Advertisement

Home Search

Green Blog: Elizabeth Baldwin

Green Blog Topic Review - Master Index
A few weeks ago I was asked to give someone information on formaldehyde so they could talk to a customer. I suggested that they send the customer an old blog post. But it was a bit challenging for them to find that post, so I thought it would be good to provide a master index of the topics covered so far. It has the added fun advantage to me of driving my editor, Kim, crazy since she’ll have to link each of these individually to the old posts! 

I’ve grouped them by general topics. Of course many will overlap topics, but this should make it a bit easier to find things.

After this, I’m going to wrap it up for the year. We’ll take a bit of a break while I try to find some more green issues to discuss next year. I wish everyone happy holidays and all the best for 2012. It’s been a tough few years for all of us, and I hope we can become more united next year and work toward the health of the industry as a whole. Thank you all for reading, and all my best.

The Formaldehyde Series:
09/14/10    Alphabet Soup Series, Part 1 of Many: VOC
09/21/10    Formaldehyde, Part 1: The “CARBonization” of America
09/28/10    Formaldehyde, Part 2: Emissions vs. Content
10/05/10    Formaldehyde, Part 3: CARB’s Approach to Formaldehyde in Composite Wood Products
10/12/10    Formaldehyde, Part 4a: The Flooring Industry’s Responsibilities Under CARB (Part 1: Documentation)
10/19/10    Formaldehyde, Part 4b: The Flooring Industry’s Responsibilities Under CARB (Part 2: Emissions)
10/26/10    Formaldehyde, Part 5: LEED and the Air Quality Standard
11/02/10    Formaldehyde, Part 6: Fun Formaldehyde Facts

LEED
08/31/10    LEED and Certified Wood: Let's Acknowledge 'Wood is Good'
11/30/10    Alphabet Soup Series, Part 2: LEED
05/17/11    Let’s Look at LEED, Part 1: Basic Vocab
05/24/11    Let’s Look at LEED, Part 2: Specific Credits for Flooring

Legality Issues, Lacey
03/01/11    Gohowood in Japan
03/08/11    Resources for the Lacey Act and Legality
04/12/11    The Lacey Act: What it Says
04/19/11    Lacey’s Documentary Burden for Importers
04/26/11    Lacey’s Legality Burden
05/03/11    Lacey and Marketing U.S. Woods
11/15/11    Lacey in the U.S., Part 1
11/22/11    Lacey in the U.S., Part 2
11/29/11    The Lacey Act and Gibson Guitar
12/06/11    Lacey's Broad Scope
12/13/11    The Proposed Lacey RELIEF Act

Greenwashing & Green Marketing
01/25/11    Alphabet Soup Series, Part 4: Greenwashing
02/01/11    Greenwashing with Logos
02/08/11    Sins of Greenwashing, Part 1
02/15/11    Sins of Greenwashing, Part 2
02/22/11    Misuse of the FSC Logo
05/10/11    Green as the Default at the NWFA Convention
05/31/11    Language Choices
10/11/11    Alphabet Soup Series, Part 5: CSR

Alphabet Soup Series
09/14/10    Alphabet Soup Series, Part 1 of Many: VOC
11/30/10    Alphabet Soup Series, Part 2: LEED
12/28/10    Alphabet Soup Series, part 3: MSDS
01/25/11    Alphabet Soup Series, Part 4: Greenwashing
10/11/11    Alphabet Soup Series, Part 5: CSR

Tropical Timber Issues
08/17/10    Banning Tropical Timber = Burning Tropical Timber
08/24/10    Ask Your Suppliers for LKS
01/11/11    Carbon Credit Confusion
01/18/11    Options for Funding Certification
11/09/10    Visit to FRIM, Part 1
11/16/10    Visit to FRIM, Part 2 (pictures)

Plantations and Species Information
12/07/10    A Green Grass?
06/21/11    Dead Trees Standing
07/05/11    Plantations Pros and Cons, Part 1: the Cons
07/12/11    Plantations Pros and Cons, Part 2: the Pros
07/19/11    What's Hot in Plantations
07/26/11    Confucius or Confusion? What Acacia is This?
08/02/11    The Lowdown on Cork
06/07/11    What Mother Nature puts in Wood May Not Always Be Good for You, Either
06/14/11    Gifts from Old Ma Nature

