Watchdog Report: USPS Still Failing To Secure Facility That Was Robbed Twice in 2023
A new inspector general report indicates that officials knew that the industrial park had been targeted in the past.

According to a new inspector general report, the United States Postal Service (USPS) is having trouble keeping its assets safe.
The USPS has over 235,000 vehicles. More than 140,000 of them are Long Life Vehicles (LLVs), those boxy trucks with a sliding side door and the steering wheel on the right. The USPS last purchased LLVs in 1994, and despite their name, the trucks were only expected to last 24 years, meaning each one should have been retired by 2018 at the latest.
In December 2022, the agency announced that it would replace its mail trucks with a fleet of electric vehicles (E.V.s). The USPS would spend $9.6 billion—including $3 billion apportioned by Congress as part of the Inflation Reduction Act—on new trucks as well as the chargers to service them.
A report by the USPS Officer of the Inspector General released last week found that officials at the Material Distribution Center (MDC) in Kansas, the USPS facility where prototype chargers were being stored and tested, "did not employ necessary physical safety measures designed to protect and deter the theft of Postal Service assets." Many of the specifics are redacted, but in March 2023, inspectors say, "MDC officials discovered that Postal Service information technology assets were stolen" from one facility. In March and April, officials "replac[ed] locks and eight exterior doors" but did not implement all of the security measures that postal inspectors recommended after the break-in.
"Despite the theft," the report continued, "and without implementing crucial remediation measures identified in the Inspection Service assessment, the Postal Service began storing charging stations in [redacted] when the first 2,000 units arrived in April 2023." The following month, the same facility "was again burglarized, resulting in additional losses to the Postal Service, including the theft of charging station heads…and other information technology assets, such as monitors, printers, and docking stations."
As a result of "insufficient safeguards," the report determined that "the Postal Service incurred two thefts and losses of approximately $59,700 in information technology assets (e.g., computer monitors, printers, and docking stations) and $7,700 from two charging station heads."
After the second burglary, MDC officials again replaced locks and contracted with off-duty law enforcement officers to patrol the area. Even so, "these measures still do not ensure" that the facility "is in compliance with Postal Service policy requiring physical safeguards or limiting unauthorized access to Postal Service assets."
The report noted that USPS policy would have required the MDC to implement a series of further security measures, including installing security cameras and an "intrusion detection system."
As if that wasn't bad enough, a footnote mentioned that "Postal Service officials at the MDC were aware of general security related issues occurring as recently as four years ago in the same industrial park, which resulted in the loss of thousands of dollars' worth of tools and equipment suffered by prior tenants." Nonetheless, "despite several security-related incidents, MDC officials did not view" the facility "as an at-risk, administrative facility that necessitated urgent mitigating actions."
The USPS has struggled in recent years. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, it experienced consistent declines in revenue even as it sat on tens of billions of dollars in unfunded pension liabilities. The USPS delivery system is optimized for paper mail over packages, even though the advent of e-commerce means that more people are ordering packages and fewer are sending and receiving letters. Given such a long record of subpar performance, it should come as no surprise that the USPS failed to do so much as even install a security camera to protect its own assets.
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Lick it before you stick it
- USPS
Oh, hell yes.
Let's put the federal government in charge of AI.
What could go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong? Go wrong?
The USPS officials concerned are obviously profiting personally from the "thefts."
Here's an idea, let's revert the USPS to what the founding fathers actually intended it to be, appointed post masters who contracted out mail delivery in their area of responsibility and postal inspectors to make sure said contractors were following the law and contracts. And before anyone says we can't do it, be aware that the USPS still does this in rural areas, rural mail route carriers are not employees but contractors and a lot of our mail is moved by air through private airlines and cargo carriers under contract to the USPS. There are also several post offices contracted in private businesses to this day (often in grocery stores and such).
USPS Still Failing To Secure Facility That Was Robbed Twice in 2023
So you're saying, not enough robbery to significantly affect the outcome?
No widespread stealing.
The entire business model is preposterous. A bunch of trees are cut down and pulped into paper to produce mass advertisement materials. These materials are delivered by a fleet of trucks sent out to nearly every address in the nation six days a week. (The materials are later hauled away by a different fleet of trucks, of course, to be re-pulped or incinerated). The entire Postal Service should be shut down, assets liquidated, and real estate sold-off. Alternatively, the system could be radically reformed. Advertisers can deliver their materials in electronic format to the Post Office which would then mass deliver it by email. Opt-in, opt-out, whatever. First class mail could be scanned and delivered electronically. Privacy concerns, blah blah blah. Those that don't want to agree to have their mail scanned and delivered can pay a monthly charge and they'll stick it all in a box and pay Fedex to deliver it to you once a week. It's all junk anyway. Government does not need to be in the delivery business.
I'm debating between having a burger or spare ribs for lunch. In addition, I'll have a side of french fries and maybe a piece of cake for dessert. I prefer wet ribs; the dry rub just doesn't do anything for me. And St. Lous style over Texas style. Yum!