Oct
08
Filed Under (bcp blog, conservation) by 1-LUV on 08-10-2007

Junk Mail Tank by Burtonwood and Holmes
Photo: Junk Mail Tank by Burtonwood and Holmes

Forty-one pounds…that’s the staggering weight of the 560 or so pieces of junk mail each adult American receives per year. Almost half of it remains completely unopened and unread before heading straight to the landfill. Sadly, recycling junk mail is especially difficult due to the high concentrations of heavy metals used in the inks. Year after year, boreal forests get wantonly turned into garbage as more than 100 million trees and 28 billion gallons of water are wasted in the production of junk mail. This whole frustrating process is perpetuated by everyone, from the USPS to credit reporting companies like Equifax and Experian, selling your name for three to twenty cents a pop to anyone in the market to buy it.

Fortunately for us all, there are ways to triumph over the junk mail debacle. Eco Cycle and StopJunkMail.org have compiled the key steps to ending the junk mail trail yourself. They give you all the details on who to call, what online forms to fill out, and who to give the “Return to Sender” treatment. Or, if you are willing to pay a fee, you can get someone else to do most of the legwork for you. Yay.

41pounds.org

41pounds.org

Frustrated with their own junk mail woes, three brothers from Michigan figured out how to trump the junk mail system and began to share the service with friends. Only one year later, 41pounds.org is 5,000 members strong and growing rapidly.
Cost
: $41/5 years
Benefit
: 41pounds.org gets your name “off the list” and keeps it off for five years. Anytime you find yourself besieged by a new set of junk mailers, you just email 41pounds.org and they take care of it for you. A third of the fee goes to an environmental or social cause of your choice.

Green Dimes

GreenDimes.com

Started by entrepreneur Pankaj Shah, GreenDimes is a for-profit company with a mission to make millions of households in America (as well as Canada and the UK) junk mail free. Cost: $20 for 1 year
Benefit
: GreenDimes helps you reduce 70-95% your junk mail for 1 year. For every Junk Mail Reduction Kit purchase, they plant ten trees on your behalf.

Stopthejunkmail.com

StopTheJunkMail.com

Stopthejunkmail.com, based in Boulder, CO, has an extremely easy-to-use online tool which allows both individuals and businesses to get off the list.
Cost: $19.95/individuals & $24.95-84.95/businesses
Benefit: Stopthejunkmail.com promises to do absolutely every step for you, no postcards to send and no forms to sign. This service allows you to choose exactly which catalogs and mailers you’d like to stop receiving. One tree is planted by American Forests with each subscription, and if you move households, Stopthejunkmail.com will give you a discount on your new address.

Luckily there are many options to end the senseless cycle of junk mail. And with incredible organizations like these looking out for you, letting go of forty-one pounds has never been so easy.

And if you love the idea of ending junk mail madness on a larger scale, you can join Forest Ethics and their Catalog Cutdown campaign.

Need a little extra incentive to sign up? Watch Johnny Hal attempt to conquer junk mail on his own.

Check Out Johnny Hal’s Web Series: Off the List

Posted by Jenn Breckenridge on Low Impact Living



Comments:
5 Comments posted on "Trees Over Trash: Ending the Junk Mail Paper Trail"
Sanjiv Parikh on October 8th, 2007 at 5:25 pm #

Hey, thanks for writing about GreenDimes, we really appreciate it. I noticed that you have our old price listed and wanted to make sure you know that our Junk Mail Reduction Kit now costs $15, one time only. Take good care and thanks again for your post.


1-LUV on January 11th, 2008 at 4:26 pm #

I did it today and I feel grrrrreat!


1-LUV on January 11th, 2008 at 4:27 pm #

Sanjiv from Green Dimes told me to correct the price I listed, but his website still charges $20, so I left it.


emily on January 22nd, 2009 at 7:47 am #

Hey this is pretty amazing……I am doing a project on things to do with recelying junk mail and this is really cool…=]


Massive design FAIL « The Aesthetic Elevator on July 17th, 2009 at 10:08 am #

[...] How many Serfco bills ended up in Burtonwood and Holmes’ Junk Mail Tank? [...]


Post a comment
Name: 
Email: 
URL: 
Comments: