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  • 2020-09-06 (xsd:date)
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  • No, USPS isn’t operating with a multibillion dollar surplus (en)
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  • Twenty-six House Republicans joined Democrats last month in supporting legislation to send $25 billion to the U.S. Postal Service and to block any changes to postal operations until after the election. The list included two of Illinois’ five GOP congressmen. U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood, however, was not one of them. Asked during a TV appearance to explain why he voted against the measure, LaHood questioned the need for that financial support. The post office right now, this year, is operating with about a $12 billion surplus, he said on WTTW’s Chicago Tonight Aug. 24 broadcast . The money isn’t necessary to get us through the election. That’s been a political football. His assertions come as the Trump administration is taking heat for removing hundreds of sorting machines and yanking mailboxes in the walk up to an election that will rely on the postal service more than any other election in the country's history. USPS says it has ample capacity to handle an influx of mail-in ballots this fall. But the agency’s shaky financial footing is a well-known and longstanding problem: USPS hasn’t recorded a profit in any year since 2006 and saw a net loss of $2.2 billion in the most recent fiscal quarter. So we decided to find out what LaHood was talking about when he said the agency was running a surplus. He was referring to the fact that the USPS had almost $13 billion cash on hand, as of June 30th, LaHood spokesman John Rauber wrote in an email, echoing a point made in the White House’s statement of administration policy opposing the bill. That figure is backed up by USPS’ latest quarterly report . Cash on hand — or unrestricted cash, as the agency calls it — is not a surplus by any definition, according to experts. Instead, it refers to the amount of money the agency has in the bank at a given time. The USPS reports its net income — also known as a profit — or net loss at the end of each fiscal period, in accordance with accepted accounting standards. Referring to cash on hand as a surplus doesn’t make sense, said David Wessel, director of the Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy at the Brookings Institution. The word ‘surplus’ suggests that the Postal Service’s revenues exceed its expenses, he said. They don’t. The Postal Service has been operating at a loss — certified by independent accountants and reported to the Securities and Exchange Commission — since 2007. In the last fiscal year, USPS brought in just over $71 billion in revenue. But it also shelled out nearly $80 billion to pay its carriers and cover expenses, including retiree benefits. A 2006 law made the agency responsible for prefunding future retiree health benefits, placing additional strain on its bottom line, which has also suffered over the years from declines in first-class and marketing mail. The postal service has run at a loss ever since. It's not even breaking even on its annual expenses and its annual income, said G. William Hoagland, a senior vice president at the Bipartisan Policy Center and former Republican staff director for the Senate Budget Committee. I don't know how anybody could say they have a surplus. Our ruling LaHood said, the post office right now, this year, is operating with about a $12 billion surplus. His spokesman told us he was referencing the nearly $13 billion cash on hand the agency reported at the end of June. But cash on hand is not a surplus, experts said. The agency has reported a net loss in every year since 2007, the year after Congress required it to more robustly fund its retirement health benefit system. We rate LaHood’s claim Pants on Fire! PANTS ON FIRE – The statement is not accurate and makes a ridiculous claim. Click here for more on the six PolitiFact ratings and how we select facts to check. (en)
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