Pros
I cannot see any positive merit to working for the U.S.P.S.
Kontras
From the set of regular 630,000 full time 'regular', thousands upon thousands are now retiring. Most of the regular employees have worked as many as 25 years, more often 35 years. All newly hired employees are designated as \"non-career employees' ( there may be a few exceptions). Such new employees are mistreated and must work no less than 50 hours, 10 hours a day at minimum. The USPS published job descriptions and their job offers conceal facts regarding a mandatory 350 day probation, where the temporary must work as many as seven days a week, Saturday through Friday. Federal labor law prohibits the USPS from demanding more than 60 hours a week but its managers do so. Supervisors will instruct their employees to work in excess of 60 hours a week, week in and week out, for 360 days and then an additional 90 days to all probationary "non-career' employee. The language the USPS trainers, hiring agents and even those who interview use to describe the hours of work available is "no-less than a four hours in a single work day". They intentionally obscure the fact that what they mean is that if a supervisor schedules a worker to perform for a particular day and cancels arbitrarily, the 'non-career' employee can show up at work, and demand wages for a maximum of four hours. The USPS has unions such as the Postal Carrier's Union and it is highly active and integrated into all of the hiring, training, and supervision of Postal Carriers. It is my opinion that the Union protects the USPS as a whole from disintegrating into a privatized, for profit business. The USPS pretends it is a Federal agency when in fact it is an independent government agency that is highly regulated by Federal law. That stated, it is a for profit organization. I do not exaggerate the hours demanded of the newly hired employee as exceeding U.S. State labor laws, whether clerk or carrier. Though it admits it is no longer a government agency, it fails to inform the public of this. Congress still controls all changes of operations in the USPS, such as the elimination of Saturday deliveries - but the core of the problem within the USPS is that it views the worker as a romantic notion. The USPS provides no real disability insurance, yet it reports accident injuries upon the thousands. It causes worker fatigue and injury but fails to modernize any of its delivery methods including the use of GIS map datum to guide carriers.