USPS To Hold Public Meeting On Consolidating Easton, MD Mail Operations
EASTON, MD – The U.S. Postal Service will hold a public meeting to discuss its proposal to move some mail processing operations from the Easton Processing and Distribution Facility into the Baltimore Processing and Distribution Center.
The meeting will take place on Tuesday, June 15 at 6:00 p.m. at Easton High School in the Auditorium, 723 Mecklenburg Avenue, Easton, MD 21601. A summary of the proposal, the meeting agenda and presentation materials will be made available to the public on usps.com prior to the meeting.
With the deep decline in mail volume due to current economic conditions, the Postal Service has an excess of employees and equipment in some mail processing operations. A study was begun on March 16 at the Easton Processing and Distribution Facility to determine the feasibility of consolidating redundant operations to see if any efficiencies and cost savings would be achieved.
The study results support consolidating some mail processing operations that are currently being performed at the Easton Processing and Distribution Facility by taking advantage of available processing capacity at the Baltimore Processing and Distribution Center in order to increase efficiency and improve productivity.
While no final decision has been reached, Postal Service managers will give an overview of the reasons for the proposal and its possible outcomes, and will listen to community input and concerns. A summary of the proposal, a meeting agenda and presentation materials will be made available on usps.com.
Anyone who wishes to submit comments in writing can send them to:
CONSUMER AFFAIRS MANAGER
Baltimore District
900 E Fayette Street
Baltimore, MD 21233-9998
Public comments will be accepted through June 30, 2010.
Maryland Senators, Congressman Call Report On Closure of Easton Mail Facility “Unacceptable”
Filed under: Congress, consolidations, postal, press releases, usps
Senators, Congressman target failure of report to include impact on mail delivery service or to consult Eastern Shore residents, workers
U.S. Senators Barbara A. Mikulski and Benjamin L. Cardin and Congressman Frank M. Kratovil (all D-Md.) today again expressed their concerns about the potential closure of the Easton Mail Processing and Distribution Facility in a letter to Postmaster General John E. Potter. They once again demanded additional opportunities for public comment on the closure and an explanation of how service to Eastern Shore residents will be affected.
In a letter to the Postmaster General dated May 19, Senators Mikulski and Cardin and Congressman Kratovil requested additional public information sessions be scheduled in Ocean City, Salisbury and Chestertown. In its May 28 response, the Post Office refused to grant the delegation’s request and failed to address residents’ concerns about how the facility closure will affect mail delivery.
“Our requests…are simple: first, schedule three additional public meetings, one each in Ocean City, Salisbury and Chestertown, in addition to the public meeting scheduled in Easton. Second, provide residents and business owners with detailed information about how the potential closure will affect their mail service. Finally, listen to the residents of the Eastern Shore, giving serious consideration to their needs. Then, and only then, should a decision be made about the fate of the Easton Mail Processing Facility.”
View the Maryland Delegation’s May 19 letter here:
http://mikulski.senate.gov/_pdfs/Press/May19EastonProcessingandDistributionFacilityLetter.pdf
View the Postmaster General’s May 28 response here:
http://mikulski.senate.gov/_pdfs/Press/May28EastonPostalFacility.pdf
The text of the today’s letter follows:
June 2, 2010
Mr. John E. Potter
Postmaster General
United States Postal Service
475 L’Enfant Plaza SW
Washington, D.C. 20260Dear Postmaster Potter:
On May 19, we wrote directly to you requesting that the U.S. Postal Service schedule additional public information meetings at different locations on the Eastern Shore so that residents throughout the Shore would have an opportunity to express their concerns regarding the proposed closure of the Easton Area Mail Processing Facility.
On May 28, we received a response from your staff member, Marie Theresa Dominquez, VP of Government Relations and Public Policy, and the message was clear: the Postal Service is taking a one-size-fits-all approach to the mail service needs of Maryland’s unique Eastern Shore and hiding behind “process.” No additional public meetings will be held prior to completing the Area Mail Processing Study that could lead to the facility’s closure. Ms. Dominguez maintains that only one meeting is warranted, despite the Eastern Shore’s unique geography, its citizen’s dependence on mail service, and the outcry of local residents and their elected representatives. We are deeply disappointed by this response.
The Eastern Shore of Maryland is a region where people still rely heavily on the mail service. If the Easton facility closes, a letter mailed from Ocean City to Chestertown would have to be routed through Baltimore, which would add to the letter’s travel time. Coupled with the summer traffic and wind restrictions along the Chesapeake Bay Bridge, mail service would be delayed even further. The Area Mail Processing Study makes no mention of these considerations. It fails to address how the Easton facility’s closure will affect the delivery of mail on the Eastern Shore. It refers only to how much money it will save. For these reasons, we consider the preliminary study unacceptable.
We also find it unacceptable that, despite assurances that a final decision had not been made and that public input is desired through June 30, the U.S. Postal Service has informed the workers at the Easton facility of its closure. This is a violation of the public trust.
Our requests, as we wrote to you on May 19, are simple: first, schedule three additional public meetings, one each in Ocean City, Salisbury and Chestertown, in addition to the public meeting scheduled in Easton. Second, provide residents and business owners with detailed information about how the potential closure will affect their mail service. Finally, listen to the residents of the Eastern Shore, giving serious consideration to their needs. Then, and only then, should a decision be made about the fate of the Easton Mail Processing Facility.
We strongly urge you to reconsider your response to our request and right the wrongs we’ve outlined here. We look forward to hearing back from you within the week.
Sincerely,
Barbara A. Mikulski
United States Senator
Benjamin L. Cardin
United States SenatorFrank M. Kratovil, Jr.
Member of Congress

