SIOUX CITY (AP) — Members of Iowa's congressional delegation are responding to a town hall meeting that drew hundreds of Sioux City-area residents with complaints about a U.S. Postal Service feasibility study by demanding a meeting U.S. Postmaster General John Potter.
``Because our previous meetings have failed to produce the cooperation we believe the people of Siouxland deserve, we respectfully request a direct meeting with you,'' wrote U.S. Sens. Tom Harkin, Chuck Grassley and U.S. Rep. Steve King, in a letter to Potter.
The feasibility study looks at a proposal to merge operations of a U.S. Postal Service mail processing center located in Sioux City with a similar facility located in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Critics have said closing the facility will result in lesser service for residents in Sioux City and surrounding areas.
Besides asking for a face-to-face meeting, the letter asks Potter to discuss how the Postal Service can work with the Siouxland community to address the concerns raised by residents and asks Potter to put similar studies on hold while waiting for Congress to take action on the pending Postal Reform bill.
The Postal Reform bill would make public data and other information considered by the postal service in making their decisions.
``Any attempt to reorganize the Postal Service in Sioux City before the Postal Reform Act is signed by the president will be viewed as an attempt to circumvent the will of Congress,'' King said.
King said a town hall meeting to discuss the proposal to move services to Sioux Falls was ``too little and too late.''
``It has taken five months for the Postal Service to even invite questions from the people who would be affected by losing our mail processing center,'' he said. ``At no point in the process has the Postal Service been up-front or honest with the residents of Sioux City.''
According to the letter, Bill Galligan, senior vice president for operations with the U.S. Postal Service, had agreed to follow the pending Postal Reform bill, but the Postal Service has thus far refused to release the information to the public.
Those who attended the town hall meeting on Thursday received only a one-page summary of the consolidation study.
If the proposal goes forward, 47 career U.S. Postal Service employees would be reassigned because of reduced workload.
Information from: Sioux City Journal, http://www.siouxcityjournal.com





