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Huffington Post -- Subsidizing Junk Mail in the Great Recession
by Todd Pagliahttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/todd-paglia/subsidizing-junk-mail-in_b_442132.html
January 29th, 2010
If you think receiving your daily dose of junk mail just kills trees, clogs landfills, exacerbates climate change, is an invitation to identity theft, and is incredibly annoying, well, it actually gets worse: you are also paying for the privilege of receiving it.
The Stranger -- Get the F### on This
by Eli Sandershttp://www.thestranger.com/seattle/get-the-fuck-on-this/Content?oid=3304534
January 26th, 2010
According to the nonprofit group ForestEthics, which pushed the measure, the American junk-mail business involves turning 100 million trees into 100 billion pieces of annoying solicitation each year.
My Northwest -- Seattle City Council wants a 'do-not-mail' registry
by Chris Sullivanhttp://www.mynorthwest.com/?nid=11&sid=275788
January 26th, 2010
The city of Seattle is taking a symbolic stand against junk mail.
Investigate West -- Seattle Council’s vote for a ‘Do Not Mail’ registry takes a stand for sustainability
by Rita Hubbardhttp://invw.org/2010/01/seattle-councils-vote-for-a-do-not-mail-registry-takes-a-stand-for-sustainability/
January 26th, 2010
The Seattle City Council passed a resolution urging the Legislature to create a Do Not Mail junk mail registry...
Catalog Choice Blog -- City of Seattle Passes Do Not Mail Resolution
http://blog.catalogchoice.org/2010/01/25/city-of-seattle-passes-do-not-mail-resolution/
January 25th, 2010
Today the City of Seattle passed a non-binding resolution asking the State of Washington to set up a do not mail registry and directing the Seattle Public Utilities agency to evaluate the existing mail preference services as an option to provide an effective service to Seattle residents.
Seattlest -- Addicted to Junk
by Aaron Mhttp://seattlest.com/2010/01/25/addicted_to_junk.php
January 25th, 2010
The environmental statistics are much too convincing to ignore. Every year an average American household receives 848 pieces of unsolicited mail. Over 100 billion pieces of junk mail delivered each year demand the destruction of 100 million trees, releasing huge amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere and going quickly into the trash.
KPLU Seattle NPR -- Seattle Council Considers "Do Not Mail" Resolution
by Liam Moriartyhttp://www.publicbroadcasting.net/kplu/news.newsmain/article/1/0/1603118/KPLU.Local.News/Seattle.Council.Considers.%27Do.Not.Mail%27.Resolution
January 24th, 2010
When you sort your mail and dump a fistful of catalogs, credit card offers and coupon booklets into the recycling bin, have you ever thought, "What a waste of paper?" Seattle City Council President Richard Conlin feels your pain.
Seattle King 5 News -- State urged to join junk mail 'do not mail' registry
by Linda Brillhttp://www.nwcn.com/news/business/Junk-Mail-Do-Not-Mail-Registry-81280897.html
January 12th, 2010
"I feel like I have a right not to have garbage delivered to my door. It's like trespassing," said registry supporter Ellie Rose of Zero Waste Seattle.
Sun Break -- Washington's Do-Not-Mail Registry Could Save 200,000 Trees Per Year
by RVOhttp://thesunbreak.com/2010/01/08/washingtons-do-not-mail-registry-could-save-200000-trees-per-year
January 7th, 2010
Now the Seattle City Council has the chance to right a litany of wrongs when they vote on a resolution to petition the state legislature to ban junk mail. The council will vote for the resolution to create a Do-Not-Mail-Registry on January 11.
Fox 5 -- Proposed Law Seeks to Limit Catalogs
by Suchita Vadlamanihttp://www.myfoxatlanta.com/dpp/news/Proposed-Law-Seeks-to-Limit-Catalogs-122109
December 21st, 2009
This time of year your mailbox is full of catalogs -- whether you like it or not. That could change if lawmakers in Washington pass a proposed new law. "For something that most people don't want and never asked for -- catalogs and junk mail generate enormous amounts of waste," said Will Craven of Forestethics.
