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Dogwood
Alliance is
kicking off the Fast Food Packaging Campaign in a city near you...
TAKE ACTION: Fast Food Packaging Campaign
Who:
Dogwood Alliance
and You
What:
Fast Food Packaging Campaign: Southern Exposure Media Tour
Where: A City near you—to find a list of planned
events, see below
When:
Thursday, March 27th—Thursday, April 15th, 2008
Why:
Dogwood Alliance
is kicking off the Fast Food Packaging Campaign
Southern
forests are too important to be wasted for fast food packaging
- Dozens of Fast Food
Corporations are buying Packaging from Southern Forests
- 15% of landfill waste is Fast
Food Packaging
- The average American throws
out 300 lbs. of Packaging Waste every year
-
“ In 2004, more
than half of all the paper produced in the United States was used in paper
packaging (AF&PA, “US Paper and Paperboard Production,” 2005).”
Join
Dogwood Alliance in challenging corporations to change their habits. Our
forests are too important to be wasted for disposable packaging. With nearly 100 paper packaging mills in
the South, the packaging decisions of these corporations have a tremendous
impact on our forests.
Louisville, KY:
KFC, 3400 Bardstown Rd in the Highlands, Louisville, KY
When: Monday, March 31st at 11am
Norfolk, VA:
The Ernie Morgan Environmental Action Center, 3500-A Granby St (neart Lafayett Zoo)
When: Tuesday , April 1st 2008 6-7pm
Wilmington, NC
Caper Fear River Watch, 617 Surry St, Wilmington, NC
When: Thursday, April 3rd 6-7pm
Asheville, NC:
McDonalds, 755 Merrimon Ave
Asheville, NC
When: Thursday, April 3rd, 2008
Atlanta, GA:
The Big Chicken in Marietta;
12 Cobb Pkwy N, Marietta, GA 30062
When: Monday, April 14th 11am
Charlotte, NC:
Taco Bell, 5518 South Blvd, Charlotte,
NC
When: Tuesday, April 15th, 11am
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"Over half of the forests that are cut down in the US are for Packaging."
Please provide peer-reviewed docomentation of the above.
When you say forests are "cut down" I assume you mean clear cut. As a forester in south MS, I can only address my geographic area. This statement is untrue in this area. People do not cut down (clear cut) forests to produce pulpwood for paper. Pulpwood is a by-product of the forest management process that enables landowners to produce higher value products such as Chip-N-Saw, sawtimber, poles, and other products. These forests, by the way, are owned primarily by private landowners, not the forest industry.
We do cut a lot of pulpwood in the South, but it is mainly through thinnings that focus on removing smaller and poorer quality trees, thus leaving better-quality trees as our crop trees. The trees left are the really high value trees, and grow more rapidly after the thinning.
Let's please deal in statements that can be supported by the facts.
I do believe it is important to reduce consumption of paper, energy, and other resources, so I do not take issue with this concept.
Want to *really* learn how forests are managed? Come to our Field Day on Friday March 28, in Sumrall, MS. Details are posted in an earlier blog.
Glenn Hughes.