| |
In partnership with
the Arbor Day Foundation and the
U.S. Mary Kay independent sales
force, Mary Kay Inc. will plant
100,000 trees in 2008 in the Bitterroot
National Forest in Idaho and Montana
under the guidance of the U.S. Forest
Service.
According to the Arbor Day Foundation,
“This effort will have everlasting
impact on our environment. The trees
planted as a result of this program
will change the
quality of life for future generations.
They will clean the air we breathe
and provide habitat for wildlife.
They will also provide economic
benefits.”
For more information about the
Arbor Day Foundation, click here:
www.arborday.org
Top
12 Tree Facts:
Environmental Value
of Trees |
|
| |
|
1. |
Just one shade tree
can intercept up to 4,000 gallons
of rainfall each year and reduce
runoff of polluted storm water.
(Source: USDA Forest Service)
|
| |
2. |
The net cooling effect of a young,
healthy tree is equivalent to ten
room-sized air conditioners operating
20 hours a day. (Source: U.S. Department
of Agriculture)
|
| |
3. |
One acre of trees absorbs six
tons of carbon dioxide and puts
out four tons of oxygen. This is
enough to meet the annual needs
of 18 people. (Source: U.S. Department
of Agriculture)
|
| |
4. |
One large tree
can provide a day’s worth
of oxygen for up to four people.
(Source: Tree Canada Foundation)
|
| |
|
5. |
Nationally, the
60+ million street trees have an
average value of $525 per tree.
(Source: Management Information
Services) |
| |
|
Economic
Value of Trees |
| |
|
6. |
Healthy, mature
trees can add an average of 10 –
15 percent to a property’s
value. (Source: USDA Forest Service)
|
| |
|
7. |
Trees properly
placed around a building can reduce
air conditioning needs by 30% and
save 20-30% in energy used for heating.
(Source: USDA Forest Service) |
| |
|
8. |
Over a 50-year
lifetime, one tree will:
- generate $31,250 worth
of oxygen
- provide $62,000 worth
of air pollution control
- recycle $37,500 worth
of water
- control $31,250 worth
of soil erosion
(Source: Michigan State University
– Update Forestry) |
| |
|
Social
Value of Trees |
| |
|
9. |
Compared with apartment
buildings that had little or no
trees or vegetation, buildings with
high levels of greenery had 52%
fewer total crimes. (Source: Kuo
and Sullivan – Environment
and Behavior, 2001) |
| |
|
10. |
Hospital patients
have been shown to recover from
surgery more quickly and require
less pain medication when their
room had a window that provided
a view of trees. (Source: Researcher,
Roger S. Ulrich) |
| |
|
11. |
Living in a home
surrounded by woods, meadows, or
other natural settings can increase
the attention capacities of children
and generally improve their mental
health. (Source: Cornell University)
|
| |
|
12. |
Social scientists
have found that the more trees and
grass in the common spaces of inner-city
neighborhoods, the more those spaces
are used by residents. (Source:
University of Illinois at Urbanna-Champaign.)
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
Other
Pink Doing GreenSM
programs: |
| |
• |
With the launch of the new Mary
Kay® Compact, Mary Kay Inc. has
created a compact recycling program
for its independent sales force and
their customers to dispose of previously
used and unwanted compacts in an environmentally
responsible way. |
| |
• |
Mary Kay distribution centers
in the U.S. do not use styrofoam
packaging material when shipping
orders. All Mary Kay orders
will soon be shipped using packing
materials made from corn and potato
starch, two environmentally friendly,
renewable resources. |
| |
• |
The U.S. manufacturing facility
sends all returned products containing
alcohol and any alcohol waste products
to a resource recovery facility
which reclaims and distills the
alcohol into fuel-grade ethanol,
which is then used as an oxygenate
for cleaner-burning gasoline. Since
the program began in 2004, Mary Kay
Inc. has recycled between 30 and
50 tons of alcohol each year, reducing
our hazardous waste disposal by
at least 25 percent. |
| |
• |
In 2005 the Dallas
manufacturing facility received
the Blue Thumb Silver Award from
the City of Dallas for its efforts
in helping ensure safe drinking
water for five consecutive years.
|
| |
|
• |
Mary Kay Inc.
President and CEO David Holl is
a member of the board of directors
of The Nature Conservancy of Texas.
Mary Kay Vice Chairman Dick
Bartlett serves as an Honorary Trustee
of The Nature Conservancy of Texas,
a member of the board of the Nature
Conservancy of New Mexico and a
member of the board of The Nature
Conservancy President’s Conservation
Council. The Nature Conservancy
of Texas is the state chapter of
the nonprofit, international conservation
organization. The mission of the
organization is to preserve the
plants, animals and natural communities
that represent the diversity of
life on earth by protecting the
lands and waters they need to survive. |
| |
|
|
 |
Nuturing a
Beautiful Future
In
honor of Mary
Kay Ash and the
Company's 45th
anniversary year,
Mary
Kay Inc. helped
the city of Dallas,
Texas, celebrate
Arbor Day by planting
45 redbud trees
in front of the
Dallas Convention
Center on April
4, 2008. During
a dedication ceremony
with Dallas Mayor
Pro Tem Dr. Elba
Garcia and Mary
Kay Inc. President
and CEO David
Holl, the area
was officially
named "The Mary
Kay Ash Grove."
The
donation of the
Mary Kay Ash Grove,
planted with the
assistance of
Mary Kay Inc.
employees, kicks
off the Company's
Pink Doing GreenSM
initiative to
plant 100,000
trees in 2008
in partnership
with the Arbor
Day Foundation.
|
|
 |
|
|
|