There's some hope in a bipartisan bill introduced by senators Susan Collins and Tom Carper to enable the USPS to access the money the agency has been forced to overfund pension obligations. If that bill passes, the postal "crisis" largely passes away also.
Only temporarily. The crisis reappears in a few years as the postal volume continues to decline.
The Postal Service should start the process of downsizing via "attrition". That is, as workers retire or leave the job they should not be replaced. The number of Post Offices and Handling Centers must also decline as volume declines. The Postal Service needs to manage its declining volume by continually reducing costs proportional to that decline. Don't wait until the volume is a fraction of its current level to begin transforming the workforce/facilities/costs.
The strike began just after midnight on March 18, 1970, as members of the National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) local #36 voted 1,555 to 1,055 to walk out the next morning. Even as NALC president James Rademacher urged his membership to return to work, the wild-cat strike spread across the nation. By the time President Nixon appeared on television to announce his decision to call up the reserves to help move mail in New York City, the strike had spread to 100 US cities, and involved over 200,000 postal workers.
As workers marched in picket lines in front of post offices from New York to Los Angeles, Americans who might have taken their mail for granted in previous weeks were anxiously seeking a resolution to the strike. At a time before cell phones and the internet, when fax machines were brand new and few in number, mail carriers toted the nations commerce and information in their bags. Letters, bills and checks to pay those bills, birthday cards, passports, legal documents, and even draft notices piled up in mail sacks on post office floors across the nation.
The strike came to an end a little over a week after it began. Postal workers eventually secured a larger pay increase. The troubles that had led to the 1970 strike were not unique to postal workers. By the late 1960s it had become evident that the centuries old institution of the Post Office Department was crumbling under the strain of post World War II mail volumes. The solution to many of these problems at that time was the reorganization of the Department on July 1, 1971 into the U.S. Postal Service. But that is another story for another blog and another time.