usps coronavirus

  • The United States Postal Service has been deactivating mail-sorting machines around the US ahead of the surge expected from mail-in voting this fall, reports say.
  • Each machine can sort up to 36,000 pieces of mail per hour. 
  • The machines sort letters, postcards, and other mail by bar code. 
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Mail-sorting machines used by the United States Postal Service (USPS) have been dismantled and removed from distribution centers around the country, according to postal workers. They told Motherboard that at least 19 machines were removed without explanation. An internal USPS letter from June included a plan to remove hundreds of more mail-sorting machines this year.

Postal Workers Union members and some Democratic politicians have expressed concerns about changes to the USPS under Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a major Trump donor who started his position this summer. President Trump has attacked the USPS and claimed that voting by mail has a high rate of fraud, without evidence. 

The USPS has more eyes on it than ever with continued mail-in voting forced by the COVID-19 pandemic. Here’s how the sorting machines being removed from distribution centers work. 

SEE ALSO: The USPS is shutting down mail-sorting machines crucial for processing absentee ballots as the 2020 election looms

The machines removed from USPS distribution facilities were delivery barcode sorters (DBCS).

The machines read the barcodes on letters, postcards, and other items of similar size, and sort them.

The USPS says that each machine can sort 36,000 pieces of mail in an hour.

Source: USPS

DBCS is only for letter-sized pieces of mail. Magazines, packages, and other larger items are sorted by separate machines.

To operate most efficiently, a DBCS machine needs two workers: one to input mail into the machine, and one to gather mail after it has been sorted.

Source: Motherboard

They can run with just one worker, although more slowly.

Postal workers told Motherboard that it’s not unusual for sorting machines to be moved between facilities or deactivated when there’s less mail volume.

“When you take out one of the machines, it takes away our ability to respond to unforeseen things that may happen,” Iowa Postal Workers Union President Kimberly Karol told Motherboard.

Source: Motherboard

While it varies by location, election-related mail is often sorted by hand.

The USPS estimates that it sends more than 142 billion pieces of mail each year, so an election with 250 million ballots wouldn’t necessarily overload its capacity if ballots were spread out over a few weeks.

Source: Business Insider

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