Interviews with Organizations on the Ground  
03/15/11     Snakes and the GFTN (GFTN Interview, Part 1)
03/22/11     The GFTN Goes Flat (Temporarily) (GFTN Interview, Part 2)
03/29/11     I Have a Suggestion About the Chicken (GFTN Interview, Part 3)
10/18/11     Sustainable Harvest International (SHI), Part 1 (Almost 3 million trees planted!)
10/25/11    Sustainable Harvest International (SHI), Part 2
11/01/11     Tropical Forest Foundation (TFF), Part 1
11/08/11     Tropical Forest Foundation, Part 2

Industry Associations
09/07/10    Should We Have Green Standards? (Grades vs. Standards)
12/14/10    Association Resources, Part 1: In the Industry
12/21/10    Association Resources, Part 2: Green Building
09/06/11    IWPA & AHEC: An Expanded Focus
10/04/11    Hardwood Federation Fly-In

Malaysian Production
11/09/10    Visit to FRIM, Part 1
11/16/10    Visit to FRIM, Part 2 (pictures)
11/23/10    Malaysian Timber Programs
04/05/11    Malaysian Mission to the U.S.

Chinese Production
09/13/11    China and Being Green
09/20/11    A Strong International Market Helps Green China
09/27/11    Evaluating Production Sources

Miscellaneous
08/10/10    Introduction: The World of 'Green'
01/04/11    Green Install Tips and Tricks
08/09/11    Spacecraft Earth
08/16/11    A Year of Blogging
08/23/11    My Green Summer Reading List
08/30/11    Enjoying the Woods

The Proposed Lacey RELIEF Act
We’ve been discussing Lacey these last few weeks, and I’ll start this post by encouraging you to check some of the previous postings for comments posted by readers.

And we’re not the only ones talking about it—the federal government’s raid on Gibson Guitar last summer kick-started a national discussion on the Lacey Act. Congress, the media, musicians and many people outside the wood industry are all giving Lacey a closer look (or for some, a first look).

Now, in response to the Gibson raid, Rep. Jim Cooper (D-TN) introduced the Retailers and Entertainers Lacey Implementation and Enforcement (RELIEF) Act, in an attempt to eliminate some of the unintended consequences of the 2008 Lacey Act Amendments. The bill currently has 17 co-sponsors (both Democrat and Republican). I would recommend you take some time and read the bill in its entirety–it isn’t that long–so you can see some of the problems Rep. Cooper has identified. There is also an overview of the bill if you would like a shorter summary.

In essence, the bill would reduce penalties for certain first-time offenses, grandfather in plant and plant products produced before the 2008 implementation of Lacey, call for a database of applicable foreign laws to be compiled with which U.S. businesses would be required to comply, and establishes an as-yet undefined certification process. The bill also aims to ensure “no government enforcement of penalties against those who unknowingly violated the Lacey Act.”

This last provision – the concept of an innocent owner—is the one that many in the industry see as the most important. Brent McClendon, executive vice president of the International Wood Products Association spoke passionately on the need for a strengthening of the innocent owner provision. “The fact that an individual or company can perform all the due care in the world, and if found to be in violation of Lacey can still have their goods confiscated without the opportunity to even have their day in court to petition for the return of these goods is not a responsible approach to combating the problem of illegal logging. This law was supposed to go after illegal logging crime syndicates, not innocent Americans.”

Innocent owner protection definitely needs to be considered. After all, having goods seized for an unwitting simple civil violation—without any legal recourse to retrieve the goods—is more than just an inconvenience. For many businesses, the result could be ruinous. The RELIEF Act attempts to strengthen the innocent owner clause of the Lacey Act to restore fairness and improve the effectiveness of the Lacey Act.

