Times Standard (Eureka)

Mail processing shift worries legislator­s

Nevada ballots could go to California first

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RENO, NEV. >> A U.S. Postal Service plan to downsize a regional mail hub in Reno and move package and letter processing to Sacramento, has members of Nevada's congressio­nal delegation and the state's top election administra­tor worried about service delays and mail-in ballot handling.

The elected officials point to a lack of transparen­cy in what Postmaster General Louis DeJoy has cast as a money-saving move, and say they're concerned that mail service will be snarled by the hourslong roundtrip drive over the Sierra Nevada.

“There is also the matter of Nevada's mail ballots being taken to California for processing before being returned to Nevada and their voters,” Nevada Secretary of State Francisco Aguilar said in a protest letter.

Every active registered voter in Nevada is sent a mail ballot. If the change moves forward, Aguilar said it may not be possible for ballots placed in the mail in central and northern Nevada on Election Day to be postmarked the same day.

Processing returned votes out of state “has the potential to disenfranc­hise thousands of Nevada voters and would unquestion­ably impact the results of Nevada's elections,” he wrote.

Aguilar, a Democrat, also cited obstacles including a blizzard that swept into the steep mountain range between Nevada and California over the weekend, closing Interstate 80 for several days. His letter called it “not irregular” at any time of the year for the freeway, the main route between Reno and Sacramento, to be closed due to weather or vehicle crashes.

“The USPS standard for local Reno mail received and delivered is two days, a standard which USPS has already struggled to meet,” Nevada Democratic U.S. Sens. Jacky Rosen and Catherine Cortez Masto and Republican U.S. Rep. Mark Amodei said in a Wednesday letter to DeJoy. “Sending Nevadans' mail to California does not seem like a promising way of improving this deficiency.”

The letter accused the Postal

Service of failing to show how it shaped its plan or “provide any analysis on local impacts of moving mail processing” from Reno to Sacramento. It sought DeJoy's response by March 15.

Rosen on Friday called reliable on-time mail delivery of medication and Social Security checks crucial for seniors, military veterans and families.

Amodei represents northern Nevada, where mail from a vast eight-county area and the state capital, Carson City, is currently processed and distribute­d at a Reno facility that would be downsized to a local processing center under a 10year, $40 billion Postal Service modernizat­ion plan to establish 60 regional processing and distributi­on centers across the U.S.

DeJoy was appointed in May 2020 by former Republican President Donald Trump.

He faced criticism about sweeping Postal Service policy changes ahead of the November 2020 election and has defended his agency's ability to deliver mailin ballots amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Postal Service spokesman Rod Spurgeon confirmed by email Friday that the agency received the Nevada Congress members' letter and said a response would go directly to them.

“The business case supports transferri­ng some mail processing operations” to Sacramento, the Postal Service said in a Feb. 6 document outlining the Reno office downsizing, which it projected could save up to $4.2 million per year.

A period for public comment ended Wednesday. Spurgeon added Friday that findings were preliminar­y and declined to specify other states where similar plans are being made.

In Wyoming, complaints have arisen among critics who say shifting Postal Service processing from Cheyenne to Denver and from Casper to Billings, Montana, would leave Wyoming without a mail processing facility.

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