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A little more in depth.....http://www.nashvillepost.com/news/2009/11/17/gibson_guitars_raided_by_fbi
Granted this story concerns guitar manufacturing, but the fundamental issue is completely applicable to speaker cabinet wood/veneers. If you are relying on your supplier and their "sustainable" wood certification/programs, you need to consider conducting a few audits on your own to prevent violations from occurring. Self-serving as it may be, I happen to be in the environmental management business when I am not tweaking my audio system. Feel free to contact me with questions.Feds Raid Gibson Guitar Plant Wednesday, November 18, 2009NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Federal agents on Tuesday raided a Gibson guitar manufacturing plant and seized guitars amid concerns about where the Nashville-based company obtains the fine woods that go into its instruments. Television stations reported that authorities seized wood guitars and other items, but no one was arrested. The U.S. Attorney's Office and Gibson officials did not return a call to The Associated Press for comment. But Gibson did issue a statement saying the company is "fully cooperating with agents of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service as it pertains to an issue with harvested wood." Guitars and other musical instruments are often built from tropical hardwoods. Amid rainforest depletion, such woods are increasingly the focus of tight controls. "Gibson is a chain of custody certified buyer who purchases wood from legal suppliers who are to follow all standards," the statement said. "Gibson Guitar Chairman and CEO sits on the board of the Rainforest Alliance and takes the issue of certification very seriously. The company will continue to cooperate fully and assist our federal government with all inquiries and information." Gibson Guitar Corp. manufactures acoustic and electric guitars. The company also makes pianos through its Baldwin brand. http://www.chem.info/News/2009/11/Feds-Raid-Gibson-Guitar-Plant/
Please keep politics out of this.Paul
sorry, tex. don't get me wrong - i enjoy this type of discussion. but, anything dealing w/govt regulations is political. govt regulations do not exist in a wacuum. they were not created in a wacuum - they were created by politics. their enforcement is political. note your last statement in you last post - with it, you directly contradict the first statement of that same post. the wery first line in the article you cite in your first post is political - when fed agents raid anything, it's political.in order for any topic like this not to be political, you cannot discuss anything relevant about it.doug s.
All the more reason to have them made in China. You don't have to convince me. The US has been an unfriendly place to manufacture for a long time. This is nothing new nor is it political in terms of Donkey vs. Elephant. There are high unskilled labor cost, tight environmental regulation and high taxation. It is a bad combination and in a global economy you are never going to win trying with all those strikes against you.
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 28 Dec 2009, 11:03 pmAll the more reason to have them made in China. You don't have to convince me. The US has been an unfriendly place to manufacture for a long time. This is nothing new nor is it political in terms of Donkey vs. Elephant. There are high unskilled labor cost, tight environmental regulation and high taxation. It is a bad combination and in a global economy you are never going to win trying with all those strikes against you. Hi Kevin, I usually agree with you and I do agree with most of your post except for the conclusion. The US actually polices environmental standards and this policy gives foriegn (Chinese) manufacturers an unfair competitive advantage because countries like China are more interested in industry and building a strong industrial base than the environment or worker safety in many cases. We need to make sure that our trading partners adhere to some reasonable standards instead of regulating all manufacturing businesses out of business in the US. The attached article really pissed me off because Gibson has a great reputation for environmental standards. We'll see if this case is legitimate but either way, if it was a Chinese company, we would never know. This type of unfair practice cannot be tollerated. Forcing these issues underground doesn't make them go away, it just makes them disappear from view. The underlying issues (destruction of rainforests, pollution, etc.) still remain. Cheers,Jack