Although bright and neon papers are eye-catching, these papers 
are no longer accepted for recycling by most paper mills. The dyes 
in bright papers are made with toxic heavy metals (cadmium, 
arsenic, and others), making these papers much more resource 
intensive and costly to recycle.  In addition, since bright papers 
can't be recycled, they end up in landfills, where their toxic dyes 
may one day contaminate water and soil.
At the University of Colorado, offices and departments have taken 
steps to reduce bright paper usage on the Boulder campus. The CU 
Bookstore, Printing and Copy Services, and CU's Distribution 
Center have discontinued stocking astrobright and neon colors. The 
University of Colorado Student Union requires groups using student 
fee money to use only recyclable paper (no brights), and the 
University Memorial Center does not allow posting of materials on 
bright or neon colors. In a University memo in February 1998, the 
Vice Chancellor for Administration's office strongly encouraged 
campus offices to discontinue use of brights papers and use pastels 
instead whenever non-white paper is needed.
Questions?  Contact the CU Recycling staff 
mailto:cure@stripe.colorado.edu.
[From EarthNet News,  December 9, 1999
...a project of the Center for Environmental Citizenship]