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Mass. ban on C&D material to be implemented.


The long-awaited Massachusetts ban on disposal, or transfer for disposal, of specific construction and demolition materials will most likely take place in mid-2006. The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (DEP DEP Deposit
DEP Deputy
DEP Department of Environmental Protection
DEP Dependent
DEP Departure
DEP Depot
DEP Deposition
DEP deployed (US DoD)
DEP Data Execution Prevention (computer security) 
) has released the final version of the rules, which are scheduled to take effect nine months from the date of their promulgation PROMULGATION. The order given to cause a law to be executed, and to make it public it differs from publication. (q.v.) 1 Bl. Com. 45; Stat. 6 H. VI., c. 4.
     2.
.

The wording of the ban, which will require all asphalt pavement, brick, concrete, wood, metals and OCC OCC

See: Options Clearing Corporation


OCC

See Options Clearing Corporation (OCC).
 from construction and demolition activities to be diverted from disposal and pass through a recycling center, is generally the same as the final version worked out by the DEP and various stakeholders Stakeholders

All parties that have an interest, financial or otherwise, in a firm-stockholders, creditors, bondholders, employees, customers, management, the community, and the government.
 in the issue, according to Ed according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Coletta, spokesperson for DEE Those stakeholders included regulators, haulers, recyclers, environmental groups, architects/engineers, contractors, landfill owners, transfer station owners, trade associations, building owners, consultant, law firms This list of the world's largest law firms by revenue is taken from The Lawyer and The American Lawyer and is ordered by 2006 revenue:[1]
  1. Clifford Chance, £1,030.2m – International law firm (headquartered in the UK);
  2. Linklaters, £935.
 and municipalities.

"We worked with so many stakeholders to develop a program that everyone could live with," says Coletta. "We tried to listen to all the groups to address all the concerns."

The stakeholders have participated in numerous DEP C&D Subcommittee meetings since 2001 and recommended to the DEP a phase-in ban on the disposal of asphalt pavement, brick, concrete, metal and wood. One of the factors in targeting these specific materials was a determination that recycling and reuse markets exist for each of them, according to James McQuade, regional planner for DEP who oversaw the development of the ban. He added that since the C&D Subcommittee's recommendation to ban the disposal of these materials, several businesses have expressed interest in establishing additional facilities to recycle and/or reuse these materials, further enhancing the recycling and reuse markets.

"The challenge will be in adding additional C&D materials, such as gypsum gypsum (jĭp`səm), mineral composed of calcium sulfate (calcium, sulfur, and oxygen) with two molecules of water, CaSO4·2H2O. It is the most common sulfate mineral, occurring in many places in a variety of forms.  wallboard, asphalt shingles, carpet and ceiling tiles, in the future," says McQuade. "It is anticipated the C&D reuse and recycling market infrastructure for these materials will be enhanced as the C&D Subcommittee and other stakeholders continue to divert more C&D material from disposal, allowing Massachusetts to reach its Solid Waste Master Plan goal of 88 percent non-municipal solid waste reduction in 2010."

William Turley, executive director of the Construction Materials Recycling Association (CMRA CMRA Commercial Mail Receiving Agency
CMRA Construction Materials Recycling Association
CMRA Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association
CMRA Capital Market Risk Advisors, Inc.
), says, "The DEP is to be applauded on two fronts here; first, for including industry in the development of the ban. So many states make regulations like this unilaterally without industry input, before getting all the facts. Second, this will promote C&D recycling in a state that has a solid infrastructure to make sure this ban works."

Many other states have expressed an interest in how the DEP developed the ban and in doing something similar in their areas. But, Turley says, New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt.  in general and Massachusetts in particular are fortunate to have the C&D recycling plants there to process the materials into products.
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Title Annotation:Commodities
Publication:Construction & Demolition Recycling
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:470
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