Order Code RS22245
September 16, 2005
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Postal Service for Katrina Survivors
Nye Stevens
Specialist in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
Summary
The U.S. Postal Service has experienced many disasters in the past, and it was
relatively well prepared for the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. While the hurricane
damaged some 500 post offices, the Postal Service was able to establish limited services
just days after the disaster. For those now displaced from their homes, USPS says that
it can provide relatively efficient delivery service if customers submit a change of
address form in person, by toll-free telephone, or on the Internet. USPS has no current
plans to request congressional appropriations for the costs it has incurred in restoring
operations. This report will be updated in October.
Every large-scale hurricane within memory has affected areas served by the U.S.
Postal Service (USPS), and that institution has long experience with the challenge of
reconstituting mail delivery. The post-Katrina challenge poses a highly visible test of its
capability, resilience, and reputation. USPS was relatively well prepared for Hurricane
Katrina, and its performance in the aftermath has been generally well reviewed in the
media.
As early as August 26, USPS was anticipating a landfall in the Gulf Coast and was
diverting some mail from processing plants in that region to minimize the effects of
potential disruption to its processing capabilities.1 Nevertheless, the hurricane’s force and
subsequent flooding were destructive to postal facilities and operations. By the time the
storm passed on August 30, some 500 postal facilities in Alabama, Mississippi, and
Louisiana had been damaged and were incapable of providing delivery service.2
The timing of the storm was critical for the Postal Service, since the first two or three
days of the month are when many people dependent on Social Security, public assistance,
and annuity income typically expect their checks in the mail. On September 1, USPS set
up temporary centers for the pickup of checks in Escatawpa, Biloxi, and Gulfport, in
Mississippi, and in Louisiana at Hammond, Covington, LaPlace, and Des Allemands, and
1 “Postal Service Operations and Delivery Update,” briefing by Thomas G. Day, Senior Vice
President, Government Relations, U.S. Postal Service, Sept. 7, 2005.
2 Ibid.
Congressional Research Service { The Library of Congress

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another opened later in Mobile, Alabama.3 In New Orleans proper, two post offices (La
Place and Gonzales) were designated as Social Security check pickup points for a short
period of time.4 More than 30,000 Social Security checks were distributed from these
centers before they closed on September 14.5
Restoration of Regular Service
Reconstituting regular mail delivery in the areas affected by Hurricane Katrina has
been a priority since the storm, and USPS has made substantial progress to date. By
September 7, USPS reported that full service had been restored to 188 of the affected post
offices, and partial service to 189.6 In 120 post offices (some of which no longer exist)
there was no service. In terms of daily deliveries, all service had been resumed in
Alabama, but 100,000 addresses in Mississippi lacked service, and 720,000 in Louisiana.7
Mobile units were brought to some of these areas, where customers could pick up mail
and purchase retail services.
By September 10, USPS reported that full service had been restored to 82% of post
offices in the area affected by Hurricane Katrina. The list of closed post offices continues
to change, and USPS has posted on its website a color-coded map,8 updated daily,
showing which ZIP codes have full, partial, and no delivery service.
Periodicals and standard (advertising) mail is still not being accepted for delivery to
certain post offices in southern Louisiana and Mississippi.9 Express Mail was embargoed
to several areas shortly after the disaster struck, but by September 15 it had been restored
to all but the Louisiana three-digit ZIP Codes 700, 701, and 704. When these restrictions
change, notification will be carried on USPS.com.10
Delivery of Mail to Dislocated Customers
While restoration of service to the areas damaged by the hurricane itself is a familiar
task for the Postal Service, the sudden displacement of hundreds of thousands of
customers from New Orleans is unprecedented. Fortunately, USPS has spent millions
3 “Postal Service Establishes Temporary Locations for Social Security Check Distribution for
Hurricane Katrina Victims,” U.S. Postal Service News Release no. 05-068, Sept. 1, 2005.
4 Ibid.
5 “U.S. Postal Service Continues to Restore Mail Services Along the Gulf Coast,” U.S. Postal
Service News Release no. 05-074, Sept. 10, 2005.
6 “Postal Service Operations and Delivery Update,” briefing by Thomas G. Day, Senior Vice
President, Government Relations, U.S. Postal Service, Sept. 7, 2005.
7 Ibid.
8 The map is available at [http://www.usps.com/communications/news/serviceupdates/zipmap
.htm?from=bannercommunications&page=katrinamap].
9 “Postal Service Operations and Delivery Update,” briefing by Thomas G. Day, Senior Vice
President, Government Relations, U.S. Postal Service, Sept. 7, 2005.
10 Specifically, see [http://www.usps.com/communications/news/press/welcome.htm].

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upgrading its national change of address (NCOA) system in recent years, because
forwarding mail for the millions of households that move every year is a major cost to its
regular operations. USPS now has the capability, through innovations in sorting
technology, to intercept mail at its original sorting point that is addressed to an address
that has changed, and re-route the mail to a new address. Thus, it can avoid the cost and
delay of physically transporting mail to the former delivery post office for flagging and
forwarding under a local change of address request.
For the current situation, USPS is urging all postal patrons who have been relocated
to file a change of address form at their new location. The form can be filed at a post
office, by toll-free telephone (1-800-ASK-USPS), or on the Internet at
[http://www.USPS.com]. The form will enable USPS to direct mail to a new address
from its point of origin, whether the new address is a relative’s home, a Red Cross shelter,
or temporary rental quarters. Recognizing that many of the displaced customers will
move again before long, USPS has made it clear that multiple changes of addresses cause
no problem, since the NCOA is an electronic system and can easily be updated. In
addition, USPS has waived indefinitely, for those affected by the hurricane, the usual 30-
day limit on forwarding mail to a new address.11
All of this is dependent, however, on the USPS having a change of address on
record. USPS has reached out to shelters to urge that the forms be filed, postal
representatives have appeared in countless media, and the Postmaster General has
appeared on national television to make the same point. By September 10, USPS reported
that more than 87,000 households of affected residents had filed change of address
forms.12
Paying the Costs of Recovery
As of September 7, USPS estimated that its physical losses would be well over $100
million.13 While some in Congress have anticipated that USPS would request
appropriations to cover some or all of its unanticipated costs, USPS has told congressional
staff that it has no current plans to do so. The Postal Reorganization Act (codified in Title
39, United States Code) charges USPS with covering its costs through the revenues it
collects from the mailing public, and USPS has been reluctant to seek appropriations (and
the congressional controls that sometimes accompany them) for support of its delivery
operations.
11 “Postal Service Operations and Delivery Update,” briefing by Thomas G. Day, Senior Vice
President, Government Relations, U.S. Postal Service, Sept. 7, 2005.
12 “U.S. Postal Service Continues to Restore Mail Services Along the Gulf Coast,” U.S. Postal
Service News Release no. 05-074, Sept. 10, 2005.
13 “Postal Service Operations and Delivery Update,” briefing by Thomas G. Day, Senior Vice
President, Government Relations, U.S. Postal Service, Sept. 7, 2005.