Follow us! >

USPS OIG – Parcel Return Service – Consolidator Payment and Refund Errors

Background

Consumers return about one-in-six online purchases. Despite growth in the returns market, the U.S. Postal Service’s Parcel Return Service (PRS) volume has declined in recent years. Introduced in 2003, the PRS product caters to private-sector consolidators that facilitate returns on behalf of merchants, generating $241.8 million in Postal Service revenue in fiscal year (FY) 2022 on 70.3 million packages. Growing the PRS product aligns with the Postal Service’s Delivering for America 10-year plan.

What We Did

Our objective was to evaluate the process for, cause of, and validity of refunds associated with the PRS product and examine the accuracy of manifested prices — the postage payments consolidators submit based on contractual rates. We conducted site visits and interviews and analyzed package data and consolidator refund requests.

What We Found

The Postal Service accepted 22.8 million PRS packages at the wrong price, resulting in $25 million in lost revenue between October 2020 and September 2023. Although USPS reviewed some aspects of manifested prices, it did not track the type of facility — processing plant or delivery unit — where packages were retrieved, a significant factor in determining price. Integrating this element into its verification process would help ensure the Postal Service consistently receives the correct postage.

Also, USPS did not always comply with contractual requirements to hold packages for at least 48 hours to give consolidators time to retrieve them. Those violations made 3.2 million packages eligible for refunds during our scope period. While robust procedures and training exist, employees sometimes failed to follow the process and management did not consistently hold them accountable. Without automation to reduce human error, the Postal Service risks losing business in the returns market. Finally, the Postal Service granted PRS refunds between November 2021 and September 2023 that may not have been warranted, due to a flawed refund verification process. The flaws exposed USPS to the risk that consolidators could request and receive refunds for additional packages that do not qualify.

Recommendations

We recommended management 1) strengthen the manifest verification process by incorporating facility type, 2) simplify the return delivery unit processes to improve compliance and enable better supervision, 3) conduct analysis on automating the process to align package handling with established PRS procedures or identifying alternatives to improve compliance, 4) develop and maintain an accurate list of active return delivery units, and 5) enhance the PRS refund review process to include an automated validation that refunds are warranted.

Sign up to receive our Daily Postal News blast

Related Articles

Tell us what you think below!

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Hot this week

Postal workers rally in Minneapolis against ICE raids

Despite bitter cold temperatures on Sunday, postal workers and other community members in Minneapolis rallied against recent U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids in the Twin Cities, specifically demanding that ICE not use postal property to stage its operations.

U.S. Postal Service Announces Bid Solicitation for Access to Last-Mile Delivery Network

Shippers large and small will be able to access the more than 18,000 USPS delivery destination units (DDUs) nationwide via a solicitation process that will begin accepting bids in late January or early February 2026.

This postal employee responded when he saw smoke and heard an alarm

Lopez and another person entered the home and helped an older, deaf customer get outside.

This retailer has revived a holiday tradition

Nordstrom has brought back its print gift catalog for this holiday season.

NALC Executive Council meets as subcommittees integrate 2025 national rap session workshop feedback into collective-bargaining preparations

The NALC Executive Council met at NALC Headquarters in Washington, DC, this week to continue preparations for the next round of collective bargaining
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img
Secret Link
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x