PATERSON NEW JERSEY SCRAP TIRE PROGRAM UNDER INVESTIGATION!


UsedTires.com-USED TIRE NEWS-BREAKING NEWS

FROM PATERSON PRESS NORTHJERSEY.com

PATERSON – City officials are asking the Passaic County Prosecutor’s Office to look into possible corruption in Paterson’s tire recycling program in response to allegations raised by an NBC New York report broadcast Tuesday evening.

NBC reported a discrepancy between the revenue Paterson had reported getting for tire collections at the city’s Department of Public Works recycling yard and the payments the city made to a private firm to haul away the tires.

The NBC story included interviews with anonymous DPW employees, who said private companies were paying off municipal workers at the yard to allow them to engage in the illegal practice of dumping extra tires for free.

A city policy says that private companies are supposed to pay $1 for every tire they haul to the municipal recycling yard. But NBC reported that companies were paying just $20 for shipments of dozens of tires.

Paterson officials said they decided to notify the Prosecutor’s Office of the allegations after NBC made inquiries about the situation.

http://www.nbcnewyork.com/investigations/Paterson-Tire-Problem-Whistleblower-Corruption-Investigation-New-Jersey-414346503.html
Report By NBCNEWYORK.com

Scrap Tire Recycling Act - The Power Of A TRO/Injunction

Scrap Tire Recycling Act – The Power Of A TRO/Injunction.

Deerfield Beach based Usedtires.com and Deerfield News has seen the significance and force of law and injunction brings.

Scrap Tire Recycling Act – The Power Of A TRO/Injunction

Back in 1996 The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico enacted Law 171 a Scrap Tire Recycling Act,the laws intention to control the disposal of scrap tires generated inside of Puerto Rico.

The Act also included language inserted at the behest of The New Tire Makers , provisions that would have eliminated by legislation used tire sales inside of Puerto Rico with Used Tires imported from the outside.Used Tire International a company owned by myself and Juan R Perez of COD Tire Distributors in Mayaguez made a Constitutional Challenge against The Commonwealth.

UTI ws successful on The Merits and to this day has a “Permanent Injunction”against certain challenged provisions of Law 171 of 1996.

UTI was saddened to hear of the passing of Judge Shwarzer of The 9ThCircuit Court of Appeals who sat in and who heard our case,

USED TIRE INTERNATIONAL INC v. DIAZ SALDAÑA
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United States Court of Appeals,First Circuit.

USED TIRE INTERNATIONAL, INC., Plaintiff, Appellant, v. Manuel DIAZ-SALDAÑA, Defendant, Appellee.

USED TIRE INTERNATIONAL, INC., Plaintiff, Appellee, v. Manuel DIAZ-SALDAÑA, Defendant, Appellant.

Nos. 97-2347, 97-2348.
Decided: September 11, 1998
Before SELYA and BOUDIN, Circuit Judges, and SCHWARZER,* Senior District Judge.Sylvia Roger-Stefani, Assistant Solicitor General, with whom Carlos Lugo-Fiol, Solicitor General, and Edda Serrano-Blasini, Deputy Solicitor General, Federal Litigation Division, Puerto Rico Department of Justice, were on brief, for appellant. Joan S. Peters, with whom Andrés Guillemard-Noble and Nachman, Guillemard & Rebollo were on brief, for appellee.
In an effort to attack the mounting problem of solid waste disposal, the Puerto Rico legislature in 1996 enacted the Tire Handling Act, also known as Law 171.   This act establishes a comprehensive scheme for the handling and disposal of used tires.   Among other things, it requires tire vendors to accept customers’ used tires at no extra charge for processing or disposal, prohibits the burning of tires and depositing of tires in landfills except under certain conditions, regulates the storage and recycling of tires, establishes import fees, sets up a fund for handling scrap tires, creates incentives for recycling and developing alternative uses for scrap tires, and imposes penalties for noncompliance with its provisions.   The legislature identified the disposal of tires as a particular problem because of the fire hazard they present, the public health hazard they create from disease-carrying mosquitoes breeding in water that accumulates inside discarded tires and the large amount of space they occupy, diminishing the useful life of landfills.

