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How Well Do You See Color?September 30, 2008
I receive regular emails from Creativeprose. Today, the editor features a link to an X-Rite site that tests your color perception. How Smart Are Hue? I've always scored low on these tests conducted under perfect lighting conditions. I took the test this morning on my not-recently-calibrated monitor and scored 3. Perfect is 0. I challenge Hammock, Inc.'s art and editorial departments to test their color perception on this. It's fun! What to Do With Old Cell PhonesAugust 27, 2008
![]() If you have a drawer full of old cell phones, here’s a link to the Keep America Beautiful Wipe Out Wireless Waste program. I’ve always donated my old cell phones to organizations that can reuse them or recycle them. Let’s keep them out of the landfills and the waterways. Hammock T Makes It to New MexicoJuly 20, 2008
Although other Hammock employees have traveled to Italy and Israel this summer, we're in New Mexico. Here's a picture of me wearing my Hammock tee in the Petroglyph National Park. Being a nature lover, I saw jack rabbits, road runners and lizards in the park. ![]() ![]() A Company with a Green SpokesgoatJune 20, 2008
While I had first heard of Gruff during the 90s, I had not seen him around the Quad plants whenever I visited. Last spring I learned that Gruff is still around after all these years and is always ready to bleat about recycling. ![]() Barbara: When I’m at Sussex on press checks for MyBusiness magazine, I notice containers for plastic, aluminum, glass and paper. What do you recycle in the corporate offices at Quad? Gruff: Magazines, catalogs, newspapers, direct mail, cardboard, manila folders, Post-it notes, mail cardboard packaging, copier and all other paper and envelopes. Stuff I like to eat. Barbara: What else do you recycle in the corporate offices? Gruff: Toner cartridges from Dell and HP, Styrofoam packing peanuts, CDs, disks and tapes; all kinds of batteries. Stuff that I can’t eat. Barbara: What about recycling in the printing and manufacturing areas? Gruff: Quad recycles 98.5% of all solid waste generated in our plants, including paper, plastic strapping, wood, metal and computers. We divert more than 300,000 tons of material away from landfills annually, except for the paper I eat before it’s recycled. Since I’m getting up in goat years, I now mostly eat just the healthy entrees in the cafeteria. Barbara: Quad runs a 24/7 operation like most printing plants. This must use lots of energy. Gruff: We’ve reduced energy consumption 36% per printed page since the mid-1990s, saving enough energy to power approximately 21,000 single-family homes. Unfortunately, no one has figured out how many goat barns we could power on Quad’s efficiencies. Barbara: As the green corporate spokesgoat for a major company, what advice can you give our readers? Gruff: Long ago, I established these GOLDEN RULES OF RECYCLING for Quad employees: 1. Do not place trash with recyclables. Barbara: Thanks, Gruff, I hope to see you in Sussex soon. I like the button with your logo, Be a Gruff, Recycle Stuff. Don't LitterJune 18, 2008
I recently attended a Metro Beautification and Environment Commission retreat. Here are some of the highlights: Shawn Bible, the Beautification Coordinator for TDOT, was one of our speakers. I learned that TDOT spends over $6 million of taxpayers’ money each year to pick up litter off highways. And the streets are still a mess! There is going to be a revival of the Adopt-A-Highway program in Tennessee. This is a program where a civic group adopts a couple of miles of highway to clean up three or four times a year. I see a great Team Hammock opportunity here. Shawn spoke about how billboards are a multimillion dollar business and won’t go away. If you find them annoying, just live with it. Tennesseans can also apply for grants to beautify highways in the Tennessee Roadscape Program. Edith W. Heller, our state leader for Keep Tennessee Beautiful, spoke about how KTnB.org is the gold standard among states in the Keep America Beautiful program. Every county in Tennessee participated in the Great American Cleanup last year. No other state had every county participate. Over 25% of the citizens of Tennessee were part of a Great American Cleanup group, too. Around 25% of Hammock Inc. employees participated in an event in May. From Ms. Heller's talk, I learned that a group is working to reduce the amount of cigarette litter (butts) in downtown Nashville. The worst litterers are between 18-34 years old. This is a horrible statistic. Luckily, KTnB.org utilizes social media tools to target this group. After the retreat, I’m encouraged that much is being done with school programs to discourage children from becoming litterers. I learned that there are lots of groups who care and who are working to solve the problem. Unfortunately, I hate that my tax dollars are going to clean up someone else’s trash. One of the greatest things I learned was that Tennessee passed a litter law last summer, TCA 39-14-5. Officer Kevin Kennett of the Litter Patrol of the Tennessee Highway Patrol, also spoke to us. The Tennessee litter law is online at www.ktnb.org/educationalresources. Officer Kennett went over a few highlights of this law: 1. Getting caught tossing a cigarette butt up to five pounds of litter is punishable by a $50 fine and 40-hours of community service. 2. Criminal littering is tossing anything from 5-8 pounds on the roadways. The fines are more. 3. Aggravated criminal littering is 10 pounds or more. And the fines are even more. I learned that 30% of the litter on our roadways is deliberate littering. Joe Smoo eats lunch in his car and tosses the McDonald’s bag out the window. Now, 70% of littering comes from trash blowing out of open bed pick ups that over 40% of Tennesseans drive. In Tennessee, “motor vehicle{s}…shall be required to have such materials in an enclosed space or fully covered by a tarpaulin.” Officer Kennett is working with local police officers to make sure that this law is enforced. There is also a law that there must be 4" of clearance in the truck bed. Thus, loose litter must be contained within the back of the truck and covered by a tarp. Quad is Certified by Forest CouncilsThis news comes from the Quad website: (June 17, 2008) Building on its role as a leader in environmentally sound printing practices, Quad/Graphics now has certifications from the world's three leading forest management programs: the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) and the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC). QuadGraphics prints MyBusiness magazine for the National Federation of Independent Business. Brown Printing Is PEFC CertifiedJune 10, 2008
And what does that mean? According to this entry on whattheythink.com, PEFC certification provides an assurance mechanism to purchasers of wood and paper products that they are promoting the sustainable management of forests. Semper Fi and American Spirit, published by Hammock Inc., are printed at Brown Printing. New Postal Addressing Standards for PeriodicalsMay 21, 2008
Above is an illustration from the postal document E8-8621 about the addressing changes for periodicals and other automated flat mail. The new address changes take effect March 29, 2009. I find it somewhat confusing as the address appears to be upside down on the front cover of the magazine. My understanding is that with the equipment recently purchased by the United States Post Office, the address is actually right side up and correct for the equipment. Visually, it's upside down for the reader, not the postman. I contacted Sean Stiewe, our postal service representative at QuadGraphics, and asked him if I had interpreted the rules correctly. Sean replied, "It looks that way as of right now, I am waiting to see how Quad is going to handle this with the post office. I will look further into this for you." Currently, the delivery address is right side up on the front cover. We'll keep you posted on this issue as March 2009 nears. New Postal Ruling Affecting PublishersMay 16, 2008
Here a news item from America Business Media about publisher's letters mailed with periodicals: In addition to the [postal] pricing changes, there is one content rule change affecting the periodicals class: a modification to the "loose enclosures" rule change to permit the enclosure of unbound "publisher's letters" with a periodical. Great American Clean UpMay 15, 2008
Each year between March 1 and May 31, Keep American Beautiful sponsors the Great American Clean Up to encourage community involvement in keeping America Beautiful. According to the kab.org website: In 2007, Great American Cleanup volunteers collected 200 million pounds of litter and debris; planted 4.6 million trees, flowers and bulbs; cleaned 178,000 miles or roads, streets and highways; and diverted more than 70.6 million plastic (PET) bottles and more than 2.2 million scrap tires from the waste stream. This Saturday, May 17, some of us from Hammock Inc. have volunteered to clean up along McCrory Lane and Charlotte Pike in western Davidson County. |
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