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#1
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There are a fair amount of knowledgeable (and, well, imaginative) folks
here, and I'm looking for help. A tire recycler in Gulfport. MS got Katrina'ed, and there are tires out the wazoo (that's a whole bunch of tires) on his property. Long story short is that there are tires, a problem with them, and I figured good ol' ROFF is as good a place as any to ask if anyone has any ideas, contacts, wants to Google beyond what we've done, or ??? And for the record, I have no interest in the problem directly beyond that as a concerned citizen. And to go even further, if someone knows something that results in money being made, and I somehow wind up being able to direct any of it, it goes to charity. Thanks in advance, and all ideas welcome, R |
#2
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![]() wrote in message news ![]() There are a fair amount of knowledgeable (and, well, imaginative) folks here, and I'm looking for help. A tire recycler in Gulfport. MS got Katrina'ed, and there are tires out the wazoo (that's a whole bunch of tires) on his property. Long story short is that there are tires, a problem with them, and I figured good ol' ROFF is as good a place as any to ask if anyone has any ideas, contacts, wants to Google beyond what we've done, or ??? And for the record, I have no interest in the problem directly beyond that as a concerned citizen. And to go even further, if someone knows something that results in money being made, and I somehow wind up being able to direct any of it, it goes to charity. Thanks in advance, and all ideas welcome, R Since it is near a port, may be economically feasible to ship them to a recyling facility somewhere else. Look at cogeneration power plants and roadway surface manufacturers. |
#3
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On Mar 14, 12:16 pm, wrote:
There are a fair amount of knowledgeable (and, well, imaginative) folks here, and I'm looking for help. A tire recycler in Gulfport. MS got Katrina'ed, and there are tires out the wazoo (that's a whole bunch of tires) on his property. Long story short is that there are tires, a problem with them, and I figured good ol' ROFF is as good a place as any to ask if anyone has any ideas, contacts, wants to Google beyond what we've done, or ??? And for the record, I have no interest in the problem directly beyond that as a concerned citizen. And to go even further, if someone knows something that results in money being made, and I somehow wind up being able to direct any of it, it goes to charity. Thanks in advance, and all ideas welcome, R Google 'Crumb rubber' to find all sorts of businesses that consume ground up tires. --riverman |
#4
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On 14 Mar 2007 00:45:18 -0700, "riverman" wrote:
On Mar 14, 12:16 pm, wrote: There are a fair amount of knowledgeable (and, well, imaginative) folks here, and I'm looking for help. A tire recycler in Gulfport. MS got Katrina'ed, and there are tires out the wazoo (that's a whole bunch of tires) on his property. Long story short is that there are tires, a problem with them, and I figured good ol' ROFF is as good a place as any to ask if anyone has any ideas, contacts, wants to Google beyond what we've done, or ??? And for the record, I have no interest in the problem directly beyond that as a concerned citizen. And to go even further, if someone knows something that results in money being made, and I somehow wind up being able to direct any of it, it goes to charity. Thanks in advance, and all ideas welcome, R Google 'Crumb rubber' to find all sorts of businesses that consume ground up tires. Thanks, but oops...maybe I should be more specific, or at least as specific as the information I have. The "common" uses are known - this was a tire recycling facility. What happened, generally and as I understand it, is that the equipment was Katrina'ed, but the tires weren't. The owner apparently thought insurance would replace/repair the equipment, and on that basis, he kept accepting tires after the storm (there were tires everywhere, plus cars being wrecked out). When the pile got too high, the city shut him down and yanked his recycling permit. There are now some 400-500,000 tires at the site, his insurance company has not ponied up, and it's become a local issue. Apparently, there's no effective way to move them to another (distant) area, and given the on-coming fire and mosquito seasons, it's an obvious concern. There was a company that had talked about coming in, but apparently, that fell apart. TC, R --riverman |
#5
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On Mar 14, 12:16 am, wrote:
Thanks in advance, and all ideas welcome, I was going to suggest an idea that I recalled reading about- sinking tires to create reefs-, but a quick check of the news suggests it isn't such a great idea: http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/02/18/news/tires.php There are some green builders who use recycled tires for wall building, but I think it is a pretty small niche, even for green building. Maybe they could be used for levee construction? http://orion.csuchico.edu/Pages/vol4...7.recycle.html Hmmm... http://www.deantires.com/ You SURE you have no interest? Maybe they could be turned into sausages? Or milk? "Oh, Mr. Johnny Verbeck how could you be so mean..." :-) Hope the problem gets solved. Bill |
#6
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I've not googled this, so take it FWIW.
