Phone Books Heading Right for Recycling/Landfill? (UPDATED)
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It is nearly 2008, does anyone still use the phone book?
Last month I received two bags of new phone books at my old address. And so our big phone book doesn’t get lonely in the plastic bag it now has a little companion.
Then the other day a ton of new phone books were delivered to our loft building. They delivered, you guessed it, more phone books than we have units in the building. Many residents don’t even have a land line — most of us just use our cell.
This past weekend I was with a friend dropping off recycling in Soulard and a woman asked us if we knew where a phone book recycling place was — she had the new books in bag ready for recycling.
What a waste.
In my old place I have a stack of books from the last several years awaiting recycling. The phone book recycling spots, when you can find one, usually states they don’t take the current year. I see a lot of resources being expenses for something most of us don’t want. Like junk mail and the free newspaper, this is litter in my estimation. Litter that I’m now responsible to deal with. Next year this thing needs to be something people can request, not something forced upon us. Recycling locations here.
UPDATE 12/4/2007 @ 8:30am:
I admit it, I fell for it. The recycling link above is for Yellowbook — not AT&T’s Yellow Pages. How many companies get to use that same symbol of fingers thumbing through a book? The phone books being passed out now are from AT&T.
This past April you may recall the excitement about not losing the Yellow Pages HQ to another city, such as Atlanta. Yes, AT&T’s Yellow Pages division is based right here in St. Louis with 655 downtown jobs.
So, wanting to be correct about it, I decided to use yellowpages.com to find a recycling center to get rid of these just delivered books. You will love this, the city in which the division is based doesn’t have a recycling partner!!!
Amazing, you can’t recycle the phone book in the town where the phone book company is based! I can think of one good place to dump all these phone books — the big open (and mostly wasted) plaza in front of AT&T’s main building downtown. They dump these things in our yards all the time. My condo association now has a big stack of these things that we will have to collectively pay to remove.
People will just pitch them, adding to our municipal disposal costs and filling up shrinking landfill space. AT&T needs to understand that we don’t really care how much advertising they sold and what sort of promises they made to these advertisers. Make deals with grocery stores to leave stacks in their lobby’s or some place where those who want a new phone book can pick one up.