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U.S. Postal Service filed an April 9 notice with the Postal Regulatory Commission of mailing services price changes to take ...
Changes need to be approved by the Postal Regulatory Commission but if approved, mailing service product prices would ...
The Postal Service contends, as it did last year before a similar increase, that the price hike is needed to achieve financial stability.
Americans could see the price of a first-class Forever stamp go up five more cents, from 73 to 78 cents, starting July 13.
If approved, the 5-cent increase for a “forever” stamp and similar increases for ... to balance the books with the decline of first-class mail.
If approved, the 5-cent increase for a “forever” stamp and similar increases for ... to balance the books with the decline of first-class mail. Alinea celebrates 20 years of modernist fine ...
A first-class stamp would go up a nickel ... Department of Government Efficiency had floated the idea of privatizing mail service. Deputy Postmaster General Doug Tulino has taken on the role ...
USPS recommended a 5-cent increase to the price of a first-class mail Forever Stamp, bumping the current price from 73 cents to 78 cents. Overall, this would raise mailing services product ...
If approved, they would kick in July 13. The first-class mail stamp, or "forever" stamp, also saw a 5-cent increase last July. The USPS calls it the "forever" stamp because consumers can use it ...