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Postal Service Privatization Draws Staples Boycott

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Thursday, July 10, 2014   

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - West Virginia labor officials say a move to put postal services in Staples stores is really a move to privatize middle-class jobs.

Kenny Perdue, West Virginia AFL-CIO President, said the U.S. Postal Service deal with the troubled big-box office supply store chain would cut costs by shifting the work from Postal Service employees to Staples workers making close to minimum wage.

Staples officials say it will bring traffic into stores hit by declining sales of paper and printing products, while the Postal Service says it's battling the rise of electronic communications devices.

Perdue argued that the Postal Service is hamstrung by pre-funded pension rules that were imposed by Congress to help make the nation's deficit appear smaller.

The postal workers union says its members make about $25.00 an hour, while Staples pays its employees about one-third of that.

According to Perdue, a Staples worker's average annual income $18,000.

He added that the plan undermines an institution many older people and rural residents rely on, and feel connected to.

"Everybody enjoys getting their mail," Perdue said. "And making sure that our grandparents get their Social Security check. They're actually trying to privatize the postal system, give it to a private entity that's in it for making nothing but profit."

Perdue said some of the back-office jobs like mail-sorting could be sent overseas by Staples.


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