
Beacon Hill residents are heading into the holiday rush with a Postal Service that federal auditors say is still struggling to meet on-time delivery goals.
A federal audit in July found that the USPS fell short of many service targets during last year’s peak season, underscoring the ongoing challenges facing the nation’s mail system.
The USPS reports that many products average above 85% on-time delivery, but the federal auditor believed that service performance had declined for most products compared to the prior peak season.
Representative
Jay Livingstone said that resident complaints about postal service
issues had greatly declined since a November 2023 staffing shortage that
caused unexpected service stoppages at the Charles Street post office.
"[Sen.
Edward Markey] and his staff were having, at one point, weekly or
biweekly meetings with the post office,” Livingstone said, attributing
the improvements to the senator’s efforts.
USPS
spokesperson Steve Doherty said in an interview that, “The vast
majority of mail was delivered to customers last year within
two-and-a-half to three days from the time it was entered into the mail
stream.”
This year’s holiday send by dates remain consistent with previous years.
For
packages to reach their destination by Christmas, USPS Ground Advantage
and First Class mail should be received by the post office by December
17, Priority Mail by December 18, and Priority Mail Express by December
20.
For Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and U.S. territories, the Ground Advantage deadline is December 16.
On
staffing, Livingstone said postal employees in his district have not
raised concerns about holiday shortages. Though he added that letter
carriers have expressed a broader concern with the Trump
administration’s continued efforts to privatize the post office.
As
the way the mail has been used has changed, so has the USPS funding
model. The 1971 Postal Reorganization Act shifted the USPS to a
self-funded service. Still today, the USPS funds its operations through
postage and service revenues rather than taxpayer dollars.
“We
don't deliver mail just where it's economically convenient or
profitable to deliver it. Other companies, our competitors, will deliver
the mail to us for the last mile,” Doherty said.
Asked
about delivery logistics in Beacon Hill’s narrow streets, Livingstone
said USPS has not raised any neighborhood specific operational concerns
with him.
“The
delivery trucks they tend to use are on the smaller side, and most
deliveries happen by postal carrier that's walking,” he said.
Doherty
said that the agency has increased its daily processing capability from
60 million to 88 million parcels, heading into this year’s peak season.
"A
big part of it, and it was long overdue, is retooling and modernizing
the equipment to match the way that people use the mail today. With
people ordering more and more things online, the package side of the
business has grown exponentially.” Doherty said.
Additionally,
the USPS has been changing its hiring structures to be less reliant on a
surge of seasonal hires. Doherty said finding seasonal hires in the
Northeast can be particularly difficult due to the area’s low
unemployment.
This
year’s hiring goal is to reach 14,000 holiday employees, but many of
these temporary positions are now designed to be converted to career
positions at the start of the next year. Since 2020 the USPS has
converted nearly 232,000 pre-career positions into full-time career
jobs.
“We've been
doing Christmas now for 250 years. I don't want to say we have it down
to a science, but it's not our first rodeo, and we keep tweaking the
process to make it more and more efficient as the customers’ needs
change,” Doherty said.
“We
plan to do it again successfully this year, and we have everything in
place to achieve that. We're very confident about being able to get your
packages home for the holiday.”