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Heather Mills wins VegNews Person of the Year 2009
"Behind the scenes" may not be the phrase that comes to mind when one thinks of Heather Mills, but maybe it should be.
Of course, the majority of the world still knows her best for her divorce, but this year, Mills has made her mark on all things veg?and when we say all things, we mean all things.
While her business plan is decidedly Marquezian, it seems to be working. Since opening on July 4, Brighton's VBites has seen a steady stream of customers and requests for franchising, with the first US location set to open October 3 in the Bronx, NY. All of her products undergo nearly constant upgrades: she's working on making potato-starch-based packaging for her refrigerated dinner line, so plastic can be taken out of the production, and she's creating an algae-based EPA-DHA omega-3 blend to add to her VBites line of faux meats that will also soon be available as a supplement. For her out-of-the-spotlight work, Mills works closely with animal-protection groups like Viva! and The Humane Society of the United States. She donates freely ("I put every bit of cash I've got into these projects"), and supports burgeoning businesses like Beyond Skin, with which shes obsessed. "They've really stuck to their ethics," she says of the vegan footwear company. "They haven't gone over to China [for production]."
With so much currently on her plate, what does the future hold? Possibly a more toneddown version of the highly outspoken?read: preachy?Mills the tabloids tend to report. "It can come off as lecturing. Now I'm hitting 42, and I'm realizing there are other ways to show people that there's a vegan, ethical, environmentally friendly alternative." And she's hoping that the VBites line of faux meats will take off, literally. "Richard Branson's a good friend of mine and just gave up eating beef, so I'm hoping we can work to get VBites on Virgin Atlantic." Though she seems to be at the eye of her own storm of veganism, Mills is optimistic about the future. "There's always sense in what seems like madness at first." Whether in the spotlight or behind the scenes, Mills' tireless activism is making sense. Article by VegNews |
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