Aggregates Manager

March 2015

Aggregates Manager Digital Magazine

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5 AGGREGATES MANAGER March 2015 LG938L: 2.5 yd 3 / 160 hp $99,500* LG948L: 3.0 yd 3 / 173 hp $118,500* LG958L: 4.0 yd 3 / 224 hp $137,500* LG959: 4.0 yd 3 / 224 hp $147,500* When price and reliability are deciding factors, SDLG is your answer. We offer four wheel loader models at industry- leading prices — they're simple to operate, easy to maintain, and a perfect fit for your day-to-day jobs. Plus, our loaders are sold through an experienced, top-tier dealer network that's ready to support you any time you need them. To find your local dealer, just click or call. * Prices are subject to change without notice. Visit sdlgna.com for details. 844-TRY-SDLG • sdlgna.com 844-879-7354 SOLID PERFORMANCE STARTS AT $99,500. Oregon Linn County commissioners gave the former Knife River quarry site in Sweet Home to a local economic development agency. According to the Albany Democrat-Herald, the 220-acre site is valued at $2 million. The county foreclosed on the property in 2010 for $500,000 in back taxes and has since reclaimed the site. KTVZ.com reports it is likely to be used for campers attending the Oregon Jamboree; proceeds from that event benefi t the economic development group. Another long-term idea for the site is for use as a stage and amphitheater for the music festival. Pennsylvania Wayne County residents are challenging a decision from the Sterling Township Zoning Hearing Board that has allowed mining at a quarry operation there. The Times Tribune reports that residents say the township's zoning ordinance indicates that the quarry is in a rural development zone that allows quarrying as a conditional use, but does not allow processing of minerals, including "crushing, screening, washing, or grading." At an earlier hearing, the owner of the property said that stone crushing has taken place at the site since the 1970s, well before the township's 1991 ordinance, and it was a grandfathered use. The residents formed a group called Sterling Residents for Responsible Quarry Operation and are appealing the decision to a county court. South Carolina At a recent Lexington County Council meeting, Vulcan Materials Vice President and General Manager Roger Dunlap presented council members with two options for truck routes. According to ColaDaily.com, one option would involve closing a dirt road that connects U.S. Highway 1 and Windmill Road and runs through the mining site Vulcan has proposed. The second option would involve closing a local road and making it the primary entrance and exit for the quarry. The second option would give truck traffi c a more direct route to the highway. Council members voted 5-2, reversing an earlier vote, and agreed to not oppose a petition to close the road if Vulcan pays to upgrade the portion of the road it would use to enter and exit to accommodate state DOT standards for heavy truck traffi c. Province News A group of Tyendinaga Township (Kingston, Ontario) residents are fi ghting the expansion of a quarry owned by CH Demill Holdings. CKWS Newswatch reports that the residents, headed by Sue Munroe, object to the operator's water-taking permit, issued by the Ministry of the Environment. The permit allows the operation to pump millions of liters of water out of the existing operation. With approximately 20 farms near the quarry, residents say they are concerned about the impact of the quarry's water use on the water table and their wells.

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