Qwest isn't the problem. I actually pay them for phone service. It's the Verizon, Tel-net, faux yellow pages phone books that are just ad book fakes that are the big waste.
I was a proud member of the Mercury Rose Parade Tape Removal Team a couple of years ago, and I would gladly lend my labor to an effort to round up these unwanted phone books and deliver them to the offices of those responsible for their production.
Oh yeah, and I embarrassingly emailed Rep. Kopel-Bailey asking her to support this bill without realizing that she was the sponsor.
And then here's how to get crafty: http://recycledcrafts.craftgossip.com/phon…
martin,
your campaign of self-embarrassment has just begun. Jules is a MAN. Read the article below (about id magazine). I hope you don't plan on starting a queer magazine now. I hear such confusion can make things "sticky."
Food day stopped coming to my house when gas hit $4, but it seems to have started back up, (although it is very spotty, I haven't gotten one in about a month.)
It is quite useful, sometimes I need to paint something, and I don't want to get paint on the floor.
All of these companies pretend to have an "opt out" program. I've tried them. Call and you'll get told you are going to be connected to that operator, then.... dial tone! That's fraud, pure and simple.
Make them pay a recycling fee in advance for every copy they distribute. Otherwise, fine the bejesus out of them.
Even if the bill passed you wouldn't see a single tree saved.
While the popular myth is that this industry is responsible for the neutering of forests, the reality is the Yellow Pages industry doesn’t knock down any trees for its paper!!! Let me repeat that – they don’t need to cut any trees for their paper supply. Currently, on average, most publishers are using about 40% recycled material (from the newspapers and magazines you are recycling curbside), and the other 60% comes from wood chips and waste products of the lumber industry. If you take a round tree and make square or rectangular lumber from it, you get plenty of chips and other waste. Those by-products make up the other 60% of the raw material needed. Note that these waste products created in lumber milling would normally end up in landfills.
And then here's how to get crafty:
http://recycledcrafts.craftgossip.com/phon…
your campaign of self-embarrassment has just begun. Jules is a MAN. Read the article below (about id magazine). I hope you don't plan on starting a queer magazine now. I hear such confusion can make things "sticky."
It is quite useful, sometimes I need to paint something, and I don't want to get paint on the floor.
Make them pay a recycling fee in advance for every copy they distribute. Otherwise, fine the bejesus out of them.
While the popular myth is that this industry is responsible for the neutering of forests, the reality is the Yellow Pages industry doesn’t knock down any trees for its paper!!! Let me repeat that – they don’t need to cut any trees for their paper supply. Currently, on average, most publishers are using about 40% recycled material (from the newspapers and magazines you are recycling curbside), and the other 60% comes from wood chips and waste products of the lumber industry. If you take a round tree and make square or rectangular lumber from it, you get plenty of chips and other waste. Those by-products make up the other 60% of the raw material needed. Note that these waste products created in lumber milling would normally end up in landfills.
For more information go here: http://www.yptalk.com/archive.cfm?ID=390&C…