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Postal Regulatory Commission

The United States Postal Regulatory Commission (or PRC), formerly called the Postal Rate Commission, is an independent regulatory agency created by the Postal Reorganization Act of 1970. Like the Postal Service, it was defined in law as an independent establishment of the executive branch.

United States
Postal Regulatory Commission
Agency overview
Formed1970
Headquarters901 New York Avenue NW Suite #200
Washington, D.C.
Employees65
Annual budget$15 m
Agency executives
  • Michael M. Kubayanda, Chairman
  • Thomas G. Day, Vice Chairman
  • Ann C. Fisher, Commissioner
  • Ashley E. Poling, Commissioner
  • Robert G. Taub, Commissioner
Websitewww.prc.gov

History Edit

Postal Rate Commission Edit

The Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 created the PRC—originally named the Postal Rate Commission—to set the rates for different classes of mail by holding hearings on rates proposed by the United States Postal Service (USPS).

From 1970 through 2006, the PRC also had oversight authority over the USPS in areas besides rates changes. Specifically, that additional oversight consisted of conducting public, on-the-record hearings concerning proposed mail classification or major service changes and of recommending actions to be taken by the postal Governors.[1]

Postal Regulatory Commission Edit

The Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006 (Public Law 109-435) enacted on December 20, 2006, made several changes to the Postal Regulatory Commission.[2][3] Besides giving the body its current name, the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act significantly strengthened the Commission's authority to serve as a counterbalance to new flexibility granted to the USPS in setting postal rates.

The Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act requires the Postal Regulatory Commission to develop and maintain regulations for a modern system of rate regulation, consult with the Postal Service on delivery service standards and performance measures, consult with the Department of State on international postal policies, prevent cross-subsidization or other anti-competitive postal practices, promote transparency and accountability, and adjudicate complaints.

The law also assigns new and continuing oversight responsibilities to the Postal Regulatory Commission, including annual determinations of USPS compliance with applicable laws, development of accounting practices and procedures for the Postal Service, review of the Universal Service requirement, and assurance of transparency through periodic reports. New enforcement tools given to the PRC include subpoena power, authority to direct the Postal Service to adjust rates and to take other remedial actions, and levying fines in cases of deliberate noncompliance with applicable postal laws.

Retiree Health Benefits Fund Edit

According to the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act, the United States Postal Service must make annual payments of between $5.4 billion and $5.8 billion to the Postal Service Retiree Health Benefits Fund from 2007. This provision of the law has been highly controversial, as no other federal agency is required to pre-fund future retirees' health benefits in this manner. The consequences of this funding requirement have been blamed for the perilous financial condition of the Postal Service, but no consensus has been reached on its fiscal effects, given other contributors such as stiff competition and other economic circumstances.[4][5]

In June 2011, the United States Postal Service had to suspend its weekly payment of $115 million into the fund because it had reached $8 billion in debt and the retirement plan had a surplus of $6.9 billion.[6]

Composition Edit

The PRC is composed of five Commissioners—each of whom is appointed to a six-year term of office by the President and confirmed by the Senate, similar to many other high-level Executive Branch office holders.[7] As with Postal Governors, PRC commissioners are permitted to serve for one additional "holdover" year beyond the end of their term if a replacement has not been nominated and confirmed. The President designates one Commissioner as Chairman of the Commission. The Commissioners together designate one of their number as a Vice-Chairman for a one-year term. No more than three of the Commissioners can be from any one political party.

The current members are:[8]

Name Position Party Term expires
Michael M. Kubayanda Chairman Democratic November 22, 2026
Thomas G. Day Vice Chairman Independent October 14, 2028
Ann C. Fisher Commissioner Republican October 14, 2024
Ashley E. Poling Commissioner Democratic November 22, 2024
Robert G. Taub Commissioner Republican October 14, 2028

Taub and Acton were confirmed for second terms in December 2016. Fisher and Poling were confirmed as new Commissioners on August 1, 2019. Kubayanda was confirmed for a second term in December 2021. Taub was confirmed for a third term, and Day was confirmed as a new Commissioner on September 28, 2023.

