USPS’s Exigent Rate Revenue Hits $2 Billion

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Bowing to a PRC order, the Postal Service finally files its Q1 report on surcharge revenue, which totaled $586 million.


Exigency marches on!

Exigency marches on!

The U.S. Postal Service reported that it collected $586 million in exigent surcharge revenue in Q1 2015, ended last December 31. That brings total revenues obtained through the emergency 4.3% rate increase to just $15 million shy of $2 billion. The Postal Regulatory Commission's approval of the exigent increase stipulated that it be pulled back once it had accrued about $3.2 billion in revenue.


The Postal Service had failed to file this report at the appointed date, February 18, most likely hoping for a decision from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals that might make the exigent increase permanent. But no decision was forthcoming from the court, and the PRC last week ordered USPS to issue the report immediately.


The Q1 report included estimated revenue collected from the sale of Forever stamps, as specified earlier by the PRC, and that newly stipulated calculation was applied to the total amount collected through the previous four quarters.


The Postal Service claimed that its surcharge collection report was late because staff resources had to be marshaled in responding to PRC requests for information relating to its Annual Compliance Report and its request for further information on rate change requests for market-dominant products.




Business Breaking News: Frequent Job Hopping Not Just a Millennial Trait


Frequent Job Hopping Not Just a Millennial Trait

While millennials are often criticized for the frequency with which they change jobs, they are far from alone in taking this approach. Job hopping was just as prevalent, if not more so, among baby boomers, new research finds.


Workers born in the latter years of the baby boom held, on average, nearly 12 jobs between the ages of 18 and 48, according to a study from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.


The total number of jobs held by boomers doesn't differ much from what many millennials are looked down upon for. Emily He, chief marketing officer of talent-management solution Saba, told Business News Daily in 2014 that research suggests today's college graduates will have a dozen or more jobs by the time they hit their 30s.




Commodity Online News: Natural Gas trading range 163.2 171.2 gains at 167


Technically market is getting support at 165.1 and below same could see a test of 163.2 level, and resistance is now likely to be seen at 169.1, a move above could see prices testing 171.2.




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