San Francisco post offices spared the axe

After a yearlong mass protest campaign, San Francisco Postmaster Raj Sanghera announced that the Bayview, Visitacion Valley and Civic Center post offices had been taken off the closure list. McLaren Station on busy San Bruno Avenue was also spared.

This is a victory for postal workers and community members from all over the country who have been working hard to resist the planned destruction and privatization of the public U.S. Postal Service.

It’s especially a victory for the communities that organized to pack the public hearings in 2011 to protest the closing of the Bayview, Visitacion Valley and Civic Center facilities. They gave the Postal Service managers an earful.

This was followed up by mass leafleting in the Mission, Bayview, Tenderloin, Bayshore, Excelsior, Viz Valley and Fillmore neighborhoods by the Save the People’s Post Office Coalition.  It includes the Senior Action Network, the San Francisco Labor Council, the Living Wage Coalition, Occupy, Poor Magazine and Church Women United. Thousands saw our banners and signs and took the flyers.

Then, on June 27, this local coalition organized a rally at the Federal Building, a march of 200 people through the oppressed Tenderloin district, an occupation and a people’s speakout inside the Civic Center Post Office, where many homeless and low-income people pick up their mail.

The Bayview, Visitacion Valley and McLaren stations are all in working-class neighborhoods in the southeastern part of San Francisco and home to many African-American, Asian, Latino/a and white families who depend on their neighborhood post offices. Victory celebrations are being planned.

Here are some of the key actions over the last year in the growing national movement to save the Postal Service:

  • A 4-day hunger strike in Washington, organized by the national network called Communities & Postal Workers United, included “Stop starving the Postal Service” demonstrations in Congress. The hunger strike broke through the media blockade and put our message in the national media. Since then, CPWU chapters have sprung up in various parts of the country.
  •  An attempted citizen’s arrest of Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe by retired New York postal worker John Dennie occurred during a rally outside USPS headquarters. Dennie charged Donahoe with violating laws which prohibit delay or obstruction of the mails.
  • Many local actions were organized by community/labor coalitions in Baltimore; Boston; Chicago; Los Angeles/Orange County; New Orleans;  New York;  Philadelphia; Portland, Ore.; San Francisco/Berkeley; and Seattle; and in the states of  Arizona, Colorado, North Carolina, Vermont  and elsewhere.  These included marches, petition drives, town hall meetings, canvassing, local hunger strikes and post office occupations, as well as a “road warrior” tour of rural post offices in Oregon by retired carrier Jamie Partridge and the Rural Organizing Project. A USPS plan to eliminate 840 motor vehicle operator jobs in California sparked protests on both coasts.
  • A growing campaign aims to stop the sale of more than 70 historic post offices in collusion with the privatizing real estate megafirm CBRE. Headed by financier Richard Blum (spouse of California Sen. Dianne Feinstein), CBRE has the exclusive contract to sell these properties in deals worth billions of dollars. Many of these post offices are architectural treasures that house priceless New Deal-era murals and sculptures honoring working people.  These public treasures, which were paid for by the taxes of our parents and grandparents, are now being sold off for private profit as if they were shopping malls. These post offices are fixtures of downtown areas that are convenient and are centers of public life. Citizens to Save the Berkeley (Calif.) Main Post Office has enlisted the entire City Council and thousands of residents to “Stop the Sale.”
  • Postal union resolutions and speeches from the floor of the Letter Carriers and American Postal Workers’ national conventions denounced Postmaster General Donahoe and the privatizers, and called for organizing local community/labor coalitions to build a powerful nationwide grassroots movement to save the Postal Service. Resolutions also committed the unions to organizing a national demonstration in Washington.  In addition, many central labor councils, state federations and individual unions vowed support for saving the Postal Service.
  • Actions were held at the Republican and Democratic Party conventions. These demonstrations included “Save the Post Office” contingents.

The USPS decision to cancel the planned closing of four post offices in San Francisco demonstrates that our movement is having an effect. But we must be vigilant: The big push to implement the Donahoe slash-and-burn program will come after the presidential election and in 2013. Our movement needs to grow, and grow fast, to stop the juggernaut. It’s up to us to mobilize our members and communities to push the privatizers back on their heels.

For information, see cpwunited.com, savethepostoffice.com and clupjs.com

The author, a retired mail carrier, is a member of the Save the People’s Post Office coalition in San Francisco.

 

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