The PRC is organized into five operating offices: Accountability and Compliance, General Counsel, Public Affairs and Government Relations, Secretary, and Inspector General.[9]

Past commissioners and chairmen[10] Edit

Name Position Party Term started Term expired
Howard Elliott Commissioners Republican November 23, 1970 February 28, 1973
William J. Crowley Chairman October 15, 1970 May 1, 1973
John L. Ryan Commissioner November 23, 1970 August 3, 1970
Chairman August 4, 1973 October 31, 1973
Rod Kreger Commissioner August 6, 1973 January 7, 1974
Nathan A. Baily Commissioner Democratic October 15, 1970 October 14, 1974
Fred B. Rhodes Chairman Republican January 18, 1974 December 30, 1974
Paul A. Miltich Commissioner March 13, 1975 March 7, 1977
Frank P. Saponaro Commissioner Independent October 15, 1970 October 14, 1977
Carlos C. Villarreal Commissioner Republican April 15, 1973 February 1, 1979
Kieran O'Doherty Commissioner Conservative February 20, 1975 October 14, 1980
A. Lee Fritschler Chairman Democratic July 31, 1979 March 4, 1981
Commissioner March 5, 1981 August 31, 1981
Clyde S. DuPont Commissioner Republican September 20, 1974 March 13, 1975
Chairman March 14, 1975 July 29, 1979
Commissioner July 30, 1979 September 14, 1981
Simeon M. Bright Commissioner Democratic December 15, 1977 October 12, 1984
James H. Duffy Commissioner May 11, 1979 September 11, 1985
Henrietta F. Guiton Commissioner December 20, 1984 June 19, 1987
Janet D. Steiger Commissioner Republican October 15, 1980 February 2, 1982
Chairman February 3, 1982 August 10, 1989
Patti Birge. Tyson Commissioner Democratic September 12, 1985 November 22, 1991
Henry R. Folsom Commissioner Republican March 9, 1982 December 29, 1992
John Crutcher Commissioner March 9, 1982 October 14, 1993
Wayne A. Schley Commissioner December 30, 1992 October 14, 1995
Edward H. Quick Commissioner Democratic December 2, 1991 November 22, 1997
George W. Haley Chairman Republican February 14, 1990 October 14, 1993
Commissioner December 1, 1993 September 10, 1998
Edward J. Gleiman Chairman Independent February 23, 1994 February 2, 2001
W.H. "Trey" LeBlanc Commissioner Democratic November 24, 1987 November 22, 2001
Dana B. "Danny" Covington Commissioner Republican November 2, 1998 October 14, 2005
George A. Omas Commissioner August 8, 1997 November 29, 2001
Chairman November 30, 2001 December 9, 2006
Dawn Tisdale Commissioner Democratic December 1, 2004 November 22, 2007
Dan Gregory Blair Chairman Republican December 9, 2006 August 5, 2009
Commissioner August 6, 2009 June 30, 2011
Ruth Y. Goldway Commissioner Democratic April 15, 1998 August 5, 2009
Chairwoman August 6, 2009 December 3, 2014
Commissioner December 4, 2014 November 22, 2015
Tony Hammond Commissioner Republican August 6, 2002 October 7, 2011
April 30, 2012 October 14, 2013
December 10, 2014 August 7, 2019
Nanci E. Langley Commissioner Democratic June 9, 2008 November 22, 2013
December 10, 2014 August 7, 2019
Mark D. Acton Commissioner Republican August 17, 2006 October 5, 2023

