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			| Kevy Baby | 02-04-2011 10:18 AM |  
 Yellow Pages Opt Out
 I have previously posted about the DMA Do Not Mail  registry where you can put yourself on a national Do Not Mail list. Since they have been getting more aggressive about it, I also wanted to share the Yellow Pages Opt Out site, where you can sign up to not  get the printed version of the Yellow Pages delivered to you:
http://www.yellowpagesoptout.com/ 
At the same time, I will also copy a segment about paper usage to dispel some misinformation about paper (from the Choose Print  web site): 
	Quote: 
	
		| Print Values Trees
 Most paper now comes from sustainable forests. These forests are  essentially “tree farms,” where trees are grown as a crop, just like  broccoli or wheat. When these trees are harvested, new stocks are  planted. Print on paper gives landowners a financial incentive to renew  forests rather than convert them for other uses, such as agriculture or  development.
 
 Print Uses “Waste”
 One-third of the fiber used to make paper comes from wood chips and sawmill scraps; another third comes from recycled paper.  Overall, in the United States nearly 80 percent of the almost 400 paper  mills use recovered fiber to make some or all of their paper products,  and of these, approximately 200 mills use recovered paper exclusively.
 
 Print is Recycled
 But that is not the complete story. Print on paper is recycled and  reused. In 2009, for example, 63.4 percent of all paper used in the  United States was recycled, and this number increases each year with  more deliberate curbside and drop-off collection systems. Recycled paper is used to make everything from construction products to consumer goods.
 
 Print is Responsible
 Just 11% of the world’s forests are used for paper, and in the U.S.  the wood used to produce paper all comes from certified forests.  The Forest Steward Council (FSC) and Sustainable Forest Initiative  (SFI) track fiber content from certified lands through production and  manufacturing to the end product. There are certified forests in over 80  countries.
 From sustainable forests to the renewable nature of trees and the  recyclability of paper, the print and paper industries have a positive  environmental story to tell—one in which print on paper and healthy  forests thrive hand-in-hand.
 
 |  Okay, I will step off my soapbox now. |