Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, left, didn't like the much higher sample-copy limit pushed by Rep. James Comer, right; Comer won. |
The bill would allow newspapers to mail many more sample copies to non-subscribers in their home counties at the same rate they pay the Postal Service to deliver papers to subscribers. The current limit is 10 percent of annual home-county circulation, enacted more than a century ago; the bill would make it 50%, which would only boost subscription appeals but provide total market coverage for advertisers that don't normally advertise in newspapers.
Also "among its provisions, the bill would require Postal Service retirees to enroll in Medicare and eliminates the requirement that the agency prefund its retiree health benefits for 75 years in the future, saving the beleaguered agency tens of billions of dollars over the next decade," Wu and Fuchs report. A financially solvent Postal Service is critical to rural America since for-profit delivery services often find it unprofitable to serve rural areas.
The bill "would also mandate that the Postal Service create a dashboard with performance data and continue to deliver at least six days each week," Wu and Fuchs report. The six-day delivery requirement is already in effect, but was in play during negotiations.
National Newspaper Association Chair Brett Wesner lauded the bill in a news release: "We greatly appreciate the hard work of Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-New York, and James Comer, R-Kentucky, in crafting a bill that drew wide bipartisan support, despite some unaccountable resistance. These two leaders came up with a complex bill that will give USPS some financial running room and, more importantly, demonstrate to the nation that we value this national treasure, the U.S. Postal Service."
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