Office of Accountability & Compliance Edit

The Office of Accountability & Compliance (OAC) provides analytic support to the Commission for the review of various Postal Service proposed actions: rate changes, negotiated service agreements (NSAs), classification of products and services, the Annual Compliance Determination, the Annual Report to President and Congress, changes to postal services, post office closings and other issues before the Commission. Areas of expertise include economic and econometric analysis, analysis of operational characteristics of the postal system, analysis of Postal Service operating costs and cost methodologies. OAC also collects, analyzes and periodically summarizes financial and various other statistical information to support Commission responsibilities.[11]

Office of General Counsel Edit

The Office of General Counsel provides legal assistance on matters involving the Commission's responsibilities; defends Commission decisions before the courts; and advises the Commission on the legal aspects of proposed legislation, rulemaking, and policies on procurement, contracting, personnel matters, ethics, and other internal legal matters.[11]

Office of Public Affairs & Government Relations Edit

The Office of Public Affairs & Government Relations (PAGR) manages communications and public outreach for the Commission with the public, Members of Congress, the Postal Service, state and local governments, and the news media. PAGR engages in public outreach, responds to media inquiries and disseminates information concerning Commission decisions and activities to the public. PAGR also provides information to postal customers and assists in the resolution of informal complaints, called "rate and service inquiries", from members of the public.[11]

Office of Secretary & Administration Edit

The Office of Secretary & Administration records and preserves PRC actions and documents, manages the dockets, reference materials, and interagency reporting. It also helps to manage the administrative aspects of the PRC, including budgeting and accounting, strategic planning, contracting, human resources and personnel, and serves as a point of contact for audits. It also manages facilities and infrastructure, and provides support services.[11]

Office of Inspector General Edit

The Office of Inspector General is a watchdog office that seeks out fraud, waste and abuse in the PRC programs and operations, and conducts audits of programs to identify areas of potential improvement. The Office of Inspector General also investigates allegations and complaints.

Public Representative Edit

The law (39 U.S.C. 505) requires that the Commission designate an individual to represent the interest of the general public in every public proceeding. This obligation is likely unique in the federal government, although state-level public utility commissions have similar arrangements. Since 2007, the Commission has used the method of appointing a staff member, on a case-by-case basis, to represent the public interest before the Commission for the duration of that particular case. This appointee is called the Public Representative. The Public Representative can obtain legal or technical support if necessary to fulfill that responsibility, but no one working in the Public Representative role can participate in the Commission's decision-making process.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Postal Reorganization Act of 1970
  2. ^ "Bill summary and status 2012-12-17 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006 (PAEA) - H.R. 6407". via Library of Congress. December 20, 2006.
  4. ^ "Widespread Facebook post blames 2006 law for US Postal Service's financial woes". www.politifact.com. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  5. ^ "Status, Financial Outlook, and Alternative Approaches to Fund Retiree Health Benefits" (PDF). www.gao.gov. p. 7. Retrieved 11 April 2018. Contrary to statements made by some employee groups and other stakeholders, PAEA did not require USPS to prefund 75 years of retiree health benefits over a 10-year period. Rather, pursuant to OPM's methodology, such payments would be projected to fund the liability over a period in excess of 50 years, from 2007 through 2056 and beyond (with rolling 15-year amortization periods after 2041). However, the payments required by PAEA were significantly "frontloaded," with the fixed payment amounts in the first 10 years exceeding what actuarially determined amounts would have been using a 50-year amortization schedule.
  6. ^ U.S. Postal Service In Crisis: Proposals To Prevent A Postal Shutdown. Opm.gov. Retrieved on 2013-10-30.
  7. ^ Postal Regulatory Commission: About PRC: Commissioners 2011-01-09 at the Wayback Machine. Prc.gov (2012-11-22). Retrieved on 2013-10-30.
  8. ^ "Leadership | Postal Regulatory Commission".
  9. ^ Postal Regulatory Commission: About PRC 2010-12-19 at the Wayback Machine. Prc.gov (2006-12-20). Retrieved on 2013-10-30.
  10. ^ "Past PRC Commissioners/Chairmen".
  11. ^ a b c d "ORDER AMENDING ORGANIZATIONAL DESCRIPTION IN 39 CFR PART 3002" (PDF). Postal Regulatory Commission. April 26, 2013. Retrieved 2013-12-18.

