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Letters to Editor
Nader to Create Postal Consumer Action Group
(posted March 14, 2005)
Consumer
Activist Ralph Nader has announced plans to create an organization dedicated
to representing the interests of individual postal customers. “Consumers do
not have an adequate seat at the table when important postal issues are
brought before the Postal Rate Commission, Congress, and the Postal Service
itself,” he said during a meeting with APWU President William Burrus.
Nader initiated contact with the APWU early in 2005.He sought the meeting
because “representatives of large business mailers and presort bureaus
generally dominate Postal Rate Commission hearings.” Nader seeks to create a
Post Office Consumer Action Group, which would put funding and expertise
into developing meaningful public testimony before the rate commission and
other postal bodies. “I welcome Ralph Nader’s input in this important
struggle,” Burrus said. “Too often, the APWU has been a lonely voice warning
about the dangers of postal policy that favors the nation’s biggest mailers,
while overlooking the needs of individual citizens and small businesses.”
Consumers’ interests have not been well represented during recent important
discussions in Washington about the future of the Postal Service, Nader
said. “The President’s Commission made sweeping recommendations that would
not only drastically restructure the Postal Service, but also eliminate and
curtail traditional services. The Commission received testimony from a few
dozen business representatives while only three representatives that even
claimed to speak for consumers were heard from.” “Individual postal users
need an organization that allows them to pool their resources so they can
have their own advocates, economists, researchers, organizers and lobbyists,
”Nader said.
The Post Office Consumer Action Group would be a nonprofit organization that
would enable individual users to band together for greater participation in
shaping national and local postal policies, Nader said. According to his
plan, the group would be funded by small voluntary contributions solicited
through a mailing by the USPS to all residential postal addresses. The
organization would be modeled on residential postal addresses. The
organization would be modeled on the Citizen’s Utility Boards, which
represent consumers’ concerns on energy, water, and transportation issues.
Establishing such an organization through a Postal Service solicitation
would require legislative action.
The APWU is a co-founder of the Consumer
Alliance for Postal Services. CAPS is dedicated to protecting
“affordable and dependable mail service for all Americans.” (source: APWU
and some additions by PostalReporter.com )
NALC National Officers Meet with Nader
Meeting
with consumer Ralph Nader (second from l.) about consumers' interests during
the postal reform debate are NALC President Bill Young (r.), Executive V.P
Jim Williams (l.) NALC General Counsel Bruce Simon and Research Director Jim
Sauber (in blue and white shirts, respectively). Young assured Nader and
Chris Shaw of the Center for the Study of
Responsive Law that NALC represents the needs of consumers by insisting
on top-quality mail service.
(source: NALC)
Excerpts from "Post Office
Consumer Action Group Model Statute"
Sec. 1. Short Title.
-- This Act may be cited as the " Post Office Consumer Action Group
Act (POCAG)."
Sec. 2. Findings and Purposes.
--
(a) FINDINGS. -- The legislature finds
that:
(1) Individual action by residential
postal users for the purposes of participating in postal matters and
communicating their views is rendered impracticable by reason of the
disproportionate expense of taking such action.
(2) Such participation and
representation can be best secured by the creation of a permanent,
not-for-profit organization which is under the democratic control of
its membership, solely responsive to that membership's goals, and
which is funded by voluntary contributions.
(3) The formation of such an entity by
consumers acting voluntarily is impeded because consumers have
neither the resources nor an efficient mechanism to contact all
residential postal users, raise initial funds and join such an
entity.
(4) In order to create such an entity,
it is necessary to establish a democratically structured
organization and to provide for the dissemination, to all postal
users, of information as to the formation and purposes of such
organization and to provide an efficient means for joining and
contributing to such organization.
(b) PURPOSES. -- It is the purpose of
this Act --
(1) To assist in establishing adequate
and affordable postal service to all residential postal users.
(2) To foster and encourage active
citizen participation in postal matters and to facilitate effective
representation and advocacy of the interests of residential postal
users before regulatory agencies, Congress, the courts and other
bodies; and for these purposes create a permanent not-for-profit
organization.
(3) To create an efficient funding
mechanism for the organization, involving no compulsory burden
whatsoever [*296] on the taxpayers of the United States, whereby
individual residential postal users and others may voluntarily
contribute to the organization.
(4) To ensure that public policies
affecting the provision, quality and cost of postal services fairly
reflect the needs and concerns of those users.
For these reasons there shall be
established a permanent not-for-profit Corporation know as the " Post
Office Consumer Action Group, Inc." with the responsibility to promote
adequate representation of residential postal users; to collect
operating funds; to assist in the redress of residential postal user
complaints; and to provide for residential postal users' membership in
such Corporation and residential postal users' direction of the
actions of such Corporation.
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