Used Tire International, Inc. (“UTI”) is an importer of used tires into Puerto Rico. It brought this action for declaratory and injunctive relief against appellant Manuel DíazSaldaña as Secretary of the Treasury to bar enforcement of certain provisions of Law 171.   Those provisions are:  Article 5(B) which prohibits the import of tires that do not have a minimum tread depth of 3/32”;  Article 5(D) which requires tire importers to file a bond in an amount equivalent to the cost of handling and disposing of the imported product and provides for execution of the bond in the event that 10% of a representative sample of a shipment does not qualify;  Article 6 which imposes a charge on all imported tires;  Article 17(A)(1) which provides for distributions from a tire handling fund, created from the charge imposed on importers of tires, to recyclers, processors and exporters of tires;  and Article 19(A) which imposes a $10.00 fine on persons selling or importing tires that do not have a minimum tread depth of 3/32.”   Following a hearing on UTI’s request for a preliminary injunction at which both sides presented testimony, the district court issued an opinion and order, granting the injunction against enforcement of Articles 5(B), 5(D) and 19(A) and denying it with respect to Articles 6 and 17(A)(1).   Puerto Rico appealed the order and UTI cross-appealed.   The parties have stipulated that we may treat Puerto Rico’s appeal as being from a final adjudication of the invalidity of Articles 5(B), 5(D) and 19(A).   We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1292(a)(1).

PUERTO RICO’S APPEAL

The district court concluded that Articles 5(B) and 19(A) facially discriminate against interstate commerce by banning the importation of a class of tires that may be legally sold and used in Puerto Rico. In reaching that conclusion it rejected the Secretary’s argument that Law 171 is non-discriminatory because the 3/32” requirement applies equally to importers and sellers of used tires.   The argument was premised on the first sentence of Article 19(A) which states:

Every person who sells or imports tires ․ that do not have a minimum depth of 3/32” ․ shall pay a fine of $10.00 per tire.

The court rejected this interpretation of the statute as implausible on the strength of the second sentence of Article 19(A) which states:

This provision shall apply to those who fail to comply but have not had their bond executed, according to what is pointed out in Article 5(D) [which requires all tire importers to post a bond].

It read that provision as making the penalty applicable only to those who have filed bonds, i.e., importers of used tires.

We agree with the district court’s interpretation.   The reference to “those ․ who have not had their bond executed” and the cross-reference to Article 5(D) dealing with importers of used tires makes it clear that only those sellers of used tires who are also importers are the subject of Article 19(A).   Moreover, as UTI points out, it would make little sense for the legislature to penalize sellers of noncomplying used tires taken in trade-in (i.e., locally-generated used tires) for to do so would simply accelerate the time when used tires are discarded as scrap and dumped in a landfill.   On appeal, the Secretary merely reiterates that the penalty applies equally to sellers and to importers but has offered “only rhetoric, and not explanation.”   See Chemical Waste Management, Inc. v. Hunt, 504 U.S. 334, 343, 112 S.Ct. 2009, 119 L.Ed.2d 121 (1992).   We conclude, therefore, that Article 19(A) discriminates against sellers of imported used tires because only they and not sellers of locally-generated used tires are subjected to the penalty and, consequently, that Article 5(B) discriminates against importers of used tires because Law 171 singles them out in barring the import of tires with less than 3/32” tread depth.1

The district court, having concluded that Articles 5(B) and 19(A) are invalid, did not reach the bonding requirement under Article 5(D).   That article provides that “[e]very tire importer shall file ․ a bond ․ equivalent to the total cost of the handling and disposal of the imported product.   Should more than 10% of a representative sample of a shipment of imported tires fail[ ] to meet [the 3/32” standard] ․ the totality of the bond shall be executed.”   Plainly the bonding requirement imposes burdens, costs and risks on importers of used tires not borne by sellers of locally-generated used tires and thus provides added support for the conclusion that Articles 5(B), 5(D) and 19(A) together facially discriminate against interstate commerce.

