Postmaster General Steiner discusses reforms
We discussed his plans to strengthen and modernize the U.S. Postal Service to ensure it continues serving Americans reliably in the years ahead.
We discussed his plans to strengthen and modernize the U.S. Postal Service to ensure it continues serving Americans reliably in the years ahead.
Postmaster General David Steiner visited nine USPS facilities in Colorado and Texas last month, part of his focus on strengthening the organization’s service to the American public.
New Postmaster General David Steiner has indicated that he plans to continue his predecessor Louis DeJoy’s Delivering for American reorganization initiative
A national mail advocacy group says the U.S. Postal Service’s deepening losses should be a wake-up call for new Postmaster General David Steiner to scrap his predecessor’s approach and chart a new course.
The below remarks are as prepared for delivery by Postmaster General and CEO David Steiner during the open session meeting of the U.S. Postal Service Board of Governors on Aug. 7, 2025.
In his first appearance before the U.S. Postal Service Board of Governors Thursday, newly minted Postmaster General David Steiner offered his support to a controversial modernization plan crafted by his predecessor and criticized by the Postal Regulatory Commission, as well as several members of Congress.
At the very start of his leadership, a seasoned executive like Mr. Steiner will reflect on his journey ahead. He will pay careful attention over the next 90 days to see what needs to be done in the coming months and years.
As a new Postmaster General with ties to FedEx assumes control of the agency, rural customers and postal workers worry about privatization or downsizing of the agency
Steiner is the highest paid chief executive in the agency’s history, with a salary of $346,780, according to a separate regulatory filing
The Postal Service’s new chief executive is defending the agency’s current operating model, at a time when the Trump administration considers challenging its independence.