Follow us! >

Rep. Angie Craig Blasts USPS after Q4 Report Ranks MN Postal Performance One of the Worst in the Country

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, U.S. Representative Angie Craig blasted U.S. Postal Service (USPS) leadership in Minnesota following the release of the USPS Office of Inspector General’s (OIG) Fiscal Year 2025 (FY25) 4th quarter (Q4) service performance report, which ranked the MN-ND District 47th out of 50 nationwide.

According to the USPS OIG, the service standard for first-class two-day service in the Minnesota-North Dakota region has declined since last quarter – with only 82% of mail arriving on time, 5 points below USPS’ national target of 87%. The national average this quarter was 86.3%.

In FY25 Q3, the region saw 84.4% of mail delivered on time and ranked 32nd in the nation for two-day service.

“Here in Minnesota, we started the year with unacceptable postal performance levels, and we’re ending with yet another startling quarterly report that puts our region in the bottom four districts nationwide,” said Rep. Craig. “This is beyond unacceptable. It’s well past time for USPS to re-evaluate their local leadership and start ensuring that letter carriers and postal workers have what they need to get Minnesotans their mail on time.”

Rep. Craig has consistently spoken out against unacceptable USPS performance in the South Metro and has led the charge to improve mail service and protect USPS from privatization. Local letter carriers and others have also raised the alarm about leadership changes that are impacting morale and culture in Minnesota post offices.

This Congress, Rep. Craig introduced her Deliver for Democracy Act, which would limit price increases on stamps until the USPS can achieve at least a 95% on-time delivery rate for periodicals and require the USPS to report annually to the U.S. Postal Regulatory Commission on its progress – including on-time delivery data for newspapers in its periodical service performance measurement.

In October, Rep. Craig successfully pushed USPS to launch an internal investigation into reports of delayed delivery of the New Prague Times. And in January, she led a resolution urging her Congressional colleagues to take all appropriate measures to reject the privatization of USPS.

Last year, following Rep. Craig’s bipartisan call for a statewide investigation, the USPS OIG announced an investigation into the entire MN-ND postal district.

And in January 2023, she launched an online USPS survey to gauge the extent of postal issues in the Second District and received more than 3,300 responses from Minnesotans. Rep. Craig delivered those responses directly to Postmaster General DeJoy’s office in Washington DC.

Sign up to receive our Daily Postal News blast

Related Articles

Tell us what you think below!

1 COMMENT

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
The Truth
The Truth
1 month ago

She’ll need to get in line, as poor service has become the norm across the country. Also the norm is in this district, performance has been poor for a while and no senior managers have been held accountable, as they never are.

Hot this week

PRC Limits USPS Market Dominant Rate Increases to Once Per Year, Tightens Workshare Discounts

Since 2021, USPS has treated its expanded pricing authority under the Modified Ratemaking System as a green light for twice-a-year increases

Underused space across USPS facilities could be a hidden drag on modernization and budgets

A new USPS OIG audit finds millions of square feet sitting idle or underutilized, raising questions about cost, efficiency and missed opportunities.

Martin Luther King Jr. Day is Jan. 19

In 1983, President Ronald Reagan signed legislation designating the third Monday in January a federal holiday in honor of King’s birthday.

VIPs help USPS dedicate a stamp honoring ‘The Greatest’

The Postal Service celebrated Muhammad Ali Jan. 15 at the dedication ceremony for the stamp honoring the three-time heavyweight boxing champion known as “The Greatest.”

Johnson gives postmaster general until July before requesting resignation

Rep. Dusty Johnson told a crowd it’s time to “turn up the heat” on the U.S. Postal Service following thousands of constituent complaints.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

Secret Link
1
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
Send this to a friend