upper waypoint

Do Phone Books Have a Future in Berkeley?

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Next week Berkeley will become the next Bay Area city to consider regulating the delivery of phone books. The SF Chronicle outlines the plan:

Berkeley's City Council is set next Tuesday to push for an anti-phone-book measure like the one adopted by Seattle, in which phone book companies are fined $125 per book for delivering to residents who don't want one...

The Berkeley measure would urge the Alameda County recycling agency to adopt a model like Seattle's. In Seattle, residents can stop phone book delivery - as well as catalogs and junk mail - by registering at a website run by a Berkeley nonprofit called CatalogChoice.org.

San Francisco launched a crackdown on phone books earlier this year and NPR's Richard Gonzalez filed this story. The Chron descirbes SF's rule this way:

Signed by Mayor Ed Lee in May, the ordinance requires phone book companies to deliver only to residents who opt in. The ordinance does not go into effect for a year. The phone book industry has filed a suit to block it.

In fact the phone book industry is busy in the courts, their suit against Seattle is now with a US appeals court.

So are you ready to give up your phone book?

I was earlier this week... our apartment building got its annual delivery and we all played shuffle the phone book to each others' doorsteps. Somehow our household ended up with three at the end of the day. And phone books are far less tasty than the proverbial sneaky zucchini drop.

Sponsored

lower waypoint
next waypoint
Impact of California Fast Food Worker Wage Increase Still Too Early to GaugeMap: What You Need to Earn to Afford a Median-Priced Home in Your County in CaliforniaBerkeley Passes Legal Protections for Polyamory, Joining OaklandNewsom Eyes Cuts to California’s $500M Anti-Foreclosure Fund for RentersEarly Bay Area Heat Wave Brings Hottest Temperatures of the Year So FarNeighbors to Rally in Support of Black SF Man Who Received Racist ThreatsBerkeley Schools Chief Rejects Allegations of 'Pervasive' Antisemitism in Capitol Hill TestimonyUC Berkeley Opens Civil Rights Investigation Into Confrontation at Dean’s HomeInside Sutro Baths, San Francisco's Once Grand Bathing PalaceIs Hollywood’s New ‘Magical, Colorblind Past’ a Good Thing?