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'Shortsighted' plan to change mail process in central Illinois draws ire of residents

Claire Grant
Springfield State Journal- Register

The room of the Hilton Hotel in Springfield was seen overflowing with people who are against the United States Postal Service's plan to change how mail is processed in central and southern Illinois.

Residents from Springfield, Peoria, Champaign and more were joined by Springfield Mayor Misty Buscher, 9 city Springfield council alderpersons and Sen. Doris Turner, D-Springfield, among others, who all spoke out against the proposed changes along with the lack of communication from the USPS.

The USPS recently proposed a new network consolidation plan to change 58 processing and distribution centers in smaller Illinois communities. These distribution processing centers will be converted into local mail processing centers.

If the proposal goes through, mail sent from central to southern Illinois addresses, will first be sent down to St. Louis, Missouri before being sent back up to the state it was dropped off in.

More:Central Illinois residents may soon see increased delays in receiving their mail

Retired letter-carrier Roz Stein rejects the proposal to change Springfield's USPS distribution center at a public meeting on March 26, 2024, in Springfield.

In a letter to the State Journal-Register, the USPS said the proposed changes would not impact Springfield residents and employees would not lose their jobs. During Tuesday's meeting, the post office said 18 jobs would be "impacted" but did not say how specifically.

Local 239 American Postal Workers Union President Johnny Bishop said there's one specific reason layoffs have not been discussed.

"They鈥檙e going to mention multiple times there鈥檚 no layoffs, the reason is we can鈥檛 do layoffs. Our contract does not allow layoffs," Bishop said.

Even with the contract in place preventing layoffs, residents were still skeptical they would not happen.

鈥淲hen you had a PowerPoint up here, the first line of your PowerPoint you were very adamant, I loved your emotional display 鈥 you said, 鈥榣et me be clear: no one will be laid off鈥,鈥 associate professor of sociology Lesa Johnson said. 鈥淚t smells like lies and that鈥檚 why people are laughing at you, and that鈥檚 why people don鈥檛 believe you. When you cannot be honest with people then you are wasting their time and yours.鈥

Bishop also said the future needs to have transparency from the parent company to the public and postal workers impacted by decisions made outside the state.

鈥淭here is no reason the state of Illinois鈥 mail should go across state lines,鈥 Bishop said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got medications for your elderly, medication for your veterans, I mean you鈥檝e got election mail."

The Sangamon County Board called the plan "short-sighted" to speed up the mail process by shipping packages out of state and plans to file a resolution opposing the plan its April 9 board meeting,

The public has until April 10 to share their complaints with the USPS before the plan put in place moves forward toward its next steps.

Complaints to quality-of-life and messages about the impending changes must be sent to to be considered by the USPS.

Contact Claire Grant at CLGrant@gannett.com, X (Formerly known as Twitter): @Claire_Granted