposed price increases Tuesday, averaging about 5 percent, and covering first class, advertising mail, periodicals, packages and other services.

The request now goes to the independent Postal Rate Commission which has 90 days to respond. If approved, the increase would take effect Jan. 2.

"The Postal Service faces a serious risk of financial insolvency," postal vice president Stephen M. Kearney said.

Kearney said the agency is facing a $7 billion loss in 2011. The rate increase will bring in an extra $2.5 billion, meaning it still faces a $4.7 billion loss.

The rate increase is part of a series of money-saving plans announced in March. These also include reducing mail deliveries to five days a week, closing offices and making other cuts in expenses. Congress must agree to eliminating deliveries on Saturdays.

While the cost of a first-class stamp would go up to 46 cents, people who bought "Forever" stamps at lower prices will still be able to use them for first-class mail without paying the difference.

Officials also said they plan a new design for Forever stamps, which currently have am image of the Liberty Bell. New Forever stamps will have images of evergreen trees. All Forever stamps would remain valid.

In addition to the 46-cent rate for the first ounce of a letter the cost for each additional ounce would go up a penny to 18 cents. The cost to mail a post card would go up 2 cents to 30 cents.

The price to send periodicals would go up about 8 percent and other rates for advertising mail, parcels and services will also go up by varying amounts.

The current 44-cent first-class rate took effect May 11, 2009.

The agency lost $3.8 billion last fiscal year despite cutting 40,000 full-time positions and making other reductions. It has continued to face significant losses this year.

The weak economy has sharply reduced mail volume as companies cut their advertising. At the same time there has been a significant drop in lucrative first-class mail, with more and more people turning to the Internet to communicate with each other as well as to receive and pay bills.

The proposal drew a prompt complaint from the mailing industry.

"This proposed rate increase amounts to another tax imposed on Americans at a time when the economy can least afford it," said Tony Conway, executive director of the Alliance of Nonprofit Mailers, a group representing charities and other organizations.

"Consumers everywhere will pay more for the letters and packages they need to send; businesses — large and small — will suffer and even more jobs will be lost," complained Conway, who was designated spokesman for the Affordable Mail Alliance, a coalition of businesses, charities and other mailers formed to oppose the increase.

Postal officials also have proposed eliminating Saturday mail delivery as a means of cutting costs, a change that would require congressional approval.

Post office finances are also complicated by the requirement that the agency make annual payments to pre-fund future health benefits for retirees, something not required of other government agencies.

And the postal inspector general contends that the Postal Service has been overcharged billions of dollars for retirement benefits for employees who worked for the old Post Office Department before it was converted to the Postal Service in 1970.
© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
29 Comments Add a Comment
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NotesToFriends says:
Pay someone else to send your casual Snail-Mail online. We'll print, stuff, post and mail your letter for you. The price is much less than the cost of driving to buy stamps, envelopes, printer ink, etc. www.notestofriends.com
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Zoiesgrandma says:
I'm right in line with SteelersWinAgain. In the past the post office has delivered other peoples mail to my address, so I always wondered how much of my mail has been delivered to other peoples houses. At one time I received another persons bank statement & being an honest person I called the bank that it came from & told them I had the bank statement & took it to the bank for correct delivery. They lost my house insurance payment & cost me my insurance carrier of 9 years. Do you know how hard it is to find a carrier to take you on when you've been dropped for non-payment? 4 months later I received the payment still inside the origianl envelope back from the carrier that had dropped me & the post date on my envelope was from 4 months prior. The post office also lost my house payment & thank goodness I had never been late with a payment before so they let me slide on the late payment. I sent a veterinarian payment that was a straight shot up the highway from my house & that was 8 years ago & they never have received it. I wasted gas to drive it to them & they agreed to inform me if they got it, they never have! I'm not real computer friendly so I never wanted to do my banking on-line but thanks to the post office & their constant neglect I now pay almost all of my bills on-line. There was one particular mail carrier that was afraid of my dogs through the picture window & he caused my mail to not be delivered if the dogs were able to be seen or heard at the window. I went to my branch of the post office & tried to get it fixed but the mail still was not coming. I went to the main branch & filed a personal complaint & the mail still wasn't coming. Finally one of the deliverers that knew my dogs took the card that stated " If dogs are seen, don't deliver" out of the mail truck. These are the types of things that cause people to stop using the US Postal service. I will use my gas to deliver the bills that I'm not able to pay on-line if they are here in town.
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SteelersWinAgain says:
If my mail carrier would stop delivering my neighbors' mail to me and mine to theirs and stop throwing packages at my door leaving scratchmarks and damaging goods, and stop running over my driveway landscaping timbers as well, I might hesitantly support possibly an 'increase.' Oh, and in the recent past, I've received 2 return 'damaged by post office' letters/packages that did not arrive at their destination....within about the last 2 months! I've complained about this carrier many times. The local USPS office says, "file a complaint online" well, so you do and year after year after year the same carrier is still around. They don't take complaints about poor service or broken goods in packages seriously. At least not in my area, anyhow. I'm really tired of 'redelivering' my neighbor's mail. Who knows what I never see/get because some neighbors are not so astute with forwarding misdirected mail. Major FAIL.
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SteelersWinAgain replies:
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Sorry, "mine to them" or whatever is grammatically correct. Been up all night with a sick newborn...Please forgive any errors...
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ppaulville says:
Chimneyfish: Exactly how many letters have you sent in the past year? Me, I've sent one letter to my girlfriend across town because she thought it'd be cute. Oh, and I sent three birthday cards. From talking with friends, that's about average. Yeah, that frequency of use will keep the USPS solvent.
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erasmus111 says:
"These also include reducing mail deliveries to five days a week..."