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 109–435 (text) (PDF) Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006
  • Postal Regulatory Commission in the Federal Register

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The United States Postal Regulatory Commission or PRC formerly called the Postal Rate Commission is an independent regulatory agency created by the Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 Like the Postal Service it was defined in law as an independent establishment of the executive branch United States Postal Regulatory CommissionAgency overviewFormed1970Headquarters901 New York Avenue NW Suite 200 Washington D C Employees65Annual budget 15 mAgency executivesMichael M Kubayanda ChairmanThomas G Day Vice ChairmanAnn C Fisher CommissionerAshley E Poling CommissionerRobert G Taub CommissionerWebsitewww wbr prc wbr gov Contents 1 History 1 1 Postal Rate Commission 1 2 Postal Regulatory Commission 1 2 1 Retiree Health Benefits Fund 2 Composition 3 Past commissioners and chairmen 10 3 1 Office of Accountability amp Compliance 3 2 Office of General Counsel 3 3 Office of Public Affairs amp Government Relations 3 4 Office of Secretary amp Administration 3 5 Office of Inspector General 3 6 Public Representative 4 See also 5 Notes 6 External linksHistory EditPostal Rate Commission Edit The Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 created the PRC originally named the Postal Rate Commission to set the rates for different classes of mail by holding hearings on rates proposed by the United States Postal Service USPS From 1970 through 2006 the PRC also had oversight authority over the USPS in areas besides rates changes Specifically that additional oversight consisted of conducting public on the record hearings concerning proposed mail classification or major service changes and of recommending actions to be taken by the postal Governors 1 Postal Regulatory Commission Edit The Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006 Public Law 109 435 enacted on December 20 2006 made several changes to the Postal Regulatory Commission 2 3 Besides giving the body its current name the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act significantly strengthened the Commission s authority to serve as a counterbalance to new flexibility granted to the USPS in setting postal rates The Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act requires the Postal Regulatory Commission to develop and maintain regulations for a modern system of rate regulation consult with the Postal Service on delivery service standards and performance measures consult with the Department of State on international postal policies prevent cross subsidization or other anti competitive postal practices promote transparency and accountability and adjudicate complaints The law also assigns new and continuing oversight responsibilities to the Postal Regulatory Commission including annual determinations of USPS compliance with applicable laws development of accounting practices and procedures for the Postal Service review of the Universal Service requirement and assurance of transparency through periodic reports New enforcement tools given to the PRC include subpoena power authority to direct the Postal Service to adjust rates and to take other remedial actions and levying fines in cases of deliberate noncompliance with applicable postal laws Retiree Health Benefits Fund Edit According to the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act the United States Postal Service must make annual payments of between 5 4 billion and 5 8 billion to the Postal Service Retiree Health Benefits Fund from 2007 This provision of the law has been highly controversial as no other federal agency is required to pre fund future retirees health benefits in this manner The consequences of this funding requirement have been blamed for the perilous financial condition of the Postal Service but no consensus has been reached on its fiscal effects given other contributors such as stiff competition and other economic circumstances 4 5 In June 2011 the United States Postal Service had to suspend its weekly payment of 115 million into the fund because it had reached 8 billion in debt and the retirement plan had a surplus of 6 9 billion 6 Composition EditThe PRC is composed of five Commissioners each of whom is appointed to a six year term of office by the President and confirmed by the Senate similar to many other high level Executive Branch office holders 7 As with Postal Governors PRC commissioners are permitted to serve for one additional holdover year beyond the end of