Can't see this email?
Click here to view it online.
Donate Now Send to a Friend
Economic action for a just and sustainable planet

Dear Co-op America Member,

A huge thank-you to all of our members and others who donated to Co-op America through the Motley Fool's recent "Foolanthropy" program, an end-of-year giving program designed to highlight charities and non-profits pursuing progressive and innovative strategies for social change.

Because of your generous giving, Co-op America emerged as the top recipient of this year's campaign, qualifying us for an additional bonus donation from the Motley Fool.

We'll be turning these much appreciated resources into even more powerful economic action throughout 2007 on programs like our anti-sweatshop programs, our green living resources, our Magazine PAPER Project, and much more (like our Green Festivals, Climate Action work, and ResponsibleShopper.org).  And we'll be working with the folks at Motley Fool to carry more stories about green business and social investing at this popular site that educates people on how to do their own investing.

Thanks so much for all your help and support. 
Alisa (signature)
Alisa Gravitz
Executive Director
Co-op America

Action

Action: Ask More Magazines to Print on Recycled Paper

Use Co-op America's resources to tell publishers you want them to help stop deforestation.  Our WoodWise Web site gives you sample templates of effective letters to magazine publishers, or write your own letter, reminding publishers that forest loss is a slow death sentence for the many species that depend on them – including humans. 

There's no reason to cut down forests for short-term uses like magazines.  Nearly all of the 12 billion magazines printed in the US are thrown away every year.  Less than 5 percent of the paper they are printed on is recycled.  You can change that – urge the magazines you read to print on recycled paper. 

Tell them you'd like to see their magazine join our eco-paper magazine network, along with titles like the following, who are recent joiners:

  • Nick Magazine, Nickelodeon's magazine for kids, which has been using recycled for more than a year now,
  • Transitions Abroad, which printed its November/December 2006 "Responsible Travel" issue on recycled paper, with help from our WoodWise program director, Frank Locantore.  (They liked it so much they're switching for future publications!), and
  • Verdant Magazine, a new magazine about green living, launching in 2007.

(Of course, please rest assured that all of Co-op America's publications are printed on eco-friendly paper, processed-chlorine-free, with the highest post-consumer waste percentages possible.)

News

News: House Votes to Raise Wages in the Marianas

As part of their "first 100 hours" of legislation, the new Democratic House of Representatives took action on a longstanding sweatshop loophole affecting thousands of workers in the US territory of the Northern Mariana Islands. 

As called for by a Co-op America editorial last summer, the House legislated higher wages on the Marianas by including them in the minimum wage increase that passed on January 10.  For more than a decade, efforts to apply minimum-wage and other labor laws in the Marianas were impeded by now-convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff and his congressional allies, though garments manufactured there were represented to the public as "made in the USA." 

A similar bill is scheduled for Senate hearings in February, and if passed, the measure will then need the president's signature to become law. Such a law would cap nine years of effort by Co-op America's publications director Dennis Greenia, who began investigating the connections between the Marianas and Abramoff while working on Co-op America's Guide to Ending Sweatshops in 1998.  His research helped reporters, authors, and investigators break the Abramoff story and hold him accountable for his actions. 

To learn more about the Marianas and the recent House action, visit Co-op America's Sweatshops.org.


Resources

Resources: Real Money Gives You Tips for Green Decorating

If you’re looking for ways to beautify your home while treading lightly on the Earth, look no further than the latest issue of Real Money, our green living newsletter.

With tips on how to find low- or no-VOC paint, eco-friendly flooring, sustainably harvested wood furniture, and other green decorating supplies, our latest featured article brings you valuable resources for green home improvement, and points you toward companies in our National Green Pages™  that can make your decorating dreams reality.

Our article also tells you which indoor plants are most effective at removing toxins from the air, and brings you advice from expert members of Co-op America’s Green Business Network™ on low-cost decorating techniques to rejuvenate your space. 

(Not receiving Real Money at home?  Join Co-op America today for only $20, and don’t miss our next complete issue by mail.)



January 30, 2007
In This Issue:
Action
· Ask More Magazines to Print on Recycled Paper

News
· House Votes to Raise Wages in the Marianas

Resources
· Real Money Gives You Tips for Green Decorating


Take Climate Action with
Co-op America in 2007.



Find special offers for sustainable giving this Valentine's Day

Not yet a supporting member? 
Supporting members receive our complete Real Money newsletter, filled with great green living tips, in their mailboxes six times a year.  Our next issue tells you about water use and rain barrels, carbon offsets for travel, and socially responsible investing.  Join today.


Already a supporting member? 
Give gift memberships to your friends and family, so they can receive our Real Money articles in their mailbox all year long.  Five memberships are only $40!  Give a gift membership today


(advertisement)

"I care about you and I care about the earth too."  Send sustainably grown flowers to your Valentine this year.  10% will be donated to Co-op America.

Co-op America - 1612 K Street NW Suite 600, Washington DC 20006
www.coopamerica.org - 1-800-58-GREEN