The inexorable increase in the volume of solid wastes and the health and environmental consequences attendant on their disposal present legislatures and courts with vexing problems.   See Philadelphia v. New Jersey, 437 U.S. 617, 630, 98 S.Ct. 2531, 57 L.Ed.2d 475 (1978) (Rehnquist, J., dissenting).   We may assume that Puerto Rico’s purpose in enacting Law 171 was to serve the best interests of all its citizens.   But no matter how laudatory its purpose, “it may not be accomplished by discriminating against articles of commerce coming from outside the [Commonwealth] unless there is some reason, apart from their origin, to treat them differently.”   Id. at 626-27, 98 S.Ct. 2531.2  In Philadelphia, the Supreme Court struck down a New Jersey statute that prohibited the importation of waste originating out of state.   The crucial question, the Court said, was whether the statute was “basically a protectionist measure, or whether it can fairly be viewed as a law directed to legitimate local concerns, with effects upon interstate commerce that are only incidental.”   Id. at 624, 98 S.Ct. 2531.   To answer that question, the Court saw no need to resolve the dispute between the parties whether the purpose was to serve parochial economic interests or to save the environment for “the evil of protectionism can reside in legislative means as well as legislative ends.”   Id. at 626, 98 S.Ct. 2531.   New Jersey’s law, it held, fell within the area that the Commerce Clause puts off limits to state regulation because it “imposes on out-of-state commercial interests the full burden of conserving the State’s remaining landfill space.”   Id. at 628, 98 S.Ct. 2531.

Puerto Rico’s legislation barring the importation of certain used tires is essentially indistinguishable from New Jersey’s.3  It, too, places the burden of conserving its landfill space on those engaged in interstate commerce, the importers of used tires.   And it is essentially indistinguishable from the Alabama statute imposing an additional disposal fee on wastes generated outside the state, struck down in Chemical Waste.   See also Fort Gratiot Sanitary Landfill, Inc. v. Michigan Dept. of Natural Resources, 504 U.S. 353, 112 S.Ct. 2019, 119 L.Ed.2d 139 (1992) (striking down statute barring disposal of solid waste generated in another county);  Trailer Marine Transport Corp. v. Rivera Vazquez, 977 F.2d 1, 10 (1st Cir.1992).   The costs associated with the required bond and the penalty upon the sale of noncomplying imported tires, moreover, resemble a tariff on goods that may be lawfully sold in the state because they are imported from another state, “[t]he paradigmatic example of a law discriminating against interstate commerce.”  West Lynn Creamery, Inc. v. Healy, 512 U.S. 186, 193, 114 S.Ct. 2205, 129 L.Ed.2d 157 (1994).   Because the Secretary has failed to come forward with a showing that Articles 5(B), 5(D) and 19(A) advance a legitimate local purpose that cannot be adequately served by reasonable nondiscriminatory alternatives, see New Energy Co. v. Limbach, 486 U.S. 269, 278, 108 S.Ct. 1803, 100 L.Ed.2d 302 (1988), they cannot withstand scrutiny under the Commerce Clause.4

UTI’S CROSS-APPEAL

UTI cross-appeals from the district court’s denial of injunctive relief against enforcement of Articles 6 and 17.   We review the denial of a preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion.   See Ross-Simons of Warwick, Inc. v. Baccarat, Inc., 102 F.3d 12, 16 (1st Cir.1996).   The appealing party “bears the considerable burden of demonstrating that the District Court flouted” the four-part test for preliminary injunctive relief.   E.E.O.C. v. Astra USA, Inc., 94 F.3d 738, 743 (1st Cir.1996).   That test requires plaintiff to show probability of success on the merits as well as irreparable injury, the balance of harm tipping in plaintiff’s favor, and absence of adverse effect on the public interest.   See, e.g., Starlight Sugar, Inc. v. Soto, 114 F.3d 330, 331 (1st Cir.1997).

