North Country Gazette



Progress Made In Cleanup Of Tire Dumps

Posted on Thursday, 19 of November , 2009 at 7:59 pm

ALBANY–In the fall 2004, New York was awash in waste tires, with scores of tire dumps spread across the state harboring an estimated 34 million used tires. Built up over many decades, these dump sites threatened the environment and public health and safety.

Now, five years later, a plan to aggressively clean up tire dumps has resulted in significant progress: more than 26.5 million tires removed and 102 sites completely addressed, including 12 of the state’s largest tire dumps, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Pete Grannis announced Thursday.  Many of the remaining sites, though not completely cleaned up, have seen significant progress.

On the anniversary of the launch of the state’s Waste Tire Stockpile Abatement Plan (2004), Commissioner Grannis noted the advancements made in attacking one of the state’s long-running environmental problems.

Of the 17 largest dumps identified when the program began, 12 have been completely cleared of tires.

The largest tire dump in New York is now cleared of tires. At the massive Fortino site in Oswego County, all of the estimated 11.4 million waste tires have been removed.

The last of the 5 million tires at the state’s second largest tire dump, Mohawk Tire in Waterford, Saratoga County, have been removed.

At the launch of the program, some 95 tire dumps were documented around the state. But DEC uncovered another 51 previously unreported tire stockpiles and added them to the program.

Nearly all the waste tires removed under the cleanup program have been recycled for other uses such as landfill liners and road construction materials.

“It took decades to fill these dumps in communities in all corners of the state,” Commissioner Grannis said. “But we have achieved a remarkable cleanup in a relatively short time. New York has aggressively attacked this issue, steadily removing environmental, health and fire threats. Dump sites have been systematically cleared of tires and materials recycled.”

Besides being an eyesore, tire piles are a major fire risk. Large stockpiles can have extremely high temperatures at their core. Burning tire piles create a range of environmental problems. Smoldering tires can create a thick, black, foul-smelling smoke. As tires melt and partially burn, they produce an oily discharge that can pollute nearby streams, ditches and waterways or seep into the groundwater. Tire fires are extremely difficult to extinguish and fire departments with large tire stockpiles in their jurisdiction must have emergency plans in place specifically for dealing with tire fires. From 1989 to 2004, New York recorded more than 20 tire-pile fires, involving millions of waste tires.

Additionally, mounds of waste tires filled with stagnant water are ideal breeding grounds for disease-carrying mosquitoes.

Funding for the state’s abatement plan come from the Waste Tire Management and Recycling Act. Along with implementing a recycling fee of $2.50 per new tire sold, the law called for the development of a cleanup plan which was completed in fall 2004. In developing the plan, DEC began by verifying the existence of suspected waste tire stockpiles and estimating the number of tires at each non-compliant site. During the summer and fall of 2003, DEC staff visited 162 locations that were identified as potential waste tire stockpiles, resulting in the documentation of 95 non-compliant waste tire stockpiles. During the course of the project, DEC uncovered another 51 previously unreported tire sites.

Please see attachment for the list of the Summary of Tire Cleanups.

Summary of Tire Cleanups

Name

County

Tires Removed

Remaining

Fortino Oswego 11.4 Million 0
Mohawk Tire Saratoga 5 Million 0
Hornburg Tire Chautauqua 1.6 Million 0
Cycletech Columbia 2.3 Million 0
Tire Recycling Inc Ulster 700,000 0
Clarence Auto Parts Erie 600,000 0
Mahopac Putnam 460,000 750,000
Hutchings Automotive Chenango 250,000 0
Thomas Price Madison 0 1 Million
Southern Tier Tire Cattaraugus 350,000 0
Gerald Eagle Rensselaer 290,000 0
Ben Maglio Wyoming 220,000 0
Title Town Tires Madison 205,000 0
Fletchers Franklin 140,000 0
Lot 65 Onondaga 50,000 0
Fortino 2 Onondaga 0 500,000
Almag Rensselaer 151,000 550,000
NY Tire Suffolk 0 2 Million

11-19-09

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