Commentary By Ron Beasley
I've lost track of how many phone books I get every year but I do know they all face the same fate - they make the short trip from my front door to the recycling bin. I see this as good news:
White Pages May Go Way of Rotary-Dialed Phone
The residential White Pages, those inches-thick tomes of fine-print
telephone listings that may be most useful as doorstops, could stop
landing with a thud on doorsteps across New York later this year.
Verizon, the dominant local phone company in the state, asked regulators on Friday to allow it to
end the annual delivery of millions of White Pages to all of its
customers in New York. The company estimates that it would save nearly
5,000 tons of paper by ending the automatic distribution of the books.
Only about one of every nine households uses the hard-copy listings
anymore, according to Verizon, which cited a 2008 Gallup survey. Most
have switched to looking up numbers online or calling directory
assistance. The phone book for many people, it seems, has gone from
indispensable tool to unavoidable nuisance.
I believe they are still making money on the yellow pages but much if not most of that activity is now online as well I would guess. I don't know how many trees that would save - I suspect phone books are mostly made from recycled phone books, but it would still save energy. This is a good move and a green move.
Does every home have internet access for online searches? What is the cost of directory assistance? I'd hate to further restrict access to public information for certain underprivileged people.
ReplyDeleteWhile I have the same relationship with my phone book as you do, Ron, it seems to me an argument born of privilege. Isn't there a way to do an "opt-in" for phone book delivery? Cutting their print run by 8/9ths should save a significant amount of money and trees, yes?