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Tennessee approves use of ADC made from C&D fines.


The Tennessee Department of Environmental Conservation (TDEC TDEC Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation
tDEC The Drexel Engineering Curriculum
TDEC Time Delay Engine Cool (automatic transfer switch setting) 
) has approved the use of an alternative daily cover (ADC (1) See A/D converter.

(2) (Apple Display Connector) A peripheral connector from Apple that combines digital video display, USB and power in one cable.
) product made of C&D debris for the state's biggest landfill. It is the second such approval of ADC made from C&D material in Tennessee.

The latest approval is at Allied Waste's Middle Point Landfill, which, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Mike DeMarco, the company's district manager for Kentucky and Tennessee, handles 4,300 tons of MSW (MicroSoft Word) See Microsoft Word.  per day.

DeMarco says the DEC "worked with the vendor to determine whether the product met the state's qualifications for alternative daily cover." Glen Pugh, solid waste program manager for TDEC, says the approval came after a couple of trial periods.

"We were primarily concerned with the use of the material because it starts out as a waste material before it is processed," says Pugh. "We wanted to make sure there were no issues related to stormwater runoff at the landfill." Pugh also wanted to allow Allied time to evaluate whether there would be any hydrogen sulfide hydrogen sulfide, chemical compound, H2S, a colorless, extremely poisonous gas that has a very disagreeable odor, much like that of rotten eggs. It is slightly soluble in water and is soluble in carbon disulfide.  gas generation. "They have a gas-to-energy facility there, and if there is any sulfur in the gas, it might give them some problems. So far we have not seen any of that," he says.

DeMarco agrees with that assessment. "So far it has worked out well. Its cost is comparative to what it is costing us for other alternative daily covers." The other landfill covers Middle Point is using include a polyshell, auto fluff, mulch and some onsite dirt. Allied has experimented with mixing with the C&D product with auto fluff and ground-up wood debris, all of which the company has been satisfied with.

The latest approval to use ADC made from C&D debris is the second instance in the state, the first being a Waste Management landfill in Lewisburg, Tenn.

The supplier of the ADC for Middle Point is CMRA CMRA Commercial Mail Receiving Agency
CMRA Construction Materials Recycling Association
CMRA Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association
CMRA Capital Market Risk Advisors, Inc.
 member Tennessee Waste in Nashville, which has been recycling C&D for five years. Phillip Nappi, president, says the company had been pulling out the metal, wood, OCC OCC

See: Options Clearing Corporation


OCC

See Options Clearing Corporation (OCC).
 and aggregate. The use of the ADC product is the company's second success in finding a market for its fines. "Two years ago we worked with Tom Roberts Thomas William Roberts (8 March 1856–14 September 1931), usually known simply as Tom, was a famous Australian artist and a key member of the Heidelberg School. Life  (immediate past president of the CMRA) to work with the TDEC about getting a blanket approval to use the fines in land use applications, exclusive of ADC," says Nappi. "We did have one other success in that short space of time."

That was the use of the fines as a fill material at a residential development. "What these projects show is that C&D fines can be used successfully when handled properly," says Nappi.
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Title Annotation:COMMODITIES
Publication:Construction & Demolition Recycling
Date:Nov 1, 2006
Words:442
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