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This profile was automatically generated using 93 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 93 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 93 references Web References
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1. PALCO facing bankruptcy? Official says ‘no comment’
www.fovd.org/htm/news_articles - [Cached]Published on: 1/25/2005 Last Visited: 1/4/2008
Erin Dunn of PALCO said company officials were still reading the article and did not have a response for media at that time, which was mid-morning today. -
2. archive.votepaul.org
archive.votepaul.org/modules.p - [Cached]Published on: 2/5/2004 Last Visited: 4/11/2007
"This stunt, in the midst of litigation and the recall ... smacks of political vendetta driven by headline-seeking instead of truth-finding," Pacific Lumber spokeswoman Erin Dunn said.
...
Dunn said consultants hired by Pacific Lumber misinterpreted data and, discovering the mistake, corrected it.
Wilson's testimony relates only to what he would have done had that new information been revealed while the environmental review was still under way. -
3. North Coast Journal - Jan. 15, 2004: IN THE NEWS
www.northcoastjournal.com/0115 - [Cached]Published on: 1/15/2004 Last Visited: 2/5/2004
Erin Dunn, Pacific Lumber's communications manager, fired off a letter to company employees last week telling them, in effect, to get with the program. Last August, she reminded workers, the company launched "a new branding campaign [that] included new stated goals, new governance principals and a new corporate mark and name -- PALCO." The acronym, Dunn continued, symbolizes "our commitment to sustainability, the environment, community and business." The PALCO logo is now on company logging trucks, company envelopes and stationery, and is being placed on company signs. It's imprinted everywhere, it seems, but in the minds of workers, many of whom continue to refer to the company by the old name, PL, and who haven't changed their office and cell phone voice mail messages to reflect the new order. Such changes must be made immediately, Dunn said in her letter. Moreover, when speaking to each other, employees "need to remind each other to say PALCO at all times. Change your habit of saying PL," Dunn exhorted.

