Would You Trust the Post Office to Deliver You a Carton of Eggs?

"It was like that when we got it."The latest desperate maneuver
from our deficit-ridden United States Postal Service (almost

$2 billion in losses
last quarter) as it looks for a way to
survive in a world that needs them less and less every day is to
try to push their way into Amazon Fresh-style grocery
deliveries.

The Postal Service has sent in a proposal asking for permission
to start testing grocery delivery services to homes. From
The Washington Post
:

Under the plan, USPS would work with retail partners to deliver
“groceries and other prepackaged goods” to homes between 3 a.m. and
7 a.m. at locations designated by consumers. Participating grocery
stores would have to drop off their orders at post offices between
1:30 a.m. and 2:30 a.m.

To be fair to the post office, they actually do already assist
Amazon in their grocery deliveries in the San Francisco area. But
if you believe that one of the roles of government is to provide
valuable services that the private sector cannot manage for itself,
you’d be hard-pressed to explain why we need their help. Instead it
looks like they’re attempting to participate in a marketplace that
is competitive and growing and doesn’t require a government
participant. Google entered the
same-day delivery market last year in a couple of major cities.

In the postal service’s proposal, they even note that they’re
stepping into an existing market: “Grocery deliveries are expanding
across the nation, with several different types of companies
beginning to offer this service in recent months.” That means the
post office needs to stay far, far away from it. The involvement of
the USPS may generate some revenue for them (and I’m betting a
round of new hires) but it also puts a government agency into play
for services that the private market is showing more and more it is
able to handle on its own.

And in a totally unrelated story, a postal service employee was
charged today with hoarding or refusing to deliver more than

40,000 pieces of mail
in Brooklyn.

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