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Editorial April 17, 2008
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Boise wins recognition for recycling
Congress Reports

Jo Bonner
The 2008 American Forest & Paper Association (AF&PA) has awarded Boise, Inc.'s Jackson, Alabama paper mill its Business Leadership Recycling

Award, which recognizes outstanding school, business, and community recycling efforts.

Boise Jackson processes 120,000 tons of recovered papers each year at its own recycling facility. The mill funds in-school recycling programs in Clarke and Washington counties, providing large blue recycling containers that are placed throughout the counties' schools.

Students at each school assist with sorting and placing paper in the collection containers for pick-up by Boise Jackson. While the program was only fully implemented in the fourth quarter of last year, five tons of high-quality sorted white ledger paper have already been collected from local schools.

For more than a decade, Boise Jackson employees have visited local schools as part of a Recycling Road Show that provides students with hands-on demonstrations of paper recycling.

Nearly 4,000 students have seen examples of the many different types of paper that can be recycled, learned how the process works, and even had the opportunity to create their own pulp and make a sheet of recycled paper.

In recognizing Boise Jackson for its extraordinary recycling efforts, AF&PA President and CEO Donna Harman said, "The program that Boise, Inc. has created at its Jackson facility is an outstanding example of the on-going commitment our members have to paper recycling."

"It will take innovative and creative programs such as this one to reach the new 60 percent recovery goal set by the industry for 2012."

I commend Boise Jackson and its employees for their continued leadership in recycling as well as for setting a standard of excellence in helping to improve our environment for future generations.

Trade agreement delayed

At a time when our national economy is struggling with skyrocketing gas prices and a slowing job market, the House Democratic majority chose to indefinitely delay the Colombia Free Trade Agreement (FTA), a bill that would make it easier for American businesses and workers to compete globally.

In an unprecedented move, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sought a rules change to prevent an up-or-down vote on the agreement and stop consideration of the bill.

As established by the Trade Act of 1974, Congress has a maximum of 90 legislative days to vote on a trade agreement once the president sends it to the Congress.

Last week, however, the House majority voted to remove the so-called "fasttrack" requirement, effectively changing the law under which trade agreements are considered.

Since 1991, Congress has allowed Colombian products virtually duty-free access to the U.S. market; however, U.S. products delivered to the Colombian market face stiff tariffs.

During this time, U.S. workers and businesses have paid over $1 billion in tariffs to sell products in the Colombian market while Colombian workers and businesses have paid almost nothing to sell in the U.S.

Currently, only 2.7 percent of American exports to Colombia are duty-free compared to the more than 99 percent of Colombian goods entering the American markets without any tariffs.

Since 1991, Congress has voted to give Colombia and other Andean countries oneway duty-free access to the U.S. market. This problem was created by an act of Congress, and Congress should act to remedy it.

Unfortunately, instead of allowing an up-or-down vote on the bipartisan trade agreement, Speaker Pelosi chose to change the rules and use the FTA as a means to gain leverage for some of her own priorities in this election year.
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