Top news | Sports | Local news
Nation & World
Senate seeks to slow closing of rural post offices

By , Associated Press | Apr 24, 2012 11:10 PM

The Senate has moved to impose new restrictions on the closing of rural post offices.

Under the measure, the ailing U.S. Postal Service would be barred from closing post offices for one year if they are located in rural areas — those with fewer than 50,000 people. The exception would be if there was no community opposition.

The measure was among revisions to a bill aimed at stabilizing the Postal Service. The main bill would provide a short-term cash infusion while delaying decisions on thousands of post office closings and ending Saturday mail delivery.

A final vote is expected Wednesday.

The mail agency says it needs to begin closings this year as part of a billion-dollar cost-cutting effort. Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe previously agreed to delay closings until May 15.



More Nation & World news  »
Hagel: Cadets must stamp out sex assault scourge
Dartmouth gets $10 million to expand study abroad
Deaths at Atlanta VA hospital prompt scrutiny
Female suicide bomber injures 18 in Russian region
Hundreds running Boston Marathon's final mile
insights INSIGHTS ON LOCAL BUSINESSES »
Text size A A A