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Saturday, February 22, 2025
HomeNewsUnited States Postal Service Announces Tenure Plan of Postmaster General Louis DeJoy

United States Postal Service Announces Tenure Plan of Postmaster General Louis DeJoy

usps.com/news

WASHINGTON — The United States Postal Service is today an­nouncing that Louis DeJoy, Amer­ica’s 75th Postmaster General, has notified the Postal Service Board of Governors that it is time for them to begin the process of identifying his successor. The Governors of the Postal Service, working with key stakeholders, will now begin the process of identifying an appropri­ate candidate to serve as the next Postmaster General and Chief Ex­ecutive Officer of the United States Postal Service.

Postmaster General’s letter to the Board of Governors can be found here.  

“Louis DeJoy has steadfastly served the nation and the Postal Service over the past five years,” said Amber McReynolds, chair­woman of the Board of Governors. “The Governors greatly appreciate his enduring leadership and his tire­less efforts to modernize the Postal Service and reverse decades of ne­glect.” She added that “Louis is a fighter, and he has fought hard for the women and men of the Post­al Service and to ensure that the American people have reliable and affordable service for years to come.”

DeJoy stated, “While there re­mains much critical work to be done to ensure that the Postal Service can be financially viable as we continue to serve the nation in our essential public service mission, I have de­cided it is time to start the process of identifying my successor and of preparing the Postal Service for this change. The major initiatives we are currently endeavoring are multi-year programs and it is im­portant to have leadership in place whose tenure will span this future period. After four and half years leading one of America’s greatest public institutions through dramat­ic change during unusual times, it is time for me to start thinking about the next phase of my life, while also ensuring that the Postal Service is fully prepared for the future.

“The Postal Service has iron­clad plans to reduce costs by over $4 billion annually, raise revenue by over $5 billion and adjust its operating network to integrate the delivery of all mail and package categories, achieving service stan­dards that make modern-day sense and compete in the marketplace,” DeJoy added. “We are well on our way with these necessary changes, and I have been developing a lead­ership team whose careers reach further into the future than the one we have today. It is important to me that we timely and methodically bring forth a new postmaster gen­eral who understands our mission and can successfully lead our spir­ited organization. I will be flexible in helping with this transition, and I am confident that with a period of dedicated focus preparing for this change, the Postal Service will be well positioned for future success under the new leadership.”

DeJoy continued, “I am extreme­ly proud of the 640,000 men and women of the United States Postal Service who live, work and serve in every American community. De­spite being victimized by a legisla­tive and regulatory business model that produced almost two decades of devastation to their organization and workplaces, they have perse­vered and embraced the changes we are making in order to better serve their fellow citizens. It has been one of the pleasures of my life and a crowning achievement of my career to have been associated with them and their mission of public service. I look forward to working with them during my remaining time here.”

DeJoy was first asked to lead the Postal Service in the spring of 2020, a time of tremendous operational and financial crisis for the organi­zation. After many years of strate­gic neglect and underinvestment in people and infrastructure, he took on the responsibility of leading the Postal Service with the understand­ing that a massive, long-term trans­formation and modernization effort was needed.

Within a year, DeJoy, his team, and the Board of Governors devel­oped a 10-year plan to put the orga­nization on a path toward financial sustainability and operational high performance. The Delivering for America plan gave the organization well-defined strategies to establish a best-in-class operational mod­el to drive network efficiency and capability; business model changes to address unsustainable legislative and regulatory mandates; product and pricing strategies to grow rev­enue; and investment in people, fa­cilities, vehicles and technology to create more effective and modern workplaces.

While only four years into the implementation of the 10-year Delivering for America plan, the strategic path is well defined, and the strategies have been tested and proven effective, and the results to date are impressive. Important­ly, the Postal Service successfully undertook the most complicated of ventures — a top-to-bottom or­ganizational transformation — and done so quickly and on an unprec­edented scale, while also delivering mail and packages at least six days per week to more than 168 million delivery addresses each day.

Under DeJoy’s tenure, this dis­ruptive transformation changed practically every process, function and operation of the Postal Service for the better. DeJoy acknowledged that the essential need for change, given the critically distressed fi­nancial and operational conditions of the Postal Service, caused ser­vice issues for the American peo­ple that he wished could have been avoided, but also recognized that the transformation was vitally nec­essary for the Postal Service to not only survive, but also thrive. This effort created a new management structure; installed much of a new processing, logistics and delivery network design; invested more than $18 billion to modernize in­frastructure; created new products and more rational pricing; and en­abled the organization to compete more effectively and to operate at a long-term lower cost. During this massive transformation and mod­ernization effort, the Postal Service distributed COVID test kits, deliv­ered the nation’s election mail, met the annual holiday shipping needs of the public, and served the Amer­ican public every day. These efforts resulted in $1 billion in controllable income and $140 million in gener­ally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) income, rather than losses, during the first quarter of fiscal year 2025.

“I commend Postmaster Gener­al DeJoy for inspiring the Postal Service with strategic direction, a competitive spirit, and a culture of achievement that comes from the successful implementation of large-scale change,” said McReynolds. “I have seen this spirit of purpose grow steadily during my time on the Board of Governors, and I am confident it will continue to grow as progress begets further progress, and the promise of a transformed and modernized Postal Service is fully realized.”

The United States Postal Service is an independent federal establish­ment, mandated to be self-financing and to serve every American com­munity through the affordable, re­liable and secure delivery of mail and packages to 169 million ad­dresses six and often seven days a week. Overseen by a bipartisan Board of Governors, the Postal Service is implementing a 10-year transformation plan, Deliver­ing for America, to modernize the postal network, restore long-term financial sustainability, dramat­ically improve service across all mail and shipping categories, and maintain the organization as one of America’s most valued and trusted brands.

The Postal Service generally re­ceives no tax dollars for operating expenses and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund its operations.

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