Why do you need to have mail delivery on Saturdays? We have always had mail delivery from Monday to Friday and we are doing just fine.
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Chimney_fish says:
I would gladly pay 50 cents to have a letter delivered anywhere in our nation.....think about it....less than it costs you to drive to work......(I said 50 cents because that should make the Postal service solvent)
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sjc_1 says:
CBS keeps blocking my posts, I must be on some "no fly" list.
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newsterI says:
Kearney said the agency is facing a $7 billion loss in 2011. The rate increase will bring in an extra $2.5 billion, meaning it still faces a $4.7 billion loss."

There you go, so even WITH the rate increase they will STILL lose over $4.7 BILLION, so in actuality the cost for a stamp has to go up now at least 6 cents to even break even.

"The rate increase is part of a series of money-saving plans announced in March. These also include reducing mail deliveries to five days a week, closing offices and making other cuts in expenses. Congress must agree to eliminating deliveries on Saturdays."

Oh boy, and then watch the first class mailing dip even further faster with Saturday closure.

"While the cost of a first-class stamp would go up to 46 cents, people who bought "Forever" stamps at lower prices will still be able to use them for first-class mail without paying the difference. "

Wonder how much THAT little marketing ploy added to the losses!
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rockcutr says:
Yes I believe the post office is too large to fail.
There are loads of things to do to correct this situation. Number one bust the postal workers union. These people all get paid way too much.
Another thing which is not likely to ever happen is the fact of it being way over due that all elected officials mail all political ads and official business out of their own inflated salaries. Time to get on board and pony up for the cause of saving the Post office. Which could actually run really smooth tuesday thru friday. The forced junk mail that is delivered must stop. The official transportation machinery should all go green. Electric, natural gas, and hybred. Only upgrade that i would suggest is that all rural carrers be provied with a car, truck or jeep to navigate the hell holes they have to deliver to. No reason in the world the city carriers get to have all the perks. Give it up for the people who really have it rough.
The health care pre pay was actually a great thing although a bit poorly thought out. Nobody expeced the financial world to poop on itself and the country. Thanks for that by the way...Love ya all....
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retiredgustav says:
One can mail a letter from San Diego California to Bangor Maine for
46 cents. If you don't like it deliver it yourself.
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newsterI replies:
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SO? you can deliver a piece of mail with photos and documents attached if you like for FREE in 10 seconds via EMAIL, your point? Last time I checked email being free saves that 46 cents you would have thrown away, along with 3-4 DAYS time snail mailing the very same letter and photo of yourself camping.

Last time I checked, it costs the SAME to send that snail mail letter across the street as it does across the country, it would also cost the same FREE amount if sent via email, and also be there on the recipient's computer in 10 seconds.

As a nonus both you and the recipient have COPIES, you can also CC other people and they too will get the same copies.
Bill paying can be done on-line for free, scheduled when YOU want it, paying whom and the amount you want when you want to, and guaranteed to pay on that day/amount, unlike a paper check LOST or delayed in the mail costing you a late fee...
retiredgustav replies:
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It may be hard for some people to fathom,but not everyone has a computer.
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