Fast Company -- Timberland, Patagonia Make ForestEthics' Holiday Gift Catalog "Nice" List
by Ariel Schwartzhttp://www.fastcompany.com/blog/ariel-schwartz/sustainability/timberland-patagonia-make-forestethics-holiday-gift-catalog-nice-
December 9th, 2009
Ah, December. Season of gifts, friends, family, and...catalogs. JC Penney broke the hearts of children everywhere last month when it discontinued its 1,000-page Big Book (due to increased reliance on Internet sales), but the move cut the company's catalog paper use by 30% annually. The Plano, Texas-based chain isn't the only company changing its mailbox-stuffing ways. According to ForestEthics' annual Holiday Catalog Environmental Scorecard, Timberland, Patagonia, REI, Macy's, and Crate & Barrel also deserve kudos for their "nice" efforts, while Sears and Neiman Marcus make this year's "naughty" list.
Environmental Leader -- J Crew, JC Penney Score a ‘Nice’ on Holiday Gift Catalog Scorecard
http://www.environmentalleader.com/2009/12/09/j-crew-jc-penney-score-a-nice-on-holiday-gift-catalog-scorecard/
December 9th, 2009
Each year, Forest Ethics rates retailers on their gift catalogs and other mailings as judged by the avoidance of paper from endangered forests, the use of Forest Stewardship Council-certified paper, use of recycled content and paper reduction.
Fourth Annual Holiday Catalog Environmental Scorecard Released
December 8th, 2009
This holiday season, the catalog and direct mail industry is showing strong trends toward ‘greener’ forest and paper policies despite several laggards playing ‘grinch’ according to environmental group ForestEthics in its 4th annual ‘Naughty/Nice List’: a scorecard on the catalog & direct mail industry.
The Green NW -- Seattle City Council Approves ‘Do Not Mail Registry’ Resolution
by Shane Petersenhttp://thegreennw.com/2009/11/seattle-city-council-approves-do-not-mail-registry-resolution/
November 24th, 2009
Today I stopped in and listened to the Seattle City Council meeting to hear about the proposed ‘Do Not Mail Registry‘. This registry will be modeled after the national ‘Do Not Call Registry‘. This registry would allow people to opt out of receiving unsolicited commercial mailings. After listening to some of the data surrounding the waste that these mailings create, it is obvious that we should have a Do Not Mail option available.
San Jose Mercury News -- Blizzard of catalogs stuff America's mailboxes: Merry mail or holiday headache?
by Paul Rogershttp://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-news/ci_13827096
November 19th, 2009
"I've had people tell me it's as if their house is being invaded by garbage,." said Will Craven, a spokesman for Forest Ethics, a San Francisco environmental group. "We may have a lot of hard choices ahead of us in terms of climate change and the environment. Getting rid of junk mail isn't one of them. "It's one of the easy ones."
Wall Street Journal -- In Digital Era, Marketers Still Prefer a Paper Trail
by Jeffrey Ballhttp://online.wsj.com/article/SB125565110691488935.html
October 16th, 2009
Never is the elusiveness of a paperless world more evident than at this time of year, when mailboxes overflow with catalogs.
DMNews -- Potter remarks take on do not mail movement
by  Kate Muthhttp://www.dmnews.com/potter-remarks-take-on-do-not-mail-movement/article/151994/
October 9th, 2009
Do-not-mail legislation has proponents, including the nonprofit ForestEthics, which runs the Web site DoNotMail.org. The portal urges consumers to sign a petition to stop "junk mail," citing environmental concerns.
Unjunk Mail -- But seriously, folks
by Will Cravenhttp://unjunkmail.com/2009/10/do-not-mail/
October 8th, 2009
US junk mail requires the logging of 100 million trees each year. Junk mailers endlessly repeat that paper is recyclable, but hardly any of them use any recycled content. Deforestation accounts for 20% of global carbon emissions—more than all the world’s trains, planes, and automobiles combined. If we want to address deforestation, junk mail is an easy place to start.
