NWPC HomeNWPC Archivebar
 

WASTE PREVENTION FORUM ARCHIVE

bullet   BACK TO ARCHIVE INDEX

  31 Oct 01 - food donations; job; anthrax and direct mail; computers; leasing; EPR; loan fund
        **  WASTE PREVENTION FORUM  **
-- A project of the National Waste Prevention Coalition
--------
Forum archive:  http://www.reuses.com/nwpcarchive

--------------------
From Peter DuBois, Clark County Environmental Services Division, waste
reduction program, Vancouver, WA:

This week at a meeting with Evergreen School District officials (Vancouver,
WA) it was mentioned that food from schools could not be donated due to the
fact that school districts receive federal funding for food.  The federal
funding restricts the giving/donating of food.  Is this true?  Does anyone
have any information on successful school district food donations,
specifically from schools receiving federal funding?  

E-mail:  Pete ( D O T ) Dubois ( A T ) co ( D O T ) clark ( D O T ) wa ( D O T ) us

--------------------
Excerpted from an announcement sent by Julie Rhodes, Reuse Development
Organization (ReDO), Indianapolis, IN: 

The Reuse Development Organization (ReDO), a national non-profit
organization, is seeking a Donations Acquisition Coordinator. This is the
lead person in contacting potential donors for materials (often excess
inventory, obsolete, off-spec or other items destined for disposal) that
will be distributed to non-profits all across the country. We need the
spirit of a salesperson with a big heart for helping people.  

Base salary commensurate with experience, plus bonus program based on
donations secured.  Successful candidate may be an employee or independent
contractor. Full or part-time will be considered. Work out of home office
will be considered. Work anywhere in the country. Benefits not included.  

This person will coordinate and facilitate all aspects of the solicitation
and securing of donated materials (especially building materials but also
furniture, tools and more) through manufacturers, distributors, national and
regional retailers, major contractors and others (such as trucking
companies, insurance companies and others that end up with excess
inventory). Materials should be appropriate for distribution to
organizations serving the material needs of low-to-moderate income people. 

Qualifications include: At least two years experience in the donation
solicitation, sales, marketing or business field. Knowledge of the building
industry and construction materials is ideal. Environmental and/or housing
background is helpful.  Knowledge of basic word processing, spreadsheet and
presentation software is required.

Serious inquiries only.  Send cover letter (describing your interest in this
position and why you believe you will be successful at this job), resume,
salary history, and at least three professional references to:  Donations
Acquisition Coordinator Search, ReDO, P.O. Box 441363, Indianapolis, IN,
46244.

Resumes must be postmarked by: November 16, 2001

E-mail:  info ( AT ) redo ( DOT ) org
	
--------------------
Excerpted from a column by Bob Tedeschi in the 10/29/01 New York Times:   

WITH ANTHRAX SCARE, INTEREST SURGES IN ONLINE BILLING AND E-MAIL MARKETING
As the anthrax scare disrupts mail-handling procedures, companies that
provide e-mail marketing and Internet billing services said last week that
they had seen a surge of interest from prospective clients and from current
customers looking to make even more use of online options.

The Direct Marketing Association, whose members include junk-mail purveyors,
has advised its members to send e-mail alerts to consumers to let them know
when promotional material is about to arrive in their mailboxes. And based
on the upswing in electronic billing, the Yankee Group, a research and
consulting firm in Boston, has made an upward revision to its forecast of
growth for this year.

The big question is whether the new interest in online mailing and billing
options will fade if the anthrax crisis passes or whether a potentially
fundamental technology shift has begun.

Paper mail has hardly disappeared. There has been some scaling back in the
$528 billion direct-mail industry - which is what the junk mailers prefer to
call themselves. "But I don't really blame that on anthrax," said H. Robert
Wientzen, chief executive of the Direct Marketing Association in New York.
"I think it has more to do with the economy, and the increase in postal
costs."

Mr. Wientzen said he did not think the public was afraid of corporate
mailings because so far the anthrax attacks had been carried out with
hand-addressed parcels bearing no return address. Although he acknowledged
the tactic by some direct marketers of sending letters with no return
address in hopes of sparking the recipient's interest, Mr. Wientzen said
these and most other direct-mail items were professionally printed, many
with company markings. He added that the high-speed production and
distribution of direct-mail material made it unlikely that a saboteur could
tamper with individual pieces en route.

Nonetheless, some direct-marketing companies say they have received worried
telephone calls from at least a few customers with anthrax concerns. Lands'
End, a catalog and Internet retailer that sent 269 million catalogs to
customers last year, has had to quell anthrax fears among several customers
a day, a spokeswoman, Beverly Holmes, said.

The primary concern apparently stems from the fact that until the anthrax
outbreaks, catalog printers like R. R. Donnelley & Sons and Quad/Graphics
often used corn starch in the printing. Because many catalogs now in the
mail were printed before the anthrax scare, customers may continue to find
traces of powder in some catalogs. (A recipient of a Lands' End catalog in
Denton, Texas, was being tested for anthrax late last week after finding an
unusually large amount of white powder in a catalog earlier this month, the
company said.)

To allay fears about direct-mail advertising, the Direct Marketing
Association recently sent guidelines to its members, including one to
consider sending e-mail messages to their customers to alert them to
promotions that will be arriving through the United States mail, among other
measures.