A business would still have to prove to a court that it exercised due care (again, innocent owner defenses cannot be used for actual criminal violations). And even with stronger innocent owner protections, a company would still face tremendous costs associated with the legal proceedings (and the not-so-insignificant fact of not having access to the inventory). But, if a business prevails in court, the goods would eventually be returned.

The RELIEF Act will certainly not fix all of the unintended problems of Lacey. It still has a long way to go in defining what this “certification process” would be, and needs to more fully cover the innocent owner concept. There are still many questions—including some I raised over the last few weeks—that would remain unanswered. But as a starting point, it’s a pretty good place to begin the debate.

For more on Lacey in the news, here are a few more links:

Battle Lines Drawn for Amending Lacey Act

Stringing Up Gibson Guitar

Guest Editorial: Gibson CEO Henry Juszkiewicz

NAMM Fights To Amend Lacey Act

Lacey’s Broad Scope
The Lacey Act is not just about guitars, although Gibson’s case has certainly gotten guitar owners concerned. The 2008 Lacey amendment applies to any plant or plant product. We’re not just talking flooring and furniture here.

Lacey covers the burl on a fancy car’s dashboard and the rubber tires on bikes—or for that matter, any machinery with a rubber gasket. There’s instant lemonade (pineapple pulp), maple syrup and chewing gum. We’re looking at clothing containing rayon as well as pet shampoo (pine tar). Books and paper products might be obvious, as well as wine corks, but did you know lipstick contains wood rosin, so that’s also covered by Lacey?

Many Americans might think, “Well that’s good it covers so many items. If they are using illegally logged components then they deserve to be cracked down on!” Yet that very scope means Lacey isn’t even being fully enforced.

Justice and APHIS (the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service) and the other governmental organizations are stretched thin—despite their best efforts, APHIS can’t even process the declarations they receive for the handful of products for which they are currently requiring submissions. Although Lacey requires APHIS to collect declarations for thousands of products, they aren’t doing so at this time. (Ironically, doesn’t that mean imported chewing gum or lipstick could be illegal since Congress requires a Lacey declaration upon entry and the form it isn’t being collected?)

Lacey also has excessive, and unfortunately, really meaningless data requirements for species and genus names. Wood is traded under a commercial or trade name, but is rarely purely a single species of tree. However Lacey says that if you do not know exactly what species are in your product, you are require to list out any possible species that could be in there.

Wood professionals know that a commercially marketed species such as “red oak” can contain dozens of different species. The NHLA (National Hardwood Lumber Association) has traditionally marketed certain species purely under an “spp” definition—Carya spp., for example, is the traditional definition of both the pecans and hickories. But Lacey doesn’t allow Carya spp. as a valid entry, which can make many declarations really rather absurd.

For example, say your leather furniture is made with a mixed U.S. hardwood lumber core. Your mill may use poplar, hickory, red oak, white oak or any number of other species, depending on what’s available at the right price at the right moment. They may buy from brokers specializing in Southern material, or get a shipment from the Appalachian region one week and a Northern state the next. You never know what they will use from week-to week. Consequently, for every single entry you need to list every possible scientific name for every possible species they could use. That could be 100 different species since what is marketed as “red oak” could be a blend of 30-50 different Quercus species.

APHIS has tried to be practical in a few areas. Although it’s not exactly what the letter of the law requires, APHIS has wisely created a special category for HDF and a few other products that are truly impossible to clearly declare—trying to figure out which grain of sawdust came from which species simply isn’t feasible. They even have a category for “driftwood” now. But they don’t accept “spp” for mixed species of the same genus. The idea is that you want to be able to track if the product is Quercus rubra or Quercus alba. But if you’re importing plywood made of meranti, to be truly accurate, you might have to list over 250 different species, which makes it truly meaningless data.

Next week we’ll look at efforts by a coalition seeking to amend Lacey so that it helps prevent illegal logging while not preventing commerce, trade, and the growth of an already struggling economy. The Lacey Act is a vital law that has protected wildlife and the environment for over 100 years. And the 2008 amendments were added with the best of intentions. But there were a lot of unintended consequences and questions raised by those amendments that mean there are ways we can make a good law even better.

CONNECT WITH HF
FEATURED SUPPLIERS