Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 27 – As people in
various countries move from rural areas to the cities, the places they are from
gradually decline with the passing of these former centers of life marked by
various changes. In some countries, school consolidation and the end of local
high schools is enough; in others, the closing of a restaurant, café, store or
even gas station may be.
Those who bemoan the passing of
village life in Russia have often pointed to the closing of stores and schools
as the key events, but they are now confronted with a Moscow plan under development
that will signal the death of villages even more dramatically: the likely closing
of thousands of post offices in rural areas.
Without a post office and thus an
official identity, many villages are likely to decline even more quickly as
their residents refocus on neighboring settlements that still have this outpost
of official life. Consequently, what may seem like simple efficiency – not
surprisingly, Russian officials are calling this another example of
“optimization” – is far more fateful.
The Russian Federation currently has
“almost 42,000” post offices. Their location is governed by a set of rules that
hasn’t been updated since 1982. According to experts, 70 percent of these are
operating at a loss, something correctable only if each is at the center of a
larger “market” (ura.news/news/1052400947).
The
draft measure the communications ministry is preparing would set the stage for
increasing the number of post offices in cities, with those in millionaire
cities supposed to serve 15,000 residents as opposed to 20-25,000 now and those
in cities of 100,000 to 250,000 to serve six to ten thousand residents as
opposed to 9,000 to 13,000 at present.
To make those increases possible,
post offices elsewhere and especially in rural areas where the number of
customers is much smaller will have to be closed if the postal service wants to
save money as it says it does in justifying these changes.
At the same time, the communications
ministry says that it will not close any post office without the agreement of
local people, but “specialists do not exclude that the new norms will lead to a
reduction in post offices. At the very least, these norms will give the government
“legal cover” to do so (kommersant.ru/doc/4104635).
Given how Putin’s healthcare “optimization”
program ahs been carried out, with rural areas stripped of medical services (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/08/admitting-optimization-has-failed-putin.html),
there is every reason to believe postal service “optimization” will be handled
in exactly the same way, benefiting the treasury at the expense of rural
Russians.
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