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Senators look for ways to restore six-day postal delivery

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The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2012 states that six-day delivery and rural delivery must occur at the same rate they did in 1983, and senators said this means the Postal Service acted illegally.

Jeanette Dwyer, president of the National Rural Letter Carriers’ Association, agreed in testimony that the cut in delivery is against the law and said her union alone would lose about 20,000 jobs with no Saturday service, which would amount to losses much greater than the 22,500 jobs Donahoe estimated would be lost across the whole Postal Service.

There are discrepancies between several of the job-loss statistics given by Donahoe, said Jennifer Warburton, director of legislative and political affairs at the National Association of Letter Carriers. She said more clarification is needed to take further steps in legislation.

Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., argued that the new five-day week works fine for those in urban areas, but that some of his rural constituents — many of whom do not have broadband Internet access — will suffer.

His larger concern was that the Postal Service won’t remain in rural America and as a result will disappear from the nation.

“I’m one of those guys who says, ‘Don’t shut it down,’” Tester said.

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