Issa's Last Ditch Effort to Eliminate Saturday Mail Delivery Falls Short
A Republican lawmaker made a final stand this week to strike down legislative language requiring mail delivery six days per week, but his efforts ultimately fell short.
Rep. Darrell Issa., R-Calif., wrote a letter to the House Rules Committee stating an appropriations bill containing a rider on postal policy was outside the parameters of the chambers guidelines. Issa said the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, which he chairs, has sole jurisdiction to create postal legislation.
House Republicans postal point man said the six-day requirement was costing the Postal Service $2 billion annually, which the cash-strapped agency could no longer afford.
Without meaningful reforms, such as the implementation of a modified six-day delivery schedule, all Postal Service operations are at risk, not just Saturday delivery, Issa wrote to Rules Committee Chairman Pete Sessions, R-Texas, raising a point of order on the spending measure.
In issuing the rules for debate and voting on the bill, however, Sessions committee took a waiver on the point of order, allowing the six-day mandate to stand.
The American Postal Workers Union called Issas efforts hypocritical, noting he did not complain about the spending bills reversal of Washington, D.C.s marijuana laws. Rep. Issas complaint would be comical if it wasnt such a serious attack on the peoples Postal Service, APWU Legislative and Political Director John Marcotte said. The hypocrisy is stunning but not unusual for Mr. Issa.
http://www.govexec.com/oversight/2014/07/issas-last-ditch-effort-eliminate-saturday-mail-delivery-falls-short/88435/?oref=govexec_today_nl