Price of stamps increase by 2 cents

Published:

Peel ’n’ weep: Stamps go up 2 cents Monday

Postal service faces $2.3 billion deficit just halfway through year
The Associated Press
updated 9:23 p.m. ET, Sat., May 9, 2009

WASHINGTON - Peel it and weep: It'll cost an extra 2 cents to mail a letter starting Monday.

The price of a first-class stamp will climb to 44 cents, though people who planned ahead and stocked up on Forever stamps will still be paying the lower rate.

It's the third year in a row that rates have gone up in May under a new system that allows annual increases as long as they don't exceed the rate of inflation for the year before.

While the increase will bring in added income, the post office continues to struggle financially as more and more lucrative first-class mail is diverted to the Internet, and the recession discourages businesses from sending their usual volume of advertising.

The Postal Service, which does not get a taxpayer subsidy for its operations, lost $2.8 billion last year and is $2.3 billion in the hole just halfway through this year.

Postmaster General John Potter has asked Congress for permission to reduce mail delivery to five days-a-week. The agency is offering early retirement to workers, consolidating excess capacity in mail processing and transportation networks, realigning carrier routes, halting construction of new facilities, freezing officer and executive salaries at 2008 pay levels, and reducing travel budgets.

Even so, the rate increase is unlikely to cover the losses and the possibility remains that the post office could run out of money before the end of the budget year, Sept. 30.

The post office could have cited extraordinary circumstances and asked the independent Postal Regulatory Commission for larger increases, but officials worried that would only result in a greater decline in mail volume and greater losses.

Potter has sought congressional changes in how the post office prepays for retiree health care, to cut its annual costs by $2 billion.

While the new 44-cent rate covers the first ounce of first-class mail, the price for each additional ounce will remain unchanged at 17-cents.

Postal officials estimate the increase will cost the average household $3 a year.

Other changes taking effect Monday:

  • The postcard stamp increases by a penny to 28 cents.
  • The first ounce of a large envelope increases 5 cents to 88 cents.
  • The first ounce of a parcel increases 5 cents to $1.22.
  • New international postcard and letter prices are, for one ounce, 75 cents to Canada; 79 cents to Mexico; and 98 cents elsewhere.

Most Postal Service shipping services prices were adjusted in January and will not change in May.

Entry #1,180

Comments

Avatar truecritic -
#1
Quote..."freezing officer and executive salaries at 2008 pay levels"

It would have been better to hear that everyone's hourly wage and salaries had been cut to something reasonable to reflect the recession we are in. Wages and salaries turned back to those paid in 1965 would be appropriate.
Avatar Kaptainess -
#2
Funny that the Postmaster makes more than the President of the United States?? I don't think ANYONE in our Government should make more money than the President, that should be the cap on pay. As for the Postal Service? They had their chance, they blew it. Once UPS and Fed Ex came online with next day delivery the US Postal Service was doomed.   These two companies found a need and delivered, while the US Postal Service, not geared for profit, ignored it. Just think of the contribution the Postal Service could have made to our national deficit if they would have taken the lead instead of Fed Ex and UPS?
Avatar jarasan -
#3
The USPS is the epitome of entrenched fed. govt. bureaucracy, they answer to no one!   All govt. agencies function this way, "not for profit, but for self perpetuation" it doesn't matter a hoot whether they profit or lose, they don't get fired. Again, govt. makes nothing, they produce nothing, they contribute nothing to the economy, they just steal from it. PUPPETOTUSPOS is working on growing this Federal heap of $h1T even larger, in hopes of breaking the back of capitalism and replacing it with $h1tism. Why do think there are states pushing for sovereignty from this?

You know the real irony of this, companies like Fedex, UPS, and DHL etc. pay corpoate taxes that ultimately help keep the USPS afloat.

E-mail and the internet put a hurtin' on the USPS also, just wait, they are thinking of taxing e-mail and internet.

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