Unjunk Mail -- How to Stop Junk Mail: The Best and Worst Do Not Mail Lists and Services
by Unjunk Mailhttp://unjunkmail.com/2009/09/how-to-stop-junk-mail-the-best-and-worst-do-not-mail-lists-and-services-chart/
September 9th, 2009
This past summer, Unjunk Mail’s research team did its best to analyze all of the services out there that help consumers stop receiving direct mail.
MSN Money -- Your 41 pounds of junk mail
by Gina Roberts-Greyhttp://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Banking/FinancialPrivacy/your-41-pounds-of-junk-mail.aspx?page=1
August 13th, 2009
When's the last time a personal letter turned up in your mailbox? The holidays? Your birthday? If you're like most people, you receive about 1.5 pieces of personalized mail -- including bills -- each week. And 16 pieces of junk mail.
NBC Chicago -- No More Junk Mail!
by Ginger Zeehttp://www.nbcchicago.com/news/green/do-not-mail-junk-042209.html
July 28th, 2009
"We want a simple, fast, effective way that any American can put there name on a list and stop receiving the junk mail that they don't want," said Francisca Rivera, a volunteer with Forest Ethics in Chicago.
Green LA Girl -- Stop junk mail: A Complete guide to getting just the mail you want
by Siel http://greenlagirl.com/stop-junk-mail-a-complete-guide-to-getting-just-the-mail-you-want/
July 4th, 2009
Don’t see why you should have to do all this work to stop junk mail you never asked for in the first place? Then sign ForestEthics’ Do Not Mail Petition, which is pushing lawmakers to create a national Do Not Mail list, similar to the existing Do Not Call list. So far, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors want a Do Not Mail Registry and passed a resolution calling on California to create one — but the resolution’s non-binding and has no actual power to help people make the junk mail stop.
Reuters -- Can junk mail help the economy?
by Reutershttp://www.reuters.com/news/video?videoChannel=74&videoId=105069
May 22nd, 2009
Some people love it, most hate it, but direct mail, commonly known as 'junk' mail, is here to stay and it may be a boon for the troubled U.S. economy.Ben Gruber reports.
Huffington Post -- Junk Mail's Endless Summer
by Todd Pagliahttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/todd-paglia/junk-mails-endless-summer_b_201928.html
May 12th, 2009
Fully 30% of all the mail in the world is US junk mail. It's been a daily annoyance for so long that many of us think of junk mail like bad weather: it's annoying, but also inevitable. Telemarketing calls at dinnertime used to annoy us too, but the Do Not Call Registry put an end to that. We can do the same for junk mail.
DMNews -- SF leads California Do Not Mail push
by  Bryan Yurcanhttp://www.dmnews.com/sf-leads-california-do-not-mail-push/article/130108/
April 6th, 2009
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors has approved a non-binding resolution last week calling on the state of California and Congress to create a Do No Mail registry — the first time lawmakers in the US have voted on creating a policy to allow citizens to block receiving unsolicited mail.
Paper Planet -- San Francisco First US City to Pass Do Not Mail Resolution
http://thepaperplanet.blogspot.com/2009/04/san-francisco-first-us-city-to-pass-do.html
April 1st, 2009
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors on Tuesday passed a resolution calling on California to create a Do Not Mail Registry giving its citizens the choice to stop receiving unwanted junk mail. The non-binding resolution represents the first time American lawmakers have withstood pressure from the direct mail industry and the U.S. Postal Service to side with the majority of Americans.
FoxNews.com -- Pitching all that pesky- and wasteful- junk mail
by Andy Krollhttp://green.foxnews.com/2009/03/25/pitching-all-that-pesky-and-wasteful-junk-mail/
March 25th, 2009
Junk mail, that plague of unwanted and wasted advertisements and catalogs, might seem like a minor inconvenience to you and me. But according to a report issued by ForestEthics, a nonprofit environmental group that tries to protect endangered forest, found that more than 100 billion pieces of junk mail are delivered in the U.S. each year — an average of 848 pieces per household.
