Labor & Economy
The U.S. Mail is Not for Sale
You can mail a letter anywhere in the domestic United States for just 49 cents. Think about that for a second. Your letter literally can travel thousands of miles – over mountains, across great lakes and through the desert – for less than the cost of a bag of M&M’s.
But some want to outsource the postal services and its workers to giant retail stores such as Staples, which would destroy what is perhaps the greatest bargain still available in America. A recent piece by David Morris in the Huffington Post explains why this is a bad idea.
There is something we can do about it. The American Postal Workers Union has launched a campaign, Stop Staples: The U.S. Mail is Not for Sale, which is garnering strong support from millions of Americans, including teachers. And as a huge seller of notebooks, pens and other school supplies, you can bet that Staples is going to listen to teachers.
Make sure Staples listens to you, too. Postal workers have been there for us through snow, rain and heat. Let’s be there for them now.
-
Deadly Dust: The Silicosis EpidemicMarch 13, 2026‘My Lungs Had Nothing Left.’ Inside The Epidemic Killing Countertop Stonecutters.
-
Latest NewsMarch 20, 2026Is Kaiser’s Labor-Management Model Unraveling?
-
Column - California UncoveredMarch 16, 2026From Invisibility to Inclusion: A ‘Generational Shift’ on Menopause Care
-
Pain & ProfitMarch 11, 2026A Year After USAID’s Termination: The Impact Has Been ‘Devastating’
-
Column - State of InequalityMarch 12, 2026Kaiser Therapists Plan Strike Over Proposed AI Use, Chronic Understaffing
-
Latest NewsMarch 9, 2026Airbnb Says More Short-Term Rentals Will Boost L.A.’s Budget. Opponents Say It Won’t Work.
-
Column - State of InequalityMarch 19, 2026More States Are Taxing the Ultra-Rich — Washington Is the Latest
-
The SlickMarch 10, 2026Climate Chilled at New Mexico Legislature — Again