their term if a replacement has not been nominated and confirmed The President designates one Commissioner as Chairman of the Commission The Commissioners together designate one of their number as a Vice Chairman for a one year term No more than three of the Commissioners can be from any one political party The current members are 8 Name Position Party Term expiresMichael M Kubayanda Chairman Democratic November 22 2026Thomas G Day Vice Chairman Independent October 14 2028Ann C Fisher Commissioner Republican October 14 2024Ashley E Poling Commissioner Democratic November 22 2024Robert G Taub Commissioner Republican October 14 2028Taub and Acton were confirmed for second terms in December 2016 Fisher and Poling were confirmed as new Commissioners on August 1 2019 Kubayanda was confirmed for a second term in December 2021 Taub was confirmed for a third term and Day was confirmed as a new Commissioner on September 28 2023 The PRC is organized into five operating offices Accountability and Compliance General Counsel Public Affairs and Government Relations Secretary and Inspector General 9 Past commissioners and chairmen 10 EditName Position Party Term started Term expiredHoward Elliott Commissioners Republican November 23 1970 February 28 1973William J Crowley Chairman October 15 1970 May 1 1973John L Ryan Commissioner November 23 1970 August 3 1970Chairman August 4 1973 October 31 1973Rod Kreger Commissioner August 6 1973 January 7 1974Nathan A Baily Commissioner Democratic October 15 1970 October 14 1974Fred B Rhodes Chairman Republican January 18 1974 December 30 1974Paul A Miltich Commissioner March 13 1975 March 7 1977Frank P Saponaro Commissioner Independent October 15 1970 October 14 1977Carlos C Villarreal Commissioner Republican April 15 1973 February 1 1979Kieran O Doherty Commissioner Conservative February 20 1975 October 14 1980A Lee Fritschler Chairman Democratic July 31 1979 March 4 1981Commissioner March 5 1981 August 31 1981Clyde S DuPont Commissioner Republican September 20 1974 March 13 1975Chairman March 14 1975 July 29 1979Commissioner July 30 1979 September 14 1981Simeon M Bright Commissioner Democratic December 15 1977 October 12 1984James H Duffy Commissioner May 11 1979 September 11 1985Henrietta F Guiton Commissioner December 20 1984 June 19 1987Janet D Steiger Commissioner Republican October 15 1980 February 2 1982Chairman February 3 1982 August 10 1989Patti Birge Tyson Commissioner Democratic September 12 1985 November 22 1991Henry R Folsom Commissioner Republican March 9 1982 December 29 1992John Crutcher Commissioner March 9 1982 October 14 1993Wayne A Schley Commissioner December 30 1992 October 14 1995Edward H Quick Commissioner Democratic December 2 1991 November 22 1997George W Haley Chairman Republican February 14 1990 October 14 1993Commissioner December 1 1993 September 10 1998Edward J Gleiman Chairman Independent February 23 1994 February 2 2001W H Trey LeBlanc Commissioner Democratic November 24 1987 November 22 2001Dana B Danny Covington Commissioner Republican November 2 1998 October 14 2005George A Omas Commissioner August 8 1997 November 29 2001Chairman November 30 2001 December 9 2006Dawn Tisdale Commissioner Democratic December 1 2004 November 22 2007Dan Gregory Blair Chairman Republican December 9 2006 August 5 2009Commissioner August 6 2009 June 30 2011Ruth Y Goldway Commissioner Democratic April 15 1998 August 5 2009Chairwoman August 6 2009 December 3 2014Commissioner December 4 2014 November 22 2015Tony Hammond Commissioner Republican August 6 2002 October 7 2011April 30 2012 October 14 2013December 10 2014 August 7 2019Nanci E Langley Commissioner Democratic June 9 2008 November 22 2013December 10 2014 August 7 2019Mark D Acton Commissioner Republican August 17 2006 October 5 2023Office of Accountability amp Compliance Edit The Office of Accountability amp Compliance OAC provides analytic support to the Commission for the review of various Postal Service proposed actions rate changes negotiated service agreements NSAs classification of products and services the Annual Compliance Determination the Annual Report to President and Congress changes to postal services post office closings and other issues before the Commission Areas of expertise include economic and econometric analysis analysis of operational characteristics of the postal system analysis of Postal Service operating costs and cost methodologies OAC also collects analyzes and periodically summarizes financial and various other statistical information to support Commission responsibilities 11 Office of General Counsel Edit The Office of General Counsel provides legal