The attorneys general of Pennsylvania and Washington announced Tuesday that they are leading states suing to block service changes at the U.S. Postal Service, even as the postmaster general reversed himself and said he’d halt some of the changes following a national outcry, reported The Associated Press.
Washington state Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro and Attorney General Bob Ferguson, both Democrats, cited policy changes that include limiting worker overtime and late or extra shifts in the lawsuit announcement, which came a day after several individuals and political candidates sued in New York state to stop the postal service changes.
Federal law requires the Postal Service to go through
specific procedures before making changes that affect nationwide service,
including a review by the Postal Regulatory Commission and a public comment
period.
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a Republican donor with no
prior postal management experience, did not follow those procedures, the
attorneys general said.
“What’s going on right now is nothing less than a full-on
assault by this administration on the U.S. Postal Service, an institution that
millions of Americans rely on every single day,” Ferguson told a news
conference.
DeJoy said Tuesday he would suspend the closure of mail
processing facilities, retail hours would not be cut and overtime would be
allowed. Still, Shapiro and Ferguson said they would keep the lawsuit active to
make sure the promises are kept.
“We need to see binding action to reverse these changes,”
Shapiro said.
While much of the outcry has focused on the ability of the
postal service to deliver mail-in ballots in November, Ferguson and Shapiro
stressed that slow mail delivery also affects important correspondence and
medical prescriptions.
The Veterans Administration fills about 80 percent of its
prescriptions by mail and many senior citizens who are not veterans get their
medicine by mail, with the coronavirus pandemic driving mailed prescription
deliveries higher, Ferguson and Shapiro said.
Ferguson filed his lawsuit in U.S. court in the Eastern
District of Washington on Tuesday against President Donald Trump, DeJoy and the
postal service. A dozen other states signed on — Colorado, Connecticut,
Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island,
Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin.
Shapiro said California, Delaware, Massachusetts, Maine and
North Carolina were joining Pennsylvania’s case, which will be filed in the
coming days in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. That case names DeJoy and
the postal service’s board of governors as defendants.
So far, all of the attorneys general signing onto both cases
are Democrats.
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