I know there is a movement to use old tires in the production of concrete, they burn them and turn them into something called fly ash, which is used in the manufacuring of concrete. I'm not sure how the process works exactly in fact the tires might not turn into fly ash, but may just be used as fuel? Secondly there are companies who turn tires in rubber flooring. |
#7
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On Mar 14, 10:04 pm, wrote:
On 14 Mar 2007 00:45:18 -0700, "riverman" wrote: On Mar 14, 12:16 pm, wrote: There are a fair amount of knowledgeable (and, well, imaginative) folks here, and I'm looking for help. A tire recycler in Gulfport. MS got Katrina'ed, and there are tires out the wazoo (that's a whole bunch of tires) on his property. Long story short is that there are tires, a problem with them, and I figured good ol' ROFF is as good a place as any to ask if anyone has any ideas, contacts, wants to Google beyond what we've done, or ??? And for the record, I have no interest in the problem directly beyond that as a concerned citizen. And to go even further, if someone knows something that results in money being made, and I somehow wind up being able to direct any of it, it goes to charity. Thanks in advance, and all ideas welcome, R Google 'Crumb rubber' to find all sorts of businesses that consume ground up tires. Thanks, but oops...maybe I should be more specific, or at least as specific as the information I have. The "common" uses are known - this was a tire recycling facility. What happened, generally and as I understand it, is that the equipment was Katrina'ed, but the tires weren't. The owner apparently thought insurance would replace/repair the equipment, and on that basis, he kept accepting tires after the storm (there were tires everywhere, plus cars being wrecked out). When the pile got too high, the city shut him down and yanked his recycling permit. There are now some 400-500,000 tires at the site, his insurance company has not ponied up, and it's become a local issue. Apparently, there's no effective way to move them to another (distant) area, and given the on-coming fire and mosquito seasons, it's an obvious concern. There was a company that had talked about coming in, but apparently, that fell apart. TC, R Ahh, got it. You're really looking to see if anyone knows of any recyclers who are interested in obtaining a mountain of used tires. Hmm....that might be a challenge. Like you said, transporting them cost-effectively would be the problem. Considering that much is getting rebuilt there and (I assume) little is being currently exported, possibly something could be negotiated with a shipping company that brings things in to bring out some tires in each ship as ballast or something. Or as a freebie to fill an empty hold. OTOH, I bet FEMA could build some dikes out of them. Or if some inventive soul could come up with an effective way to build dikes out of used tires, they'd make a fortune. --riverman |
#9
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![]() "Tim J." There was a business up here in MA that ran into a similar problem about 10-12 years ago. After a zoning change, the owner was told he's have to remove the tires he'd been collecting for more than a decade because of the fire hazard, about the same number you mentioned, or go to jail. .. Faced with paying many hundreds of thousands of dollars he didn't have, he ended up serving time and losing the business. whoa, nellie! that would be unconstitutional on more than one basis, imo. most obviously, the imposition of a criminal penalty against conduct that was not criminal at the time it was initiated would be a clear violation of the "ex post facto" clause. i don't get it. any details on this "prosecution"? news articles? the guy's name? yfitons wayno(not that i don't believe you--i just think there's something missing) |
#10
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Wayne Harrison typed:
"Tim J." There was a business up here in MA that ran into a similar problem about 10-12 years ago. After a zoning change, the owner was told he's have to remove the tires he'd been collecting for more than a decade because of the fire hazard, about the same number you mentioned, or go to jail. . Faced with paying many hundreds of thousands of dollars he didn't have, he ended up serving time and losing the business. whoa, nellie! that would be unconstitutional on more than one basis, imo. most obviously, the imposition of a criminal penalty against conduct that was not criminal at the time it was initiated would be a clear violation of the "ex post facto" clause. i don't get it. any details on this "prosecution"? news articles? the guy's name? The business name was Trant (Steel? Salvage?) in either Brimfield or Palmer, MA. George Adams is the resident expert in all things local to Western MA, so he can probably fill us in. yfitons wayno(not that i don't believe you--i just think there's something missing) It's probably one of my loose screws that finally fell out. I'm sure there's probably a LOT more to the story that my memory has omitted. Again, I'd bet good money Mr. Adams or Mr. Gula could fill us in. old_guy "Well, that's the way *I* remember it!" \old_guy Good to see you, BTW. -- TL, Tim ------------------------- http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
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