Recyclers Wary in Washington
Proposed Washington State Senate Bill S-5788 looks to increase record keeping for transporters of commercial recyclables and requires all recycling facilities to register with the state and to pay a fee for the registration.
The Washington State Recycling Association, as well as many private processing facilities, haulers and even some solid waste companies with transfer stations and MRFs, are concerned parts of the law are written to benefit a select group of waste haulers to the detriment of anyone else hauling recyclables in the state.
Recyclers are also concerned about a "private-right-of-action" clause that allows for third-party enforcement of some of the bill’s statutes through the court system. Critics also say the state has no funding to enforce the extra provisions, though it would add another layer of local health jurisdiction over processing facilities.
The "Recycling Enforcement and Accountability Law (REAL)" purports to help the state increase its recycling rate from around 35 percent to a statutory goal of 50 percent. To do that, that bill says the state needs "reliable collection and transporting of commercial recyclables and the [assurance] that recycling facilities are recycling the materials delivered to them."
David Whitley of Construction Materials Recycling Association (CMRA) member company Nuprecon Inc., Snoqualmie, Wash., says, "The material processing side of this bill is reasonable as it levels the playing field to make sure facilities are monitored and health and fiscal responsibilities are addressed."
He adds, "The real problem lies with the transporter requirements. It seems like a self-serving attempt by the hauler association to flow control all waste materials into their hands and away from the free market solutions innovation. The lack of definitions and the hastily drafted law is rife with unintended consequences; the baby can be thrown out with the bath water," Whitley says.
Under the proposed bill, only haulers certified by the state can handle waste materials, including C&D to be recycled. The bill does allow generators working at their own sites to haul recyclables, but that is all. Otherwise the transporter must have a Section G certificate, which is a solid waste hauling license issued by the state.
Whitley adds that if the bill’s transporter and processor requirements had been designed to capture data on diverted C&D materials that would count towards state goals, which would require state laws to be changed to allow C&D material to be included in the state’s recycling criteria, "then we might be getting somewhere." Whitely says the material stream is currently well protected by local municipalties without the bill.
The entire bill is available online at www.leg.wa.gov/pub/billinfo/2005-06/Htm/Bills/Senate%20Bills/5788.htm. The bill is currently in the Washington Senate’s Water, Energy & Environment Committee. A companion bill is in the House’s Natural Resources, Ecology and Parks Committee.
ConExpo Attendance Tops 120,000
More than 124,220 industry professionals from around the world attended the ConExpo-Con/Agg show in Las Vegas in mid-March.
The show, which was co-located with the IFPE (International Exposition for Power Transmission) and several trade association annual meetings, featured an array of equipment from man-
ufacturers around the world.
The ConExpo-Con/Agg show in 2005 featured a record-breaking amount of exhibit space: more than 1.88 million net square feet of exhibit space used by 1,968 exhibiting companies.
According to ConExpo and IFPE organizers, international attendance was at a record high—more than 21,220, which is 17 percent of total attendance figures. International visitors to the shows hailed from more than 130 countries.
The shows hosted a record 44 official international customer delegations, representing 35 countries. These delegations were organized by the U.S. Department of Commerce, as well as in-country trade associations and related groups. Russia was well represented with eight official delegations attending, as was China with two official delegations. Delegations were in attendance from Thailand and Indonesia, discussing the tsunami relief situation and reconstruction needs.
An Iraqi delegation of more than 40 businesspeople was at the shows, in the first private-sector trade delegation to the U.S. from that country in about a decade. The trip was planned by the Iraqi-American Chamber of Commerce and the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.
Hotel occupancy by show attendees and co-located association conventions reached more than 104,000 cumulative room nights. The shows brought an estimated $180 million worth of non-gaming revenue to Las Vegas.
According to the shows’ organizers, the 2002 ConExpo and IFPE shows attracted more than 108,000 attendees.
Demolition Firm Hopes to Open Plant in Mass.
W.K. Macnamara, a demolition company headquartered in Waltham, Mass., is working with a Massachusetts town to build a construction and demolition recycling facility. If the company receives all the permits needed, it will be the first C&D recycling plant for the company.
Kurt Macnamara, owner of the demolition firm, says the company is in the permitting phase with the state of Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection.
In the meantime, the company is expected to go before the city of Devens, Mass., within the next month to present its case. W.K. Macnamara also will have to appear before the city’s Board of Health.
If the company receives the go-ahead from the state and local governments, it hopes to break ground on the project by early next year, with operations scheduled to begin approximately a year later.
Macnamara says the facility, which will be enclosed and soundproofed, will be highly automated and will be capable of handling around 1,500 tons of construction and demolition material per day. The company has already selected a site that is zoned for heavy industry.
The company has plans to recycle concrete, wood, old corrugated cardboard (OCC) and various types of ferrous and nonferrous scrap metal, as well at carpet and other materials generated from demolition sites. The company has said that it will not be taking in any material deemed as hazardous, including asbestos.
Along with crushing equipment, conveyor equipment and various types of sorting machinery, the facility hopes to have a rail spur built on the site to allow for the rail movement of some material processed at the facility.
Macnamara says he has been working with potential consumers for much of the material and is confident that a ready market for the processed C&D recyclables will be available when the plant is up and running.
According to local press reports, the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection supports such projects.
In addition to a state solid-waste permit, W.K. Macnamara will also need a sewer-extension permit and possibly a conservation and management permit from the state Division of Fisheries and Wildlife, according to local reports.
Macnamara also says plans call for the building to include an educational center that can be used as part of an outreach program for residents, especially schools.
City Looks to C&D to Increase Recycling Rates
City officials in Piedmont, Calif., are in the process of drafting a construction and demolition recycling ordinance to help boost the city’s recycling rates, according to a report in the Contra Costa Times (Walnut Creek, Calif.).
Officials want to tap into the C&D material stream to help the Alameda County Waste Management Authority meet its goal of diverting 75 percent of its material from area landfills by 2010, according to the report.
State mandates require California cities to divert a minimum of 50 percent or face heavy fines.
Piedmont currently diverts 64 percent, which exceeds the state minimum, but falls short of the city’s individual recycling goals, according to the report.
City Planner Kate Black tells the Contra Costa Times that construction and demolition material makes up approximately 21 percent of the debris in the county landfills.
A draft of the C&D recycling ordinance is expected to be presented to the city council by early summer, according to the report.
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