Greenbang -- No such thing as ‘carbon-neutral’ paper: coalition
http://www.greenbang.com/no-such-thing-as-carbon-neutral-paper-coalition_8389.html
March 24th, 2009
“Paper production can never be ‘carbon neutral,’ ” said Ginger Cassady of ForestEthics and senior campaigner for the Do Not Mail campaign to establish a registry for Americans to opt-out of junk mail. “Resource consumption and greenhouse gas emissions are inevitable in the production of paper, and we must support products which are truly ‘low carbon’, and not those which make suspiciously unrealistic claims of carbon neutrality.”
SF Weekly -- Will Proposed S.F. Anti-Junk Mail Measure Be Death Knell of Post Office? Environmental Group Says USPS Is Already Dead.
by Joe Eskenazihttp://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2009/03/will_proposed_sf_anti-junk_mai.php
March 24th, 2009
As anticipated, San Francisco's City Operations & Neighborhood Services Committee yesterday approved of a proposed "Do Not Mail" registry that would, in theory, spare city dwellers from the acres of junk mail that clog our post boxes yearly. And, when you look at the jaw-dropping statistics presented by the antipaper-waste organization ForestEthics, it's hard to argue otherwise.
San Francisco Chronicle -- How to curtail junk mail
by Chronicle Editorialshttp://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/03/19/EDPP16IQO5.DTL
March 19th, 2009
The numbers are staggering. The average household receives over 800 pieces of junk mail per year. It's a mighty river that totals 30 percent of the world's snail mail. The brochures, letters and inserts equal 100 million trees per year, according to ForestEthics, an enviro group that's pushing for stricter federal rules.
San Francisco Chronicle: The Thin Green Line -- Snail Mail Goes Digital
by Cameron Scotthttp://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/green/detail?entry_id=37140
March 18th, 2009
On March 23 at 1 p.m., the San Francisco Board of Supervisors will vote on a resolution calling for a statewide Do Not Mail registry, that would allow people to opt out of junk mail catalogues and credit card offers.
San Francisco Chronicle -- San Francisco to the rescue (again)
by Marisa Lagos http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/cityinsider/detail?entry_id=36922
March 13th, 2009
Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi, goaded on by the environmental nonprofit ForestEthics, introduced the legislation last fall, but put it on the back burner until now (his office is hoping to get it scheduled for a hearing on March 23). The measure wouldn't actually ban junk mail in San Francisco -- it's a resolution urging the state Legislature to create a Do Not Mail registry, akin to the National Do Not Call Registry.
USA Today -- Nobody could stop it. Until Now.
March 10th, 2009
View the ad that we placed in the USA Today letting Bay Area residents know that San Francisco has a chance to become the first municipality to put an end to unwanted junk mail.
Yahoo Green -- Banish junk mail
by Lori Bongiornohttp://green.yahoo.com/blog/the_conscious_consumer/52/banish-junk-mail.html
March 5th, 2009
The easiest and cheapest solution to stopping junk mail doesn't exist yet: A national Do Not Mail registry (similar to the Do Not Call list Congress created in 2003).
Miami Herald -- Bills to combat junk mail introduced
by Nirvi Shah
March 1st, 2009
''If Americans are looking for a way to reduce their carbon footprint, this is a place to start,'' ForestEthics spokesman Will Craven said. ``When we think of climate change, we think of cars. We think of polar bears. We don't think of deforestation. Deforestation accounts for nearly one-fifth of all global emissions -- more than all trains, planes and automobiles combined.''
Dallas museum buys junk mail art
January 23rd, 2009
Artist Annette Lawrence's "Free Paper" exhibit is creating quite a buzz. Currently on display at Flatbed Press in Austin, the exhibit uses junk mail collected for an entire year, broken into months, creating a powerful visual of just how much junk shows up on our doorsteps. And the Dallas Museum of Art just bought the December stack!

