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Press releases

Kick off for the Un métro qui
nous est propre
awareness campaign
Montreal, 9 March 2005 -
With Montreal Mayor G�rald Tremblay, Claude Dauphin, chairman of the board
of the Montreal Transport Commission, and Alain Lemaire, president and CEO
of Cascades Inc. in attendance, Andr� Pr�fontaine, president of
Transcontinental Media, and St�phane Gagn�, publisher of the daily newspaper
métro, kicked off the recycling awareness campaign Un métro qui
nous est propre this afternoon. At a press conference in the McGill
metro station, the highlights of this ambitious project were outlined. The
high point will be the installation of some 200 paper recycling bins, each
with a 97-litre capacity, throughout the Montreal subway system.
The Un métro qui nous est propre campaign, which will require an
investment of more than $2.5 million over six years, will receive financial
support from Cascades Inc. More than 400 tonnes of paper a year, or about
eight tonnes a week, will be recycled. Note that the paper on which the
daily métro is printed is composed of approximately 40% recycled
fibres.
“Our main objective is to improve the cleanliness of the metro in a
responsible and sustainable manner,” explained St�phane Gagn�, publisher of
métro. “In addition to protecting the environment, those who use the
recycling bins will be contributing to the literacy organization
Fondation pour l’alphab�tisation. In fact, métro will donate 20%
of its annual revenue from the sale of the recycled paper to that foundation.
This represents over $5,000 for this organization dedicated to eliminating
illiteracy, a problem which of course particularly interests us as publisher
of a free newspaper.”
Andr� Pr�fontaine, president of Transcontinental Media, praised the efforts
of the teams at métro and the Société de transport de Montréal: “Our company
and our partners in this project are acting responsibly and contributing in
a major way to protecting the environment. This is an important step in the
development of the daily métro, which has been a great success with
advertisers and the approximately 517,000 readers it reaches every week.”
Claude Dauphin, chairman of the Montreal Transport Commission, pointed out
that the métro daily newspaper is an added value for the 325,000
people who use the subway system every day. “I am convinced that over the
next few months the communication and awareness campaign will encourage
riders to put their paper into the recycling bins,” he stated. “Reminders
will appear on the bins themselves and in the métro to remind people,
and an awareness crew will be at work in the more crowded stations to
motivate people to recycle.”
Alain Lemaire, president and CEO of Cascades Inc., stated that recycling 400
tonnes of newsprint a year will save some 6,800 trees. He added that “this
project is an important one for Cascades, since it increases our volume of
used paper, the raw material used in manufacturing recycled paper and
cardboard. As well, we believe that the new recycling bins in the metro will
increase the population’s awareness of the importance of recycling.”
Finally, Montreal Mayor G�rald Tremblay praised the initiative and believes
that all the conditions are right to make this campaign a huge success. “I
strongly believe in the slogan of this awareness campaign, Un métro qui
nous est propre. Cleanliness is one of this administration’s priorities,
but the City cannot assume this responsibility alone; it is also incumbent
on our citizens. I’ve said before that if only half our two million
residents picked up one piece of paper off the ground, the city would be
transformed.”
To end the press conference, Robert Lemieux, Recyc-Québec’s president and
general manager, and Sophie Labrecque, president and general manager of the
Fondation pour l’alphab�tisation, joined Mr. Tremblay and Mr. Gagn�
in showcasing two types of recycling bins.
The free daily métro is owned by Publications métropolitaines inc., a
partnership that includes Transcontinental Media Inc., Metro International
S.A. and Gesca Ltd.
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