Those who conduct e-mail marketing campaigns on behalf of other companies
say they are unsure whether the association's recommendations are behind the
recent increase in business, but they do suspect the recent anthrax anxiety
plays a role. William C. Park, chief executive of Digital Impact, which runs
e-mail marketing campaigns for Dell Computer, Gap and others, said the trend
toward e-mail marketing had already begun before the anthrax mailings, as
companies searched for more cost-effective forms of advertising in a weak
economy.

"But safety concerns around direct mail have led to an acceleration of the
adoption," Mr. Park said. "Customers are more likely now to 'opt in' and
receive e-mail," he said, referring to consumers who take the option of
agreeing to receive promotional e-mailings from companies. "Businesses see
that, and it's just accelerated their desire to switch."

Businesses that deal directly with consumers are reluctant to speak publicly
about changes in their marketing or billing activities, for fear of either
feeding the anthrax paranoia or setting themselves up as targets, analysts
and executives said. And a spokesman for the dominant e-billing provider,
CheckFree, would not comment on recent business activity in the wake of the
anthrax attacks. 

But executives from some other companies that provide e-mail marketing
services, like Responsys and Bigfoot Interactive, said they had had a surge
in business in the last several weeks. These executives also said their
clients had stepped up efforts to obtain the e-mail addresses of their
offline customers. In e-mail industry vernacular, this is known as
"appending," or attaching the e-mail address to the rest of a customer's
data profile.

Complicating such efforts, said David Finkel, chief executive of Brann
Worldwide, a direct-marketing agency in Wilton, Conn., part of Havas
Advertising, is the fact that companies cannot buy e-mail addresses as
easily as other customer data. He says there are only 20 million to 22
million e-mail names available to direct marketers, compared with hundreds
of millions of names and postal addresses. But Mr. Finkel predicted that
more consumers, to avoid paper mail, will be willing to give out their
e-mail addresses. "The real win will be for marketers who'll now have two
ways to reach their customers" - online and through the regular mail - "if
they can present it in a way that shows it's in the customer's best
interest, not the company's." 

Businesses that send bills on behalf of utilities, mortgage companies and
others have also attracted interest in the wake of the anthrax attacks.
Princeton eCom, which helps companies prepare customer bills for the
Internet and accept online payments, has had a 33 percent increase in online
billing volume among existing customers in the last two weeks, a company
spokesman, Tom Healey, said.

One of Princeton eCom's customers is Triton PCS, which operates the SunCom
cellular phone service in the Southeast. Triton began offering online
billing in March, but the biggest surge in customers signing up for it has
come in the last few weeks, a spokeswoman, Melissa Nichols, said. "And we
haven't been marketing it aggressively," she said. "Whether customers are
specifically mentioning anthrax, I don't know. But interest in electronic
billing is definitely on the rise." 

Jason Briggs, a Yankee Group analyst, said enrollment in electronic- billing
services had recently risen enough for him to revise the industry's growth
estimates. Previously, Yankee had projected that 9.1 percent of American
households would use Internet-based billing services in 2002, up from about
7 million in 2001. Now, Mr. Briggs predicted it would be more on the order
of 9.4 percent. "And that's conservative," he said. "That'll amount to a lot
of bills, a lot of consumers and a lot of revenue. The industry will,
unfortunately, benefit from what's going on."

Yet Mr. Briggs cautioned that even though e-billing companies might sign up
significantly more customers in the short term, some consumers would
probably revert to using paper bills if anthrax concerns faded. "When people
feel more secure," he said, "our old habits will start to kick back in
again." The trick for billers will be to provide enough incentives for
customers to keep using the online billing systems once they adopt them.
"One of the biggest issues for billers is how to get people to turn off the
paper," he said. Otherwise, billing companies could end up having to support
the costs of both online and offline payment systems.

"This amounts to a short-term window of opportunity for the e-billing
vendors and the billers themselves," Mr. Briggs said. "Once they get people
online, it's really their game to lose."

--------------------
Link to a 10/15/01 article by Jonathan Skillings on the CNET News website,
about pilot projects for computer recycling and reuse (first seen in Jim
Schrock's "Delete this Newsletter"):

http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1006-200-7508715.html

--------------------
Link to "Leasing: A Step Toward Producer Responsibility," a report by Bette
Fishbein, Lorraine  McGarry, and Patricia Dillon, published in December,
2000, by Inform, a non-profit environmental research organization (first
seen in the Business and the Environment newsletter):

http://www.informinc.org/leasingbook.htm   The report is in Adobe Portable
Document Format (PDF).     

--------------------
Link to various research on Extended Product Responsibility by Inform, the
environmental research organization:

http://www.informinc.org/eprgate.htm

--------------------
From Stephen Long, Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection,
Boston, MA:

The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has posted a
request for responses for the administration of its Recycling Loan Fund
(RLF) at:
http://www.comm-pass.com/Comm-PASS/Scripts/xdoc_view.idc?doc_id=012286&dept_code=EQE&cp_xx=


DEP seeks responses from interested parties ("Respondents") desiring to
manage and administer the RLF. The RLF is a $4.4 million revolving loan fund
aimed at providing credit enhancement to eligible businesses (recycling,
reuse, and source reduction) to enable them to take advantage of the state's
other economic development programs and leverage private sector financing
for business purposes. 

E-mail:  Stephen ( D O T ) Long ( A T ) state ( D O T ) ma ( D O T ) us
						- end -


  The Waste Prevention Forum archive is hosted by Reuses.com.