Issa Conintues Fight To Save USPS
By Adrianna McGinley
The U.S. Postal Service can and should be saved, said House Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) Monday.
“If the fix required that we completely eliminate the post office, I’d be standing here telling you why we have to do it, but it’s not necessary,” Issa said.
Issa has introduced legislation he says will save the postal service without cutting workers’ wages or benefits, and would eliminate the potential for privatizing the service.
“The post office should be run like a business and if they’re run like a business they can pay salaries that they determine and benefits they determine,” Issa said. “But, they’ve got to be able to not need a government subsidy.”
The bill proposes forcing retirement on those who are eligible and it would provide incentives for those who are able to find work elsewhere. Issa said he disagrees with proposals mandating the elimination of six-day service, saying that maintaining the service while proving it cost effective would be most beneficial to consumers. He also criticized plans suggesting money be borrowed from the retirement fund.
Issa proposed several solutions to save money for the service, including investing in cluster mailboxes to replace door chutes, saying it would save $5.5 billion in labor costs, and expressed the need for the Post Master General to be given more decision-making power.
“The one thing we can’t give [the Post Master General] is the ability to do nothing,” he said.
Salazar Defends Moratorium, Promotes Safe Energy Future
Philip Bunnell - Talk Radio News Service
Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar told members of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Thursday he hopes the country will learn from the BP Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico, and defended a moratorium on deepwater drilling imposed by the Obama administration.
Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.) expressed outraged with the administration’s response to the spill, saying the temporary drilling ban “doesn’t make any sense to me.” Burton said he feared rigs will move to other countries, leaving many American workers without jobs.
Salazar defended the moratorium, saying it is necessary when “all of our resources are focused” on the current spill.
Salzar said he hopes that the Gulf can be restored to a condition “better than it was before April 20,” and that the country will invest in safer oil and gas acquisition methods.
“[We must] embrace the new energy future of America with a much broader portfolio including wind, solar, and geothermal energy,” the embattled Secretary said.
Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) voiced concern over the nation’s energy policy as a whole, calling offshore drilling exploitive of the environment.
“We need to start thinking about [how] our system is collapsing.”