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Buried in unwanted phone books?

by Columbine in Environment and Open Space - Posted on January 23, 2009 at 9:43 pm

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Aldermen Gewirtz and Desmond, and simultaneously Aldermen White and Sullivan, have introduced measures to stem the flow of unwanted phone books (text below the cut). If you have an opinion about unwanted phone books, the My Somerville page is a good way to find out who your aldermen are and let them know.

Order

By Ald. Gewirtz and Desmond, That City Solicitor draft an ordinance to curtail mass phone book distribution in the interest of the environment and the convenience of residents, and provide an advisory opinion about how to do this so that phone books are available upon request but are not littered on doorsteps of those who do not want them.

Order

By Ald. White and Sullivan, That a representative of the City Solicitor appear before this Board’s Committee on Legislative Matters to address regulating the non-mail distribution of advertising brochures and phone books.

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6 Responses to “Buried in unwanted phone books?”

  1. These orders are from yesterday’s (Jan 22nd) Board of Aldermen meeting agenda (pdf).

    I find the Gewirtz/Desmond order confusing. First, aren’t the aldermen the legislators, so why would they ask the solicitor to draft legislation? Second, “to curtail mass phone book distribution” is completely vague. The White/Sullivan order is easier to understand. Unfortunately, neither order specifies a time-frame for action.

    It would make a ton of sense for phonebooks to be optional.

    I wonder how the aldermen came up with these ideas simultaneously and why in two pairs? Is this some coordinated strategy or just coincidence?

    Read more opinions about this on the Davis Square Live Journal thread Phone books = do not want

    Note, this article was cross-posted on Davis Square Live Journal under To take arms against a sea of phone books.

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  2. James Kebinger says:

    I just asked my Alderman to look into this. I think any approach should be opt-out rather than opt-in to protect people who really need a phonebook. Obviously without financial consequences, there will be no reason for the publishers of the phone books to care about any lists.

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  3. Columbine says:

    I suppose opt-out would be better than nothing, if it worked. But since most buildings in Somerville contain multiple dwellings, opting out would be an exercise in futility. My 3 would just be considered spares for a different resident, much like those damned newsprint circulars that seem to make up half of the mail carrier’s load these days.

    However, in terms of financial consequences, the phone book companies could definitely save money by not printing and distributing multiple phone books to every resident. Printing costs, and it can’t be cheap to deliver stacks of heavy books.

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  4. People around the country are grappling with this issue. Here’s a Jan 6 ‘09 article on the topic Minnesota (USA) Politician Introduces Bill to Make Phone Books Optional. Personally, I think phonebooks should be opt-in. People should be able to sign up for annual phonebooks or request them on an ad-hoc basis. The phone companies could send annual reminder post cards or letters to remind people about the service and offer a customer service phone number that people can use to subscribe. The amount of trash and nerves this would save would be huge!

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  5. AJ says:

    Here’s a link to where you can opt-out of receiving a paper phone book.

    http://www.yellowpagesgoesgreen.org/stop-yellow-pages/

    After opting-out, a great online directory to use is:

    http://www.WhitePages.com

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  6. Mary says:

    Oh, please, make them stop!! I put them right into the recycling bucket. And of course I have about 6 because for some reason they think my two family house has half a dozen units….sigh.

    What a waste.

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