(Watch the local news coverage after the jump.)

Advertising Age -- Sears, Capital One, AmEx Make Watchdog's 'Naughty' List of Direct Mailers
by Michael Bushhttp://adage.com/article?article_id=133332
December 16th, 2008
NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- If the nonprofit group ForestEthics had its way some, of North America's top direct marketers -- including Sears, Capital One and American Express -- would get just as many lumps of coal in their mailboxes this holiday season as direct-mail pieces they bombard consumers with throughout the year.
Time Magazine -- De-Cluttering Your Mailbox
by Jeremy Caplan
December 4th, 2008
Remember when going through the mail was a thrill? These days Americans get an average of 18 pieces of junk mail for every personal letter. From catalogs to credit-card solicitations, our mailboxes are increasingly clogged with clutter. Dealing with unwanted mail not only wastes our time (eight months over the average lifespan) but also bears environmental costs.
Christian Science Monitor -- Americans hail a postman's junk-mail jihad
by Patrik JonssonChristian Science Monitor
December 2nd, 2008
To the folks on his route through the cul-de-sacs of Apex, N.C., Steve Padgett wasn't just a great mailman but a decent guy who once sent a pink teddy bear to an ailing neighborhood kid.
Raleigh News & Observer: Mailman gets probation -- and accolades
by Sarah Ovaska
November 20th, 2008
RALEIGH - After former mailman Steven Padgett received probation in federal court Wednesday for holding onto years worth of junk mail, support for him swiftly spread beyond his family, friends and residents of his Apex route.
Guardian News -- Don't print this post [blog]
by Tony Juniperhttp://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/nov/17/climatechange-carbonemissions
November 17th, 2008
From the napkins around paper coffee cups to our morning newspaper, the junk mail and the bedtime book, paper is everywhere. We use more and more of it, and its impact on the environment is huge.
Triple Pundit -- ForestEthics Speaks Out on Junk Mail [blog]
November 6th, 2008
Last week I reported on comments made my Pitney Bowes executive chairman, Mike Critelli, in a recent NY Times interview. Mr. Critelli believes the environmental impact of unsolicited mail is greatly exaggerated by well-funded, but misinformed activist groups. To provide an opposing viewpoint, I asked Will Craven, the Media Officer and spokeperson for ForestEthics' Do Not Mail campaign to respond to Critelli’s comments.
The Discerning Brute -- Junk Mail: An Interview with Linda Wells [blog]
by Joshua Katcher
October 19th, 2008
Do you still get tons of unwanted junk mail in your mailbox every day? I know I do. I recently spoke with Junk Mail expert and environmental activist Linda Wells of Forest Ethics to find out how to deal with this annoying, destructive, and wasteful marketing tactic, and why it still happens.
WBZ-TV Boston -- Learn How to Rid Your Mailbox of Junk
by David Wade
October 1st, 2008
Do you ever cringe because you open your mailbox and it's stuffed with junk mail?
Salem News -- Sick of junk mail? Opt-out strategies reduce mailbox waste-invasion
by Andrea Fox
October 1st, 2008
As ForestEthics showed, action causes reaction.
Globe and Mail -- Graffiti that will grow on you
by Zoe Cormier
September 6th, 2008
Artists have always made statements on environmental issues, and these days more and more are practising what they preach. In abandoned lots and derelict public parks, guerrilla gardeners plant flowers, trees and vegetables.
Paul Harvey Jr. on ABC Radio -- Do You Hate Junk Mail?
by Paul Harvey Jr.
August 25th, 2008
Listen to Paul Harvey Jr.'s report on how ForestEthics reveals an even bigger reason to hate junk mail.
