CMRA hopeful about lead-based paint rules. (C&D News).Recyclers of painted wood and concrete debris will reportedly have more options when revised U.S. EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid. EPA abbr. eicosapentaenoic acid EPA, n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic. EPA, n. rules concerning lead-based paint are made public. William Turley, executive director of the CMRA CMRA Commercial Mail Receiving Agency CMRA Construction Materials Recycling Association CMRA Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association CMRA Capital Market Risk Advisors, Inc. , says sources within the EPA are indicating that a revised rule has received internal clearance at the agency and will be published by the end of the year. The original rule proposed by the EPA would have banned all debris with measurable amounts or lead-based paint from C&D recycling centers. Recyclers were almost unanimous in their objections to this rule and its potential effect on the viability of both wood and concrete recycling When structures made of concrete are to be demolished, concrete recycling is an increasingly common method of disposing of the rubble. Concrete debris was once routinely shipped to landfills for disposal, but recycling has a number of benefits that have made it a more attractive . The revised rule will reportedly allow C&D recycling facilities to remain as disposal options for painted wood and concrete, where they can be processed into new products that will greatly dilute di·lute v. To reduce a solution or mixture in concentration, quality, strength, or purity, as by adding water. adj. Thinned or weakened by diluting. the presence of lead contained within these products. The EPA's reconsideration of the rule has been taking place since the original rule was proposed in the first half of 1999. Public comment periods elicited strong remarks from members of trade groups such as the CMRA, Lisle lisle n. 1. A fine, smooth, tightly twisted thread spun from long-stapled cotton. 2. Fabric knitted of this thread, used especially for hosiery and underwear. , Ill., the National Association of Demolition Contractors, Doylestown, Pa., and from other recycling advocates. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion