The Cities

St. Paul residents object to proposed closure of local post office

Posted at 9:53 AM on November 16, 2011 by Madeleine Baran (2 Comments)
Filed under: Business, St. Paul

Residents of the Payne-Phalen neighborhood said they're not letting their post office go without a fight.

Several dozen people voiced their objections to the proposed closure of the Seeger Square post office at a public hearing held by the Postal Service last night. Some criticized the Postal Service for not issuing any public hearing notices in a foreign language, particularly given that 39 percent of neighborhood residents speak a language other than English.

"Seeger Square serves one of the most diverse neighborhoods in the whole of Minnesota. Correct?" said Leslie McMurray, an organizer with the Payne-Phalen District Planning Council.

The crowd answered with a resounding yes. McMurray scanned the mostly white, elderly crowd. "And yet this group is not as diverse as our community."

Many said the proposal was the latest blow to a low-income neighborhood that has struggled to attract jobs and basic services.

"The fact that this area is being considered is adding insult to injury," said state Rep. John Lesch. "I know that many people aren't here because they feel like, well, it's just going to happen. They feel like a dog that's been beat too much, to quote a Bruce Springsteen line."

However, the Postal Service says it's running out of money and doesn't have many options left. Earlier in the day, it reported losing $5.1 billion last year.

The Seeger Square post office, at 896 Arcade Street, is just one of 3,652 post offices marked for possible closure or consolidation. The list includes nearly 100 post offices in Minnesota.

Postal Service employee Margaret Campbell began the hearing by recounting the Postal Service's financial woes -- a decrease in mail volume, a dispute with federal lawmakers over pension payments, and the burden of meeting federal requirements without receiving any tax money.

"As dismal as it sounds to say, we are in a crisis," she said.

The closure of the Seeger Square post office would save about $216,000 a year, Campbell said. The post office does not have any mail carriers and is used entirely for P.O. boxes and retail sales.

Customers can use the post office at 1425 E. Minnehaha Avenue (1.6 miles away) or avoid the post office entirely and instead buy stamps from local banks and grocery stores, she said. (Rainbow Foods, the grocery store next to the Seeger Square post office, already sells stamps.)

Campbell wasn't convincing anyone - and she said she didn't expect she would. At one point, someone in the audience suggested asking everyone who thinks the post office should stay open to raise their hands. Every hand was up in the air within seconds.

As far as the complaint that the Postal Service did not post hearing information or send out notices in any foreign languages, Campbell had this to say:

Headquarters does not, um, does not provide us with that option. And frankly, it would be impossible for us to figure out which household to send which language to.

This comment was met with laughter and comments from several people that it wouldn't be that hard to print the information in several languages on the same notice.

Some attendees had suggestions for how to improve the Postal Service. One woman asked, "Why don't they, instead of having all these fancy stamps, just go to one common stamp?"

Campbell replied, "I think the collectors would probably disagree with you on that. Stamp collecting is still one of the major hobbies in the world, and actually, stamp collectors more or less give us the money because they never use those stamps."

Another woman suggested the Postal Service consider using a mobile post office, similar to a bookmobile, that could make up for the loss of a permanent station. Several Postal Service employees said they're considering that and think it's a good idea, although they cautioned that the mobile service would probably struggle to be as consistent as they would like.

The public has 60 days to comment on the proposal. After that, the Postal Service will provide public notice of its final decision within 30 days. It then has to wait at least another 60 days before closing the office.

Campbell cautioned that the Postal Service has not yet decided which offices to close. She reviewed the three criteria for including a post office on the potential closure/consolidation list. The criteria include:

1. Offices with $27,500 or less in annual retail revenue AND less than two work hours per day. (This criteria is meant to focus on the smaller rural offices.)


OR

2. Offices with $600,000 or less in annual retail revenue AND 5 or more alternate access points within 2 miles. "Alternate access points" are defined as places where customers can buy stamps - like at a bank or grocery store. A store does not need to accept packages or offer other services to be considered to be an "alternate access point."

OR

3. Offices with $1 million or less in annual retail revenue AND 5 or more "alternate access points" within 5 miles.

The Seeger Square office falls into criteria #2.

What do you think? Given the financial problems facing the Postal Service, is it reasonable to ask that customers share the burden of cutbacks?


Comments (2)

We are dealing with a government structure that is out of control and that does not work for the people, only (in) the best interests of the major corporations and banks. We cannot allow our most valued institutions to fall by the wayside. We must resist the casual casting off of workers as if they had no name or consequence. The Occupy movement are showing us what we must do; let's do it and bring a true democracy to our country.

Posted by Stewart | November 17, 2011 9:51 AM


The Post Office is now in crisis mode. They have been telling congress this for the past 2 years (perhaps more than!) My father was a postmaster in the chicago area for many years...so, I heard it all first hand!

As a stamp collector, I'd like to see the different stamps continue. 1 design will certainly kill the hobby!!

A final note....I have kept up to breast with the latest. ONE thing I have YET to hear...is ....

OK..if we are to keep the PO alive...we need to raise rates for 1st class mail to 90c (arbitrary cent, obviously) and the 2nd ounce to 45c... etc. etc...

by doing so, it would give the general public an idea to keep services - AS IS - by going to these higher rates, would be required!

flip side...higher rates probably will cause a lot more folks to use the net to pay bills, send emails instead of letters, etc. etc... fallout in other words...

Unions are also killing the Post Office... but, this is a whole other topic, in and of itself! LOL!

Posted by Richard | November 17, 2011 12:49 PM


Post a comment

The following HTML tags are allowed in your comments:
+ Bold: <b>Text</b>
+ Italic: <i>Text</i>
+ Link: <a href="http://url" target="_blank">Link</a>
Fields marked with * are required.


Comment Preview appears above this form upon pressing the "preview" button. Edit your comment and press "preview" again, until you are satisfied with your comment.

Your comment may not appear on the blog until several minutes after it was submitted.

November 2011
S M T W T F S
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30      


Master Archive

MPR News
Radio

Listen Now

Other Radio Streams from MPR

Classical MPR
Radio Heartland

Services