Mine That Data Blog -- Six Questions with William Craven of ForestEthics [blog]
by Kevin Hillstromhttp://minethatdata.blogspot.com/2008/08/six-questions-with-william-craven-of.html
August 20th, 2008
Having spent my entire career in the retail and catalog marketing industry, I wanted to ask Will Craven of ForestEthics a few questions about the Do Not Mail campaign from a catalog marketing perspective. What follows is an unedited transcript of the interview.
Sierra Club Radio -- How does junk mail contribute to global warming?
by Orli Cotel
Will Craven from Forest Ethics on what junk mail has to do with global warming.
Santa Rosa Press Democrat -- What's behind all that junk mail?
August 15th, 2008
Everyone knows junk mail junks up your mail box, but the nonprofit ForestEthics has recently come out with a report on exactly how it is junking up the planet.
San Francisco Chronicle: The Thin Green Line -- Return to sender [blog]
by Cameron Scott
August 8th, 2008
Do you get tired of all the coupons, catalogues, and credit card offers in your mail everyday?
Natural Home Magazine -- Junk Mail’s Toll on the Environment [blog]
by Gina Souders http://www.naturalhomemagazine.com/2008/08-junk-mails-toll-on-the-environment.aspx
August 8th, 2008
More than 100 billion pieces of junk mail floods mailboxes on a yearly basis—that’s more than 900 pieces per household—reporting exclusive offers, urgent messages, nearly impossible promises and must-buy merchandise.
The Star-Ledger -- Study warns of junk mail's secret danger
by Tom Johnson
August 7th, 2008
Here's another reason to hate junk mail: It has a bigger carbon footprint than 11 coal-fired power plants, seven U.S. states or the emissions generated by heating nearly 13 million homes for the winter.
New York Sun -- With Junk Mail Bill Stalled, New Report Details Effects
August 7th, 2008
Meanwhile, an environmental nonprofit organization, ForestEthics, published a report yesterday detailing the detrimental environmental impact of junk mail and a petition signed by about 60,000 people who support a "do not mail" registry.
USAToday.com -- More jeers for junk mail
by Bob Swanson and Doyle Rice
August 6th, 2008
Another reason to hate junk mail: According to a report released today from ForestEthics, this unwanted clutter adds 51 million tons of greenhouse gases each year to the Earth's atmosphere.
Radio Nation with Laura Flanders -- Do Not Mail
July 28th, 2008
Annabelle Gurwitch on a new effort to curb paper junk mail
Good Morning America Radio -- Live a Greener Life
July 23rd, 2008
Annabelle Gurwitch is interviewed by Hilarie Barsky on ABC's Good Morning America Radio
WNYC -- The Secret Power of Junk Mail
July 16th, 2008
Annabelle Gurwitch, spokesperson for the “Do Not Mail Registry” and host of Planet Green’s WA$TED, and Jerry Cerasale, Senior Vice President of government affairs at the Direct Marketing Association, debate the virtues of junk mail.
The Nation -- Dump the Junk
by Annabelle Gurwitch
July 15th, 2008
Unlike our President, I did open the e-mail. I also saw the movies about climate change, watched the television specials, and I read the books.
PRWatch.org -- Fighting Junk Mail via 'Do Not Mail' Lists: Devilish Details and Front Groups
by Anne Landman
May 5th, 2008
A recent blog about the pro-junk mail lobby and its front group Mail Moves America, a coalition of businesses that oppose efforts to create a legislated "Do Not Mail" list to protect citizens from being showered with unwanted junk mail, drew many comments.
Philadelphia Inquirer -- GreenSpace: Farther down the paper trail
by Sandy Bauers
April 8th, 2008
Toilet paper and similar products are hardly our only paper woes. Another insidious paper use — and one that’s annoying instead of useful to boot — is junk mail.
Racine Journal Times -- Toll of junk mail too great for most Americans (op ed)
by Steven Krieger
April 2nd, 2008
The vast majority of American people disagree with the editorial, “No need for laws on junk mail” published on March 30th, 2008. A recent Zogby International poll concluded that 89% of people would support a tool similar to the Do Not Call registry to make it easy to opt out of unsolicited junk mail.