assistance on matters involving the Commission s responsibilities defends Commission decisions before the courts and advises the Commission on the legal aspects of proposed legislation rulemaking and policies on procurement contracting personnel matters ethics and other internal legal matters 11 Office of Public Affairs amp Government Relations Edit The Office of Public Affairs amp Government Relations PAGR manages communications and public outreach for the Commission with the public Members of Congress the Postal Service state and local governments and the news media PAGR engages in public outreach responds to media inquiries and disseminates information concerning Commission decisions and activities to the public PAGR also provides information to postal customers and assists in the resolution of informal complaints called rate and service inquiries from members of the public 11 Office of Secretary amp Administration Edit The Office of Secretary amp Administration records and preserves PRC actions and documents manages the dockets reference materials and interagency reporting It also helps to manage the administrative aspects of the PRC including budgeting and accounting strategic planning contracting human resources and personnel and serves as a point of contact for audits It also manages facilities and infrastructure and provides support services 11 Office of Inspector General Edit The Office of Inspector General is a watchdog office that seeks out fraud waste and abuse in the PRC programs and operations and conducts audits of programs to identify areas of potential improvement The Office of Inspector General also investigates allegations and complaints Public Representative Edit The law 39 U S C 505 requires that the Commission designate an individual to represent the interest of the general public in every public proceeding This obligation is likely unique in the federal government although state level public utility commissions have similar arrangements Since 2007 the Commission has used the method of appointing a staff member on a case by case basis to represent the public interest before the Commission for the duration of that particular case This appointee is called the Public Representative The Public Representative can obtain legal or technical support if necessary to fulfill that responsibility but no one working in the Public Representative role can participate in the Commission s decision making process See also EditBoard of Governors of the United States Postal Service History of United States postage ratesNotes Edit Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 Bill summary and status Archived 2012 12 17 at the Wayback Machine Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006 PAEA H R 6407 via Library of Congress December 20 2006 Widespread Facebook post blames 2006 law for US Postal Service s financial woes www politifact com Retrieved 4 May 2020 Status Financial Outlook and Alternative Approaches to Fund Retiree Health Benefits PDF www gao gov p 7 Retrieved 11 April 2018 Contrary to statements made by some employee groups and other stakeholders PAEA did not require USPS to prefund 75 years of retiree health benefits over a 10 year period Rather pursuant to OPM s methodology such payments would be projected to fund the liability over a period in excess of 50 years from 2007 through 2056 and beyond with rolling 15 year amortization periods after 2041 However the payments required by PAEA were significantly frontloaded with the fixed payment amounts in the first 10 years exceeding what actuarially determined amounts would have been using a 50 year amortization schedule U S Postal Service In Crisis Proposals To Prevent A Postal Shutdown Opm gov Retrieved on 2013 10 30 Postal Regulatory Commission About PRC Commissioners Archived 2011 01 09 at the Wayback Machine Prc gov 2012 11 22 Retrieved on 2013 10 30 Leadership Postal Regulatory Commission Postal Regulatory Commission About PRC Archived 2010 12 19 at the Wayback Machine Prc gov 2006 12 20 Retrieved on 2013 10 30 Past PRC Commissioners Chairmen a b c d ORDER AMENDING ORGANIZATIONAL DESCRIPTION IN 39 CFR PART 3002 PDF Postal Regulatory Commission April 26 2013 Retrieved 2013 12 18 External links EditOfficial website Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 109 435 text PDF Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006 Postal Regulatory Commission in the Federal Register Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Postal Regulatory Commission amp oldid 1180632394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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