USPS announces staff cuts at its headquarters

Amid declining mail volumes and a slow economy, the U.S. Postal Service is eliminating between 220 and 250 jobs at its headquarters.

The positions cut are in the agency's Washington, DC, headquarters and “headquarters-related units” such as an engineering center in Virginia, an address management center in Memphis, and various data processing centers, said USPS spokesman Greg Frey. The cuts represent about 15% of the headquarters' work force.

According to an internal message, some already vacant positions have been eliminated, while other occupied positions are being eliminated.

Frey said employees who currently occupied positions that were eliminated are still working, “doing generally the same work they were doing all along.”

The USPS hopes to reassign those employees in the next few months to positions that will become vacant either by workers already planning to retire, or those who accept the Postal Service's voluntary early retirement option.

“It's our every hope that we can minimize the number of impacted employees that may be terminated,” he said.

Starting next week, those employees whose positions were eliminated can begin applying for certain vacant positions.

Frey said employees would be placed in vacant positions that are similar to their previous ones.

The whole process “will take a few months,” he said.   

close

Next Article in Direct Mail

Follow us on Twitter @dmnews

Latest Jobs:

More in Direct Mail

Delivered: Fitness Postcards

Delivered: Fitness Postcards

What's in our mailbox this month: fitness postcards from Retro Fitness, American Woman Fitness Centers, Union's United Taekwondo Academy, and Bally Total Fitness. (We're totally pumped.)

Data-Driven Marketing Gets Dramatics Results

Data-Driven Marketing Gets Dramatics Results

Everyman Theatre company incorporated data-driven strategies to optimize its direct mail marketing. Total ROI after one campaign? 552%.

Postal Board Shelves 5-Day Delivery

Postal Board Shelves 5-Day Delivery

Bulk mailers can now feel free to set their summer and fall delivery schedules, but worries fester over a looming rate increase.