Jacksonville Daily Progress -- ‘Do Not Mail’ quest about junk as well as environment
by Cristin Ross
April 2nd, 2008
Sure they fight the rain and snow and dark of night — but if all the mail carrier delivers is junk mail, some people are saying don’t bother.
The Dunning Letter -- Junk mail industry whining again over Do-Not-Mail state legislation
by Jack Dunning
March 31st, 2008
Instead of stepping forward with ideas on how to help solve the identity crisis issue—which is due in part to the junk mail industry’s handling of names and personal data—the Direct Marketing Association (DMA) and the businesses it regulates are wailing over the fact that states, fifteen of them, have started to enact their own laws.
Akron Beacon Journal -- Campaign targets unwanted catalogs
by Bob Downing
March 26th, 2008
Postal carriers' mailbags might be getting a little lighter, thanks to a group of environmentally aware students. Teacher Jim Duxbury and the Orrville High School earth science club directed an innovative campaign to target unwanted mail-order catalogs.
Globe and Mail -- Pushing the envelope
by Jennifer Wells
March 22nd, 2008
Murray Martin wonders: "Is this a real issue or is this an emotional discussion?"
NWF's love affair with the junk mail industry
by Glenn Hurowitz
March 20th, 2008
Yesterday's Washington Post had a fascinating article by Lyndsey Layton about how the U.S. Postal Service is teaming up with the junk mail lobby to stamp out (heh heh) efforts to create state or national "Do Not Mail" lists that would allow people to opt out of receiving commercial solicitations.
Kings County Advertiser -- A modern curse
by Wendy Elliott
March 19th, 2008
Going to the post office would be more enjoyable -- I like the socializing -- if there was something in our mailbox other than bills. But I always find myself irked by junk mail -- my own and that addressed to deceased family members.
Battle Creek Enquirer -- Campaign seeks to stop unwanted junk mail
March 19th, 2008
June will mark the fifth anniversary of the start of the National Do Not Call Registry. Since that time, millions of Americans have signed up to have their telephone numbers excluded from telemarketing lists.
Washington Post -- Efforts to Block Junk Mail Slowed
by Lyndsey Layton
March 19th, 2008
Chris Pearson, a state legislator in Vermont, had a sense that the people were with him when he proposed a bill last November to allow residents to block junk mail.
KSWT-TV Yuma -- Get Rid Of Junk Mail
March 18th, 2008
There are ways to filter your spam e-mail, but what about all that junk mail you get via snail mail? Besides being annoying, it's also bad for the environment.
Barre Montpelier Times Argus -- It should be easy to stop junk mail
by Paul Burns and Steven Krieger
March 16th, 2008
Each year, the direct mail industry sends Vermonters over 40 million pounds of junk mail or 64 pounds per person, with little regard to whether people actually want to receive their solicitations for credit cards, cable TV and the like.
Page Six -- Leo Joins Junk Mail Crusade
by Philip Recchia
March 14th, 2008
Leonardo DiCaprio can’t stand unsolicited missives showing up in his mailbox.
DMNews -- More pressure for do-not-mail
by Ellen Keohane
March 14th, 2008
The rallying cry for do-not-mail bills in several states grew stronger last week. A do-not-mail campaign to “stop junk mail” launched on March 11 with the support of celebrities including actor Adrian Grenier from HBO's Entourage and Daryl Hannah, known for her roles in Splash and the Kill Bill series.
Daily Kos -- Sign the Do Not Mail List Petition (blog)
by Paul Morel
March 13th, 2008
For me, junk mail is worse than telemarketers. Not only does it eat up my time by forcing me to skeptically open the letters labeled 'Important Legal Documents!', but it also creates mountains of waste every single day.
Pocono Record -- 'Do not mail': curb junk mail
March 13th, 2008
The conservation group ForestEthics is spearheading a campaign to eliminate junk mail. The plan is a great idea for people who are annoyed by batches of circulars and unsolicited product promos regularly stuffed in mailboxes. It could also benefit businesses.
