Massive Mail Delays Continue Across Michigan and the Nation

You’ve got mail. Somewhere. Probably. The U.S. Postal Service is still digging out from under an avalanche of mail sent during the recent holiday season. But for much of the past year, the postal system has been strained by COVID-19 and policy changes.

Postal Service truck

Online shopping has skyrocketed during the pandemic as many customers sheltered at home. Both the postal service and those who depend on timely mail deliveries are still coping with the result.

In cities like St. Louis, postal workers are putting in 12-hour days and pulling extra shifts to make a dent in mountains of letters and parcels. In Baltimore, utility customers are receiving bills in the mail that are already past due. And outside the main post office in Detroit, Lucy Johnson says lost letters that should have arrived at their destination long ago are putting her house at risk.

“I got a bill back, my mortgage payment, and it said it was late last month,” Johnson says. “I know I mailed it 10 days in advance and they still charged me a late charge. Seems like the bills come on time but when you mail them out they don’t get there on time. What’s going on?”

The Perfect Postal Storm

The U.S. Postal Service has an answer at the very top of its official tracking page.

A disclaimer there notes the system is “experiencing unprecedented volume increases and limited employee availability due to the impacts of COVID-19.” That combination is making it tough on those at the other end of the mailbox.

“Any given day we’re six to 12 carriers short out of 60 routes. So there are days that it just can’t get done.”  Jennifer Kowalczyk, American Postal Workers Union official

About 20 miles north of Detroit, near the Shelby Township Post Office, American Postal Workers Union official Jennifer Kowalczyk says letter carriers and mail clerks have never seen anything like the current deluge.

“They just feel like there’s no end in sight. Because usually (around) Christmas, there’s a month or two that it’s hectic, it’s crazy, you’re working 12 hours a day. But this has been going on since the middle of March. So you’re going on almost a year. And these people are exhausted,” she says.

In addition to exhausting shifts, postal workers face understaffing due to COVID-19 implications. Union officials estimate as many as 14,500 postal employees are under quarantine.

“So any given day we’re six to 12 carriers short out of 60 routes. So there are days that it just can’t get done,” Kowalczyk said.

Bottlenecks and Backlogs

Groups representing some of the nation’s largest bulk mailers say certain major processing hubs were so overwhelmed late last year that they were “embargoed,” and refused to accept any mail for a time as they attempted to clear the bottleneck of letters and packages.

Delivery trucks reportedly waited hours and sometimes even days before they could drop off mail at facilities in regions like Metro Detroit and Philadelphia, portions of New Jersey and some southern states, areas hit hard and early by COVID-19.

Laura Herberg/WDET
Laura Herberg/WDET

Art Sackler, who heads the Coalition for a 21st Century Postal Service, which represents some of the nation’s largest companies that rely on mail delivery, says the slowdowns pose a real threat to small businesses already on the edge financially.

“Small-town newspapers that depend on the postal service to arrive on Saturdays, so that people have the ads that they can use on Saturday when they go for their shopping. They couldn’t even drop ‘em off (at some post offices.)”

The postal service itself has long been losing money, as customers increasingly rely on emails and e-commerce.

When Postmaster General Louis DeJoy took over last summer, he vowed to make the service more efficient and cost-effective. DeJoy moved to slash overtime and accelerate mothballing sorting machines. He also required letter carriers to begin deliveries at a specific time each day and not return to a post office, even if it meant leaving some mail stranded.

“As we begin the new year I want us to set a new tone. We will… deliver affordable and dependable service to the American public in a self-sustaining business manner.” Louis DeJoy, U.S. Postmaster General 

Federal courts blocked those orders, ruling that the postal service had to ensure mail-in absentee ballots arrived on time to be counted in the November U.S. elections.

By all accounts, the postal service made good on delivering ballots in a timely fashion.

But in a recent video to postal employees, DeJoy intimated his previous changes, as well as new initiatives to streamline the service, are coming in 2021.

He says, “As we begin the new year I want us to set a new tone. We will soon begin a process to deliver a postal service of the future that will deliver affordable and dependable service to the American public in a self-sustaining business manner.”

Buried Under Packages, Ravaged By COVID

The postmaster general’s message worries some members of the U.S. Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, which oversees the postal service. The ranking Democrat on the committee last year, U.S. Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., helped investigate whether DeJoy was purposely slowing delivery last year to limit mail-in ballots.

Peters says the postal service is just that – a service — and can’t be run like a business.

“I’m particularly concerned that the Postmaster General is focused primarily just on cutting cost. Certainly cutting costs is important, but you can’t do it in a way that impacts service,” says Peters.

Laura Herberg/WDET
Laura Herberg/WDET

Back near the Shelby Township Post Office, Union Local President Roscoe Woods says DeJoy’s procedural changes helped delay delivering letters already buried under so many packages the facility there had to erect a tent to house the overflow. And Woods says COVID-19 continues to ravage the postal workforce.

He says some older employees took early retirement to avoid close contact with others at postal facilities or along delivery routes, while workers with children were forced to stay home as schools went virtual.

Woods claims efforts to modernize operations in the future can only go so far.

“However automated it may be, however, streamlined you can make it, it still requires people to move the mail,” Woods said. “It still requires bodies sorting, ’cause not every address can be read by a computer, not every parcel can be sorted by a machine. They can try to cut bodies and service will suffer.”

Union officials say the postal service is keeping on about 10,000 temporary workers until the end of the month to help clear the massive backlog of mail. They also say the postal service is finalizing a deal to add almost 10,000 new jobs at processing plants. 

But the postal services’ total workforce is well over 600,000. And those employees are still dealing with mail that keeps piling-up as unprecedented increases in online shopping continue.

Even though most postal workers are next up to receive COVID-19 vaccinations, unions predict mail delivery won’t truly improve until the pandemic relaxes its grip on the nation.

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Author

  • Quinn Klinefelter is a Senior News Editor at 101.9 WDET. In 1996, he was literally on top of the news when he interviewed then-Senator Bob Dole about his presidential campaign and stepped on his feet.