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Post Office changes: What’s in the USPS 10-year plan

A sign marks the entrance to a post office location. Some branches could see hours reduced or be consolidated under proposed 10-year plans. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

(NEXSTAR) — A 10-year plan aimed at bringing financial stability to the United States Postal Service will include cuts to branch hours, postage increases and longer delivery windows, according to details released Tuesday.

The USPS changes were laid out in a long-anticipated planning document released online. The 58-page document details how a decline in mail volumes and increase in packages has made the traditional 3-day First Class delivery deadline more costly and logistically difficult hit.


Here are some of the highlights from the “Delivering for America” plan:

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy called the plan a “very positive vision” that would help prevent the need for future government bailouts.

DeJoy, a prominent donor to former President Donald Trump, has come under heavy criticism for a series of operational changes that slowed mail before the 2020 elections. The policy shifts fueled fears that DeJoy was attempting to sabotage the agency on the behalf of Trump, a vocal critic of mail voting, before it handled unprecedented numbers of mail-in ballots. Despite the worries, the agency said, it delivered more than 99% of ballots within five days.

President Joe Biden does not directly have the authority to remove Dejoy, and Democrats have been pressing the president to nominate a slate of potential governors who could do just that. Biden nominated three new members at the end of January.

“There are parts of the plan that raise deep concerns,” the American Postal Workers Union wrote in response to the plan. “At a time that the public is demanding faster delivery of mail and packages, proposals that would slow the mail and reduce retail services – such as changing service standards, plant consolidations and reducing operating hours at post offices – will only have a negative effect on postal workers and the public.”

The union did call other elements of the plan “welcome proposals.”

The Associated Press contributed to this article.