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Black smoke signals Vatican conclave has failed to elect new pope on first day;Nine in 10 surveyed people in CO, across globe back climate action; Three-Fifths comments ignite Indiana controversy; For MN, SNAP benefits reach farmers markets, other parts of the economy.

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As Congress debates Medicaid cuts and emissions rollbacks, former presidential candidate John Kasich calls for protecting vulnerable Americans, veterans link fossil fuel dependence to military deaths, and advocates warn funding cuts threaten health and jobs.

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DOGE is gutting a 30-year old national service program, cuts are likely but Head Start may be spared elimination in the next budget, moms are the most vulnerable when extreme weather hits and there's a croaking sound coming from rural California.

Proposed post office ‘slowdown’ threatens rural Americans

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Tuesday, December 24, 2024   

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy has made clear he wants the Postal Service to turn a profit. But advocates warn proposed changes would hurt rural Maryland and the rest of the country.

A plan from DeJoy would make any mail farther than 50 miles from a regional processing center move one day slower.

Annie Norman, a leader of a group called the Save the Post Office Coalition, said rural areas would be the most impacted by the proposed service cuts.

"Rural folks rely on the post office to deliver prescription medications or live chicks for their farms," said Norman. "We're talking about seniors, and veterans, folks with disabilities, Indigenous communities. They all need the postal service to pay bills and get their social security checks. "

The latest proposal builds on previous changes that altered the Postal Service's delivery commitment from three days to five. Other past changes include multiple price hikes on Forever stamps.

DeJoy says his proposal will save the Postal Service $3 billion yearly.

A Pew Research poll found that Americans view the U.S. Postal Service as the second most favorable government agency, only behind the National Park Service.

But advocates like Norman have said cutting service standards will only contribute to a downward spiral. She said Postal Service officials need to look at creating more streams of revenue.

"No one in this country's asking for slower mail service at higher prices," said Norman. "And one way that they can expand the revenue of the Postal Service and dig themselves out of a hole is to focus on new revenue, through services like postal banking to places that really need it."

Postal banking includes providing low-cost checking and savings accounts, to millions of people who are locked out of the banking industry.



Disclosure: Americans for Financial Reform contributes to our fund for reporting on Budget Policy & Priorities, Campaign Finance Reform/Money in Pol, Social Justice. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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