Mail Traffic Deaths Reporting Act of 2025
Summary
What This Bill Does
The Mail Traffic Deaths Reporting Act of 2025 creates a crash-reporting system for vehicles transporting mail. Within 90 days, the Postmaster General must issue regulations requiring collection, tracking, and public reporting of deaths and injuries from traffic crashes involving mail vehicles. USPS employees and contractors engaged in transporting mail must report injury or fatality crashes within three days, unless serious injury prevents timely reporting under procedures the Postal Service creates. Reports must include details such as date, time, location, crash nature, contractor identification, numbers of injuries and fatalities, and contributing factors. Employees and contractors must update reports if crash-caused injuries or fatalities change. USPS must create a standard form, maintain a continuously updated internal digital database, publish an annual public report with aggregated statistics, trends, and analysis, and impose appropriate contractor penalties such as fines, suspension, or termination for missed reporting deadlines.
Who Benefits and How
Road-safety advocates benefit because USPS crash deaths and injuries would be tracked in a dedicated database and summarized in an annual public report. Congress oversight committees benefit because aggregated statistics, trends, and analysis make Postal Service transportation safety easier to monitor. Communities affected by mail-vehicle crashes benefit from more transparency about crash frequency, fatalities, injuries, and contributing factors. Postal safety managers benefit from standardized crash data that can identify recurring risks in employee, contractor, route, or vehicle operations.
Who Bears the Burden and How
The United States Postal Service must write regulations, build a standard reporting form, maintain an internal digital database, publish annual reports, and enforce compliance. USPS employees transporting mail must report qualifying injury or fatality crashes within three days and update reports when injury or fatality information changes. USPS mail delivery contractors must meet the same reporting deadlines and face fines, contract suspension, or contract termination for noncompliance. Contractor compliance teams must collect crash details, identify the contractor involved, and track contributing factors without exposing personally identifiable information in the public report.
Key Provisions
- Requires the Postmaster General to issue crash-reporting regulations within 90 days of enactment.
- Requires USPS employees transporting mail to report injury or fatality crashes within three days.
- Requires USPS contractors at any tier transporting mail to report injury or fatality crashes within three days.
- Requires reports to include date, time, location, crash description, contractor identity, injury and fatality counts, and contributing factors.
- Requires a standard USPS reporting form and a continuously updated internal digital crash database.
- Requires annual public reports with aggregated statistics, trends, and analysis while protecting personal identities.
- Authorizes contractor penalties, including fines, suspension, or termination, for failure to report by the deadline.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Requires the Postal Service to issue regulations within 90 days for collecting, tracking, enforcing, and publicly reporting deaths and injuries from traffic crashes involving vehicles transporting mail, including three-day crash reports by USPS employees and contractors, a standard reporting form, an internal digital database, annual public reports, and penalties for contractors that miss reporting deadlines.
Key Policy Areas
Postal Service, Transportation Safety, Government Transparency
Primary Purpose
Requires the Postal Service to issue regulations within 90 days for collecting, tracking, enforcing, and publicly reporting deaths and injuries from traffic crashes involving vehicles transporting mail, including three-day crash reports by USPS employees and contractors, a standard reporting form, an internal digital database, annual public reports, and penalties for contractors that miss reporting deadlines.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- Road-safety advocates
- Congressional oversight committees
- Communities affected by mail-vehicle crashes
- Postal safety managers
Identified Costs
- United States Postal Service
- USPS employees transporting mail
- USPS mail delivery contractors
- Contractor compliance teams
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
Passed HouseReceived; read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland …
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to …
Passed House (inferred from eh version)
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without …
On motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill …
Passed/agreed to in House: On motion to suspend the rules …
Considered as unfinished business. (consideration: CR H938-939)
At the conclusion of debate, the Yeas and Nays were …
DEBATE - The House proceeded with forty minutes of debate …
Considered under suspension of the rules. (consideration: CR H933-935)
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Congressional oversight committees, United States Postal Service
Positive-direction: Congressional oversight committees
Negative-direction: United States Postal Service
Communities affected by mail-vehicle crashes, Road-safety advocates
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "postmaster"
- → Postmaster General of the Postal Service
- "postal_service"
- → United States Postal Service
Key Definitions
Terms defined in this bill
A commercial motor vehicle highway occurrence causing a fatality, qualifying bodily injury, or disabling vehicle damage requiring tow-away, excluding only boarding, alighting, loading, or unloading events.
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology