Postal service battles could also mean delays for those second $1,200 stimulus checks

Personal finance

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Capitol Hill lawmakers have been deadlocked on a new stimulus package.

But another issue — sweeping changes to the U.S. Postal Service — now has both parties clashing again.

The crux of the argument: whether changes that would improve the balance sheet of the country’s mail service would deny Americans’ their right to vote and receive money in the mail.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has called House lawmakers back from summer recess to vote on a bill that would block the  changes for now.

Meanwhile, Senate Democrats have also expressed concerns about changes initiated by new Postmaster General Louis DeJoy.

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“Mr. DeJoy appears to be engaged in a partisan effort, with the support of President Trump, to delay and degrade mail service and undermine the mission of the United States Postal Service,” a group of seven Democratic senators wrote in a letter to the USPS Board of Governors.

That includes cutting back hours at some locations, denying overtime pay and eliminating some sorting machines and mailboxes.

The changes threaten Americans’ ability to vote in the election and their access to Social Security, Veterans Affairs and other benefits, as well as prescription medications, the senators said. Signees include Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., as well as Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.

The letter, however, does not name stimulus checks, another form of payment for which Americans may have to wait.

Congress authorized a first round of stimulus checks with the CARES Act this spring. That included payments of up to $1,200 per individual or $2,400 per married couple, plus $500 per child under age 17 to those who met certain income qualifications.

While about 160 million of those payments have been sent, there are still millions of checks outstanding.

Meanwhile, Congress has discussed deploying a second round of checks in the next stimulus package. At this point, the moneys may not be approved until September, provided lawmakers come to an agreement. Actual payments may not start until October.

President Donald Trump on Monday reaffirmed his commitment to sending more money directly to Americans while defending changes to the Postal Service.

“We want money to go to the people that need it,” Trump said.

Noam Galai | Getty Images

“I have encouraged everybody to speed up the mail, not slow the mail,” he said. “And I also want to have a Post Office that runs without losing billions and billions of dollars a year, as it has been doing for 50 years.”

Approximately 80% of second stimulus checks would be made through direct deposit, according to Mark Mazur, director at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

But the remaining checks may be subject to delays caused by postal service changes.

“My sense is that the delays are relatively short lived, and so it would be a matter of a few days or a week delay, not months delay,” Mazur said.

Still, an additional delay could add to the financial burden of families who are counting on it. Meanwhile, many people have anecdotally reported that they are still waiting for their first stimulus checks, and are confused as to why they have not received the money.

While the IRS has set up a phone line to provide help with questions on the payments, it can be difficult to get through to send the correct information to the agency.

Up to now, the delays some Americans have experienced in receiving the payments is unrelated to the Postal Service, according to Mazur.

“For taxpayers who haven’t gotten a stimulus check yet, the largest reason by far is that they were unable to substantiate that they were entitled to the payment that they thought they should have gotten,” Mazur said.

“It’s not the Postal Service holding back the delivery of the check, but rather the IRS being able to confirm that this household was eligible,” he said.

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