Thousands of USPS mail handlers and postmasters accept separation incentives
By Amanda Palleschi
October 5, 2012 - Government Executive
Nearly 3,000 U.S. Postal Service mail handlers and more than 4,000
postmasters have opted for separation incentives the agency offered as part of
its efforts to save money by reducing its ranks.
According to USPS spokesman Mark Saunders, 2,952 mail handlers accepted the
agencyfs offer of $15,000 to leave voluntarily, and 4,189 postmasters accepted
its offer of $20,000. The total came close to the 7,400 postmasters and
full-time mail carriers the agency predicted
in July would sign up for the incentives.
The new numbers are final, Saunders said.
The incentives are part of USPSf plans to whittle down its workforce to help
generate about $500 million in savings. It also expects to downsize through
attrition. The agency offered the incentives to 21,000 postmasters and its
43,000 full-time mail handlers.
Full-time career employees opting to leave will receive half their payment at
the end of 2012 and the other half in 2013.
USPS also is offering part-time retirement programs to early retirees.
Earlier this week, USPS announced
plans to offer more than 110,000 career employees represented by the
American Postal Workers Union up to $15,000 to voluntarily retire or leave the
agency. The full $15,000 is available for APWU-represented clerks, mechanics,
vehicle drivers, custodians and administrators who have worked 1,520 paid hours
in the 26 pay periods prior to the date of their departure; part-time employees
can receive a prorated portion of the $15,000.
USPSf financial outlook remains bleak. The agency defaulted last week on a
$5.6 billion congressionally mandated obligation to prefund retiree health
benefits, marking the second time in two months it defaulted on its payments;
the agency also failed to pay $5.5 billion for fiscal 2011 prefunding
obligations, originally due to the Treasury Department in September 2011.
By Amanda Palleschi
October 5, 2012
http://www.govexec.com/pay-benefits/2012/10/thousands-usps-mail-handlers-and-postmasters-accept-separation-incentives/58629/