COOK COUNTY, Ill. (WGN) — The holiday rush may be over, but reports about the postal service’s troubles continue.
A former Cook County sheriff’s officer said a postal delay hit him hard. Dan Moreci spent 30 years with the sheriff’s office before retiring last April.
At the time, the county’s pension fund told him he was eligible to receive a monthly annuity of $7,576, a figure that included additional sick time that Moreci could purchase with money he had saved in a deferred compensation plan.
Amid the pandemic, the office that processes the deferred compensation paperwork was closed, so Moreci sent his documents through the mail.
But because of postal delays, it was not processed within 30 days, as was required.
As a result, Moreci was no longer eligible to purchase that additional service time, reducing his monthly annuity by 38% to $4,693. If he lives to be 80, that difference will have cost him nearly $1 million.
“At the time, I didn’t know there was a problem with the mail,” he said.
The pension fund told him they must abide by state law and can’t make an exception, not even because of the COVID-19 outbreak. But Moreci said he’s not giving up and has filed a lawsuit in Cook County Circuit Court, hoping a judge will rule in his favor.
In an email, the pension fund’s executive director said, “While we sympathize with Daniel Moreci in his effort to mail a check to the Cook County Pension Fund, the Fund had no choice but to act as it did because of state law.”
She added, “The code is clear that the Pension Fund must receive payment for the purchase of additional service credit within 30 days after the participant ends his employment with the county. In this case, the Pension Fund did not receive Mr. Moreci’s payment within 30 days. The Board, of course, will abide by any Court order in this matter.”
In the meantime, while he awaits a judge’s ruling, Moreci works as a handyman to make ends meet.
Moreci is not alone in terms of mail trouble. Illinois residents filed a total of 15,861 claims involving lost mail through the first 11 months of last year.
To settle those claims, the U.S. Postal Service paid more than $1.2 million, according to data obtained by WGN.
“[It’s] an utter lack of professionalism to have those numbers just here in our state,” said Alderman Matt O’Shea.
Amid ongoing reports of spotty delivery and poor service, he and other local politicians have been calling on Congressional leaders to help fix the problem, but progress has been slow.
In response, a U.S. Postal Service spokesman said: “As the holiday inventory continues to drop, the Postal Service fully anticipates improvements in performance. Recent snow accumulation in our region has also been a challenge in transporting mail and delivery.”