| Long title | An Act to provide stability to and enhance the services of the United States Postal Service, and for other purposes. |
|---|---|
| Enacted by | the117th United States Congress |
| Number of co-sponsors | 102 |
| Citations | |
| Public law | Pub. L. 117–108 (text)(PDF) |
| Statutes at Large | 136 Stat. 1127 |
| Codification | |
| Titles amended | Title 39—Postal Service |
| Legislative history | |
| |
ThePostal Service Reform Act of 2022 is afederal statute intended to address "the finances and operations of theU.S. Postal Service (USPS)",[1] specifically to lift budget requirements imposed on the Service by thePostal Accountability and Enhancement Act[2] and require it to continue six-day-a-week delivery of mail.[3]

The act was first introduced on May 11, 2021, byRepresentativeCarolyn Maloney (D-NY).[1] The House of Representatives then passed the bill by 342–92 on February 8, 2022.[4] On March 8, 2022, the Senate voted 79–19 to pass the bill.[5] PresidentBiden signed the bill into law on April 6, 2022.[6]
Similar bills to the Postal Service Reform Act have been proposed in recent years, but none passed.[7] ThePostal Accountability and Enhancement Act (PAEA), passed in 2006, required the USPS to pre-fund benefits for future retirees, and this cost the agency about $5.5 billion annually.[8] The PAEA required the USPS to pre-fund these health benefits more than fifty years in advance. This requirement caused the USPS to accumulate billions in debt annually in recent years.[9] The USPS Fairness Act would have allowed the USPS to still continue to pay benefits from the accumulated funding (about $56.8 billion in 2020) until depleted, but the intended purpose of the USPS Fairness Act was to remove the pre-funding requirements placed on the agency by the PAEA.[7][9] That bill passed in the House (309—106) in 2019[10] but died in the Senate.
The Postal Service Reform Act of 2022:
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