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Opt out of junk mail

[3 Comment(s)]

By Rachael Lundy

A similar campaign to the Do Not Call Registry is soon developing plans, which gives consumers the preference to opt out of junk mail. These individuals would like the choice to not be bombarded with junk mail, just as they have the choice to not be called by telemarketers at all hours of the day. As a result of these nuisances, the Do Not Mail campaign has launched itself as the representative for these proactive consumers.

“American mailboxes are inundated with junk mail,” states www.donotmail.org. “More than 100,000,000,000 pieces of junk mail are delivered each year – that’s more than 800 pieces per household. In fact, junk mail in the United States accounts for one-third of all the mail delivered in the world.”

Receiving junk mail can be a nuisance, but people’s livelihoods depend on delivering this type of post. It takes the efforts of several million employees to pack and deliver junk mail; however, if the efforts of the Do Not Mail campaign take effect, it has the potential to affect the employment of many.

According to Newsmax magazine, “Proponents of direct mail say that 3.5 million Americans directly or indirectly owe their jobs to direct mail advertising.”

Not only are these jobs going to be impinged upon, but the U.S. Postal Service is also going to feel the hit when they are no longer receiving postage payments for these type mail-outs.

The Direct Marketing Association (DMA) has researched the potential effects this campaign may have on the “junk mail” sector of the economy, and further expresses its concern for instituting this Do Not Mail campaign. “Advertising mail annually generates about $686 billion in sales revenue,” states the DMA.

As in every situation there are pros and cons when instituting certain policies.

The U.S. Forest Service estimates that 100 million trees are used each year in order to generate this junk mail – junk mail that is left unread and lining landfills.

In the event this campaign’s goals take effect, the environment could strongly benefit from the reduction in paper wastes, and in return, this campaign against junk mail could save U.S. forests and reduce pollution caused by the energy used in creating this unwanted mail.

For more information regarding the Do Not Mail campaign, visit www.donotmail.org.

Originally Published: Issue 694 - July 23, 2008

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Comments

  1. Great article, Ms. Lundy.

    30 percent of all the mail delivered in the world is US junk mail. Something\’s seriously out of whack if we\’re receiving a third of the world\’s mail when we don\’t want it and never asked for it.

    With deforestation accounting for 20% of global carbon emissions (more than all planes, trains, and automobiles combined), it\’s clear that waste like junk mail is an outdated 20th century practice that will not help us meet the challenges of the 21st.

    Go LSU! Sign the petition at donotmail.org

    WKC | 2008-07-24 - 03:31:02 PM (CDT)
  2. 30 percent of the Post Office revenues come from advertising mail -- and a lot of people respond, otherwise no one would waste the money and effort to make such mailings. Also, trees are a crop so diminishing the paper industry would again have the effect of putting people out of jobs, not leaving forests standing to produce oxygen.

    cjw | 2008-07-26 - 01:28:31 PM (CDT)
  3. The main problem with DMA’s thought process is THEY have control over what mail we receive, NOT the consumer. And the DMA’s mail preference service is all but ineffective. It ONLY applies to those businesses that belong to the DMA.

    I find it offensive that junk mailers continue to send us stuff we never asked for, and they think that’s fine. Just like the Do Not Call list, I’m pushing for a Do Not Mail list so the consumer has control, not some business we never consented to mail us their junk!

    Doug | 2008-08-23 - 09:40:52 PM (CDT)
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