{"id":3316,"date":"2008-08-21T13:01:24","date_gmt":"2008-08-21T19:01:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wordpress-367309-1145705.cloudwaysapps.com\/?p=3316"},"modified":"2008-08-21T13:01:24","modified_gmt":"2008-08-21T19:01:24","slug":"electronic-bills-convenience-and-sustainability","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sustainablog.org\/articles\/electronic-bills-convenience-and-sustainability\/","title":{"rendered":"Electronic Bills, Convenience and Sustainability"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"Paperwork\"<\/a>How many bills do you get per month? If you’re like the\u00a0vast majority\u00a0of North Americans, you get a boatload. And every month, you probably take one look at them, pay the bill, and then shred it and toss it into your recycling bin.<\/p>\n

While I still get excited when I get mail that is addressed to me, I’m not quite as excited about it when it turns out to be yet another bill. Recently though, I’ve found some services that have let me avoid getting bills in the mail (unfortunately, for some reason, I still have to pay them… I haven’t quite figured out how to avoid that aspect yet!).<\/p>\n

For those of you who have not availed yourselves of it, there are services<\/a> available that will help. From the post office’s e-post<\/a> service, to getting your monthly reminders from your biller<\/a> (Mastercard, cell phone), you can reduce the amount of paper that you receive in a month.<\/p>\n

The best part of all? If you are self-employed or\u00a0someone who enjoys making the most of various tax write-offs and therefore need copies of your bills just in case of an audit, with electronic bills in pdf format, you can always just store them on your hardrive, rather than adding them to bulging file-folders.<\/p>\n

According to PayItGreen<\/a>, If the average household were to switch to electronic bills, it would save:<\/p>\n

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