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Businesses United States News

If You Bought a Real Christmas Tree, You Paid 15 Cents To the Christmas Tree Promotion Board (buzzfeednews.com) 109

An anonymous reader shares a report: Christmas season is in full swing, and if the newly-formed Christmas Tree Promotion Board is doing its job right, you'll want to buy a real tree. You'll crave the sweet aroma of sap and the soft lustre of real pine needles. You'll accept nothing less. The board is a government-backed marketing program that's devoted to protecting Christmas tree farmers against the threat posed by artificial trees, the industry's arch nemesis. The uber-seasonal industry group, based in Colorado, is focused on "increasing the value and demand for cut Christmas trees." And it has a state-mandated source of funding: by law, growers must pay $0.15 from every Christmas tree sold to the organization.

Some might describe the work of the quasi-government entity as Christmas tree propaganda, but Tim O'Connor, its executive director, doesn't see it that way. "Propaganda is often fiction. We have no fiction, just facts and the story of the Christmas tree," he said. The facts, as he likes to point out when given the chance: the Christmas tree industry's impact on local economies, and traditions surrounding the holiday plant. Among other things, the board aims to maintain profitability for the country's Christmas tree farmers, who a decade a ago confronted a serious oversupply problem as too many real trees were harvested and fake trees became more popular. Prices plummeted.

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If You Bought a Real Christmas Tree, You Paid 15 Cents To the Christmas Tree Promotion Board

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  • by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 ) on Wednesday December 25, 2019 @09:09AM (#59555862)

    I don't buy them, I plant several each year instead.

  • by jarkus4 ( 1627895 ) on Wednesday December 25, 2019 @09:23AM (#59555892)

    I know there are lots of mandatory organizations that are supposed to guarantee quality of key services (architects, lawyers, etc). There are also those copyright collectives that are used to simplify relations with myriad of small producers. Still this is first time I have heard of mandatory marketing.

    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      Do a search for "USDA Promotion Boards". They exist for all kinds of products like blueberries, raspberries, peanuts, watermelons, milk, cattle, eggs, and avocados.

  • by darthsilun ( 3993753 ) on Wednesday December 25, 2019 @09:44AM (#59555936)
    Required by law? srsly?

    https://www.christmastreepromo... [christmast...nboard.org]

    Glad I have an artificial tree
    • Even better than monthly subscriptions, "required by law" - the holy grail of business strategy.

    • Required by law? srsly? https://www.christmastreepromo... [christmast...nboard.org] Glad I have an artificial tree

      I always go to the mountain and cut my own. The US Forest Service requires me to buy a $10 tree permit, but all of the money goes to forest management, not to a promotion board.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • In my community we go to the farm and pay the guy cash, the pines are just grown on the side. He doesn't pay sales tax or fees.

        I think the article is talking about pine trees you pick up at Walmart or Home Depot or at large commercial tree farms.

      • Nah, check the article, you're conflating "state-mandated" with local/state level. This is actually under the USDA, so it's federal. "state" in the broad sense not the narrow sense.

        You can also check the figures, they made $1.8 million in the year the article came out. Divide by 0.15 and you get that they're collecting the rates on about 12 million trees a year, which is definitely national level.

    • by dissy ( 172727 )

      Required by law? srsly?

      Everyone knows the bestest way to help out tree farmers and make them more successful, is to take a fixed dollar amount out of their profits for each tree sold!

      It may just be me, but I've never heard of this promotional group before this story, nor seen the results of their work. Some mighty fine value in exchange for that money I'd sarcastically say.

  • by diesel66 ( 254283 )

    True to buzzfeed form, the author eventually brings the article around to why President Trump's immigration policies are naughty. Talk about propaganda.

    • True to buzzfeed form, the author eventually brings the article around to why President Trump's immigration policies are naughty.

      As anyone who interacts with family around the holidays knows all-too-well, the holiday season is when, after a few drinks, your crazy uncle/father/grandpa/etc. suddenly becomes an armchair political pundit.

      You think it's bad this holiday season, wait until 2020.

  • by kenh ( 9056 )

    The horror of growers (not buyers)paying a self-imposes fee for their collective benefit!

    Also, the self-imposed fee only applies to the US, Christmas is an international celebration, and Slashdot has an international audience - readers in Germany, for example, did not likely pay 15Â yo 'Big Christmas Tree'.

    • 15 cents to the Marketing association.
      $30 to the seller.
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      self-imposed fee

      Its not self-imposed its a Government-Imposed Checkoff Program [wikipedia.org]

      This indubitably will benefit larger growers in the long run, but smaller growers might not benefit much so may want nothing to do with it; a $0.15 cost for tree would not be worth a $0.16 per tree's worth on average increase in sales; gain an extra penny per tree X 10000 trees, basically pay the government $1500 extra up front, borrow that money from the bank at some interest, to eventually come out ahead MAYBE $100 if th

  • Except when those expenses are things like mandatory wages, mandatory benefits, mandatory "CO2 reduction" activities, etc. Got it. Interesting logic, there!
  • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Wednesday December 25, 2019 @10:24AM (#59556016) Homepage Journal

    When can we expect similar 'explosive' stories on the following?

