CMRA News

CMRA TAKES ON SEVERAL ISSUES

Efforts to keep C&D recycling viable in the face of new regulations and laws will be a focus for the Construction Materials Recycling Association (CMRA) in 2003. CMRA members met for their Annual Meeting and installed new board members in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on Monday, Jan. 20.

Issues facing recyclers of concrete, wood and other building materials include dealing with hazardous substances such as lead and arsenic as well as combating unreasonable restrictions relative to zoning and siting facilities.

On one front, the CMRA is working with the government laboratory CERL to characterize painted concrete, ideally so it can show that the trace amounts of lead in such material does not render it unfit for recycling. Several CMRA member companies, including Eagle Crushing Co., Galion, Ohio, and Ted Ondrick Co., Chicopee, Mass., have pledged $1,000 contributions to help fund the study.

The idea is to provide a sample study that can be submitted to regulators in various states should they question the practice of recycling concrete that contains trace amounts of lead-based paint. Testing began Feb. 10 on materials recovered from a demolition project at Fort Ord, Calif.

The CMRA will also be conducting programs to boost end markets and materials generated. The group has started working through the U.S. EPA WasteWise program to form construction site target recycling levels. The first such arrangement is in the works with retailer Target Co., Minneapolis, with the retailer pledging to recycle 50 percent of the materials at its construction sites. "We think it’s a good way to promote C&D recycling at the customer level, working with the customers of contractors rather than contractors," said CMRA Executive Director William Turley.

On the end markets side, the CMRA is asking to help provide information to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), Washington, when that group begins studying the issue of specifications of crushed concrete as road base.

"Markets and regulations will unify us the most," incoming CMRA President Tom Roberts told the assembled CMRA members, who come from several types of businesses. Roberts’ company, J.R. Capital Corp., handles mixed C&D debris, including concrete, asphalt and wood, the most commonly generated C&D materials.

"We want to bring a voice to regulators and elected officials in states where there are challenges and debates concerning our processes and our products," Roberts declared.

Members from various states noted that they face end market restrictions such as demolition wood not being usable as mulch (Massachusetts) and concrete crushing plants being restricted from doing onsite work (Texas) if there is a home, school or church within one quarter of a mile.

CMRA FORMS COMMITTEES

The Construction Materials Recycling Association (CMRA), Lisle, Ill., announced the revamping of its committee structure at the C&D World Annual Meeting in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., in late January.

The CMRA board of directors and CMRA Executive Director William Turley decided to form six committees to concentrate on areas of mutual interest to CMRA members and the C&D recycling industry.

"Concerns about markets and regulations will unify us the most," CMRA president Tom Roberts of J.R. Capital Corp. in Florida told the association’s members at its annual meeting. "We want to bring a voice to regulators and elected officials in states where there are challenges and debates concerning our industry," he remarked.

The committees will work separately on several common goals, including adding members, securing funding for research and putting together a communications programs that can explain the CMRA position to elected officials, regulators and the general public.

Roberts noted that increased attention and funding can help the CMRA have a presence in such states to speak up for C&D recyclers. Increased membership was touted as one solution. "We need more members, which generates more revenue," stated Jay Giltz of Eagle Crushing Co., Galion, Ohio, chairman of the new Membership Committee. "The only way we can have a voice in these states is if we grow," he added.

The six committees and their chairpersons are:

• Membership Committee: Jay Giltz, Eagle Crushing Co., Galion, Ohio, (800) 253-2453.

• Public Relations Committee: Rick Givan, Recycled Materials Co., Arvada, Colo., (303) 431-3701.

• Awards Committee: Rob Hosier, General Environmental, Des Moines, Iowa, (515) 249-9308.

• Nominating Committee: Ken Patterson, Patterson Services, Mableton Ga., (404) 505-1449

• Legislative Committee: Trey Brown, Big City Crushed Concrete, Dallas, (972) 243-5820

• Finance Committee: John Kelso, Jet-A-Way Inc., Roxbury, Mass., (617) 541-4000.

CALL FOR PAPERS

The Annual Meeting of the Construction Materials Recycling Association (CMRA) will be January 2004 in New Orleans. Currently the CMRA, which is the leading organization for construction waste and demolition debris recyclers, is requesting abstracts for possible presentations at the meeting, which is the only event focusing on C&D recycling.

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

• Recycled concrete/asphalt markets

• Asphalt shingle recycling trends

• Overcoming barriers to recycled C&D materials

• Developing new markets for recycled wood

• Dealing proactively with regulators

• Construction waste management

• Wood recycling techniques

• Family business succession planning

• What’s happening in gypsum recycling

• Mobile vs. portable crushers

Those readers who feel they have a presentation that addresses one of the topics listed above or one that is of interest to C&D recyclers, should contact the CMRA by phoning (630) 548-4510; faxing (630) 548-4511; or e-mailing turley@cdrecycling.org.

 

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