Honolulu Star-Bulletin -- Senders quash junk mail bills, senator says
by June Watanabe
March 13th, 2008
Hawaii is among 18 states where legislation has been introduced to set up a "Do Not Mail" registry, similar to the federal "Do Not Call" registry aimed at telemarketers.
ABC News -- Science and Society: Save The Trees (blog)
by Ned Potter
March 12th, 2008
So you go to your mailbox and open it, and what do you find? Bills? Too many. Catalogs? Won't be able to afford anything in them after I pay the bills. Supermarket circulars? Plenty. Garish envelopes stamped, "Important Information -- Open Immediately!"? You know junk mail when you see it.
Multichannel Merchant -- ForestEthics Takes Aim At Catalog Lists
by Jim Tierney
March 12th, 2008
ForestEthics, the environmental watchdog group known for its creative protest against catalogers, is taking a new tack. The San Francisco-based nonprofit has launched its own Do Not Mail campaign.
TV20 -- Don’t Keep In Touch: Junk Mail
March 12th, 2008
Five years after a national “Do Not Call” registry got people signing up to keep their names out of the hands of telemarketers, environmental groups and eco-celebrities are launching a campaign to create the junk mail equivalent.
Duluth News Tribune -- Fed up with junk mail
by John Myers
March 12th, 2008
Five years after Congress approved the popular Do Not Call List to limit unwanted telephone calls, environmental groups and activists are calling for a national Do Not Mail List to slow the flood of junk mail.
Stockton Record -- Stemming the tide of junk mail
by Joe Goldeen
March 12th, 2008
On average, every household in America receives 848 pieces of junk mail a year. That's more than 100 billion pieces of unsolicited paper using more than 100 million trees.
Los Angeles Times -- Emerald City: Get the 'Do Not Mail' registry started (blog)
by Siel
March 12th, 2008
Love the Do Not Call Registry? Wish you had a similar one for junk mail?
Grist -- Forget-me-please
by Sarah van Schagen
March 11th, 2008
Just about five years after the opening of the Do Not Call Registry, ForestEthics has signed, sealed, and delivered on a campaign for a Do Not Mail Registry, aimed at eliminating that other annoying way marketers try to reach their grubby little hands into our personal lives: junk mail.
KCBS -- SF Group Starts Petition Drive to Opt Out of Junk Mail
by George Harris
March 11th, 2008
A San Francisco-based non-profit is working to create a "Do Not Mail" Registry, similar to the wildly popular "Do Not Call" Registry.
EarthTimes -- ForestEthics Launches 'Do Not Mail' Campaign to Stop Junk Mail
March 11th, 2008
Five years after the national Do Not Call Registry became the most popular consumer rights bill in history, conservation group ForestEthics launched its campaign for a Do Not Mail Registry today to give Americans the choice to stop wasteful, annoying and environmentally destructive junk mail that also fosters identity theft.
Plenty -- Gardening: So Much Botanical Porn
by Susan Brackney
January 16th, 2008
What started as a trickle of plant and seed catalogs is now a full-on deluge. Each season easily brings a couple of pounds' worth of Stark Brothers, Breck's, Burpee, and countless other mailers brimming with crisp close-ups of swollen buds, glossy foliage, and flower heads ablaze in myriad, awe-inspiring hues.
Concord Monitor -- Make it easy to end flood of junk mail
by Steven Krieger
January 11th, 2008
This week, the House Commerce Committee heard testimony on a bill that gives the people of New Hampshire a choice to end unwanted direct mail solicitations. Rep. Susi Nord introduced House Bill 1506 to create a Do Not Mail registry modeled after the wildly popular Do Not Call registry.
Salon -- Stop junk mail for good
by Liz Galst
December 17th, 2007
You'd think that with all the spam floating around the Internet these days, good old-fashioned junk mail, the kind that clogs your home's mailbox and the nation's landfills, might be a thing of the past.

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