    Buy beef? You likely paid $1 to "Big Beef"...

    Buy Mushrooms? You likely paid $0.0055 per pound to "Big Mushroom'...

    Buy a mango? You likely contributed to "Big Mango"...

    Did you buy Honey? Watermelon? Popcorn? You likely contributed to "big honey," "big watermelon," or "big popcorn." (Respectively)

    Other corners of agriculture have similar marketing organizations: ranchers are required to pay $1 per head of cattle sold to the Cattlemen's Beef Board, mushroom growers pay $0.0055 per pound to the Mushroom Council, mango importers pay $0.0075 to the National Mango Board. There are groups for honey, watermelon, and popcorn too. Any industry can propose a program that requires all producers to pay fees to promote the commodity, and the USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service will consider it "if the proposal has substantial industry support."

  • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Wednesday December 25, 2019 @10:34AM (#59556038) Homepage Journal

    As it promotes cut trees to consumers, one activity the board is expressly prohibited from is lobbying politicians. That is the job of an industry group called the National Christmas Tree Association (not to be confused with the American Christmas Tree Association, which was founded by an artificial tree wholesaler). O'Connor also happens to be the Executive Director there.

    O'Connor said any funding the association receives from the board must have a designated use that does not include lobbying. To influence policy, the association contracts lobbyist Craig Regelbrugge, senior vice president of AmericanHort.

    Among the association's main concerns is labor policy, which faces changes under the Trump presidency. "Ours is an industry substantially reliant on foreign-born labor," Regelbrugge wrote in a post on the association's website.

    The article conflates the board and association, two separate organizations with distinct agendas, only one of which includes lobbying politicians, the other is legally prohibited from lobbying politicians.

  • Do we really need to KILL such a large oxygen-producing carbondioxide-reducing plant to have a good time.
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Kill?

      When I was a kid, my folks would buy a live tree for Christmas. We'd set it up and keep it well watered. After Christmas, they'd take it out into the back yard (we had a huge lot) and plant it. Those trees are now at least 75 feet tall.

    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      They outnumber us about 10-100 to 1.

      There are more trees on Earth than stars in the galaxy.

      "a September 2015 paper published in the scientific journal Nature titled âoeMapping Tree Density at a Global Scale,â which provided an estimate for the number of trees on Earth of 3.04 trillion"

      P.S. there's more tree-wood in your house than all the Christmas trees that you'll ever use in your lifetime.

    • If you bury it you capture its carbon. If you let it live it becomes carbon neutral over time. So kill it and plant a new one.
      • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

        Not just carbon neutral, cutting down trees and burying them deep so they don't rot and then growing up new ones is carbon negative.

        Doing that is essentially the opposite of burning fossil fuel.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • The trees covered by this 15 cents are farmed, so the cut ones are replaced.

      If you buy a $10 license to cut a christmas tree from the USDA (national forest), they use the money to plant several more and/or do other good stuff.

      Using renewable resources sustainably is OK.

  • oversupply problem as too many real trees were harvested

    Growing up my father would grab his tree saw, pack us into the car, and take a trip to an upstate douglas fir tree grower. You could walk the entire lot to pick just the tree you wanted, when you found it you cut it down yourself and carried it to the tree baler so it would sort of fit into the car.

    I always looked at those pre-cut trees as for the lazy. Plus you never know what it really looks like.

  • And it has a state-mandated source of funding: by law, growers must pay $0.15 from every Christmas tree sold to the organization.

    This is the only outrageous part of it all — the government-mandated pay.

    Everything else — Christmas itself, marketing, sustainability — are irrelevant.

  • Mine is still alive after more than 15 years and now over 6 feet tall and it stay up all year long. It's survived a couple of moves and being knocked over by cats a few times.

    It probably needs a bigger pot - I've only put it in a larger one once.

    Happy Halloween everyone. Or is it Christmas? I get those 2 holidays confused for some reason.

  • I have these nice retro ceramic trees. They belonged to my late grandmother before me. Pretty sure they're way better for the environment than any real tree, and much less of a fire hazard, especially since I swapped the bulbs for LED bulbs. Real nice, no mess, and the cat isn't as interested in destroying them.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • The only "real" trees are ones that have burlap wrapped roots n dirt. That get replanted. While Christmas trees per se are renewable, I'd question their ecological impact being net positive.
  • Who even pays for a christmast tree? You are supposed to steal one from the forest.

  • And you the customer have the privilege of paying to have more advertising in your life.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

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