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Thursday, July 24, 2003

Postal Service advised on how to better operate



By Randolph E. Schmid
The Associated Press

WASHINGTON - Personalized postage stamps - featuring the kids, the dog, the company logo - might be in Americans' future.

Such special-issue stamps, sold at a premium, were among the recommendations issued Wednesday by the President's Commission on the Future of the Postal Service.

The panel also called on the post office to:

• Cut its work force while increasing automation.

• Establish a bonus, or pay-for-performance, system for managers and union members.

• Set up a security system to track mail.

• Make changes in its collective bargaining process.

Established in January by President Bush, the commission is to issue its final report by the end of the month.

Allowing mailers to personalize stamps would add value to sending materials by mail, said Harry J. Pearce, co-chairman of the commission.

"There's enormous creativity out there," added co-chairman James A. Johnson, citing the popularity of personalized license plates.

Personalized stamps were introduced in Canada in 2001 and have proven very popular, Canada Post spokesman Tim McGurrin said.

The commission recommendations most likely to draw controversy were those dealing with its work force and collective bargaining. Indeed, those were the only recommendations not approved unanimously.

Commission member Norman Seabrook, president of the New York City Correction Officers association, was the lone dissenter on recommendations to speed up collective bargaining, to add pension and post-retirement health coverage to collective bargaining and to set up a pay-for-performance system for management and union workers.

Pay-for-performance leads to establishment of a "good ol' boy" network in which managers simply reward workers they like, he charged.



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