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December 11, 2002  
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LIEBERMAN WELCOMES APPOINTMENT OF TWO CONNECTICUT RESIDENTS TO POSTAL COMMISSION
Nine-member Commission to Investigate the US Postal Service
 
WASHINGTON- Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Joe Lieberman (D-Conn)., Wednesday, welcomed two Connecticut citizens - Yale University President Richard C. Levin and PanAmSat President and CEO Joseph R. Wright - to a new commission that will spend the next seven months looking for ways to reform the U.S. Postal Service.

The nine-member Commission on the United States Postal Service, appointed by the Bush Administration, will examine Postal Service operations, structure and finances to determine ways to maintain the service’s viability in the face of stiff competition from e-mail and financial setbacks revolving around last year’s anthrax attacks through the mail. The Postal Service has not turned a profit since 1999, due in part to a declining volume of mail.

“The task of reforming the United States Postal Service so that it can carry out its vital mission in the future is a daunting one,” Lieberman said. “Recent efforts to craft an approach that is acceptable to all sides have resulted in disappointment. However, the president has selected a number of distinguished members for this new Commission and I am confident that Dr. Levin and Mr. Wright will make innovative and positive contributions, which I hope will ultimately lead to constructive recommendations for the future of the Postal Service.”

Wright is a former director of the Office of Management and Budget with nearly 40 years of entrepreneurial, industry and government experience. He directs PanAmSat’s global operations, including strategic development, sales, marketing, regulatory affairs and all financial issues associated with PanAmSat’s global satellite services business.

Wright was OMB director under President Reagan from 1982 to 1989, serving in the Cabinet and the Executive Office of the President. He was also deputy secretary of the Department of Commerce from 1981 to 1982, and later was on the President’s Export Council as chairman of the Export Control Subcommittee.

Levin, a long time New Haven resident, is a specialist in the economics of technological change. He has also written about intellectual property rights, the patent system, industrial research and development, and the effects of antitrust and public regulation on private industry. He has taught on microeconomics, industrial organization, antitrust, the oil industry, the competitiveness of U.S. manufacturing industries, and the history of economic thought. He chaired the Yale economics department, and served as dean of the graduate school. Levin received his bachelor's degree in history from Stanford University in 1968 and studied politics and philosophy at Oxford University, where he earned a B.Litt. degree. In 1974 he received his Ph.D. in economics from Yale and was named to the Yale faculty.

The co-chairmen of the new commission are Republican Harry J. Pearce, chairman of Hughes Electronics Corp. and a longtime General Motors executive, and Democrat James A. Johnson, chairman of the board at the Brookings Institution and a former head of Fannie Mae.
 
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December 2002 Press Releases
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December 20 - Lieberman Warns Against Short-Changing Homeland Security
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December 20 - Lieberman Condemns Review of Federal Regulations
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December 20 - Governmental Affairs Committee Minority Report:
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December 19 - GAO Report Finds Flaws in OMB’s E-Government Initiatives
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December 17 - Lieberman Clarifies Intelligence-Sharing for New Department of Homeland Security
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December 17 - Lieberman Says E-Gov Bill Serves Homeland Security
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December 12 - 9-11 Commissioners Must Disclose
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December 11 current Press Release
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December 11 - Lieberman Calls for Greater Planning, Coordination, Communication Between Federal, State and Local Governments
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December 10 - Lieberman Rebukes Bush on Local Homeland Security Money
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December 6 - Most Federal Agencies Tackle Major Management Problems
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December 6 - 9-11 Commissioners Might Have to Publicly Disclose Financial Information
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December 6 - GAO Says Insufficient Use of Personnel Flexibilities Can Significantly Hinder Federal Agencies
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December 6 - Lieberman Seeks Information About Suspicious Letter
Were Proper USPS Procedures Followed?
 

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Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
340 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20510