Article 6 imposes a charge on each imported tire, whether new or used, varying with the dimension of the wheel rim.   The revenue received from this charge is placed in an Adequate Disposal Tire Handling Fund, created under Article 17, to subsidize the cost of processing and recycling used tires.   The district court held that Article 6 does not discriminate against interstate commerce because the charge is imposed on all tires entering Puerto Rico, no tires being manufactured in Puerto Rico. See Exxon Corp. v. Governor of Maryland, 437 U.S. 117, 125, 98 S.Ct. 2207, 57 L.Ed.2d 91 (1978).   UTI argues that the charge discriminates because it is not imposed on locally-generated tires.   Those tires, of course, pay the charge when they enter Puerto Rico as new tires.   The district court found that those tires nevertheless enjoy an economic advantage because the charge is not passed on in the price of locally-generated used tires.   Whatever the basis for that finding, we find nothing discriminatory in a one-time charge imposed on the importation of every tire, new or used.   The only used tires that may enjoy an advantage are those that were imported new or used before Law 171 became effective (some of which were presumably imported by UTI).   But their advantage is temporary and is the result, not of discrimination, but, rather, of the inevitable phasing in of the new law.   Because we find that Article 6 “regulates evenhandedly to effectuate a legitimate local public interest, and its effects on interstate commerce are only incidental,” Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc., 397 U.S. 137, 142, 90 S.Ct. 844, 25 L.Ed.2d 174 (1970), we affirm the district court’s ruling denying injunctive relief.

Article 17(A)(1) provides for the distribution out of the Adequate Disposal Tire Handling Fund of the revenue derived from the import charge.   Out of the revenue collected, handlers of tires to be processed or recycled in Puerto Rico are to receive a maximum of 91% of the handling and disposal fee and exporters up to 46%.   UTI contends that this provision facially discriminates against tire exporters.   The district court found, and it is not disputed, that UTI is not a scrap tire exporter and thus not hurt by the law.   Accordingly, it lacks standing to attack this article.   See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560-61, 112 S.Ct. 2130, 119 L.Ed.2d 351 (1992).

UTI seeks to avoid its disability by arguing that Article 17 together with Article 6 create a tax-subsidy program similar to that found to be invalid in West Lynn Creamery, Inc. v. Healy, 512 U.S. 186, 114 S.Ct. 2205, 129 L.Ed.2d 157 (1994).  West Lynn struck down a Massachusetts milk pricing order which imposed an assessment on all milk sold by dealers in Massachusetts, two-thirds of which came from out of state, and then distributed all of it to Massachusetts dairy farmers.   Even though the assessment and the subsidy, separately, could be lawfully enacted, together they constituted a scheme under which out-of-state producers were required to subsidize competition by local high cost dairy farmers, neutralizing advantages possessed by lower cost out-of-state producers.   Id. at 194, 114 S.Ct. 2205.   The Puerto Rico import charge is distinguishable because it does not subsidize local dealers at the expense of those engaged in interstate commerce.5

CONCLUSION

We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s order respecting injunctive relief.

FOOTNOTES

1.  Because no new tires are manufactured in Puerto Rico, all new tires are imported along with used tires.   New tires in due course enter the local trade as locally-generated used tires when they are taken in trade-in or bought for resale by local tire dealers.   At that point, they compete with imported used tires.

2.  “Puerto Rico is subject to the constraints of the dormant Commerce Clause doctrine in the same fashion as the states.”  Trailer Marine Transport Corp. v. Rivera Vázquez, 977 F.2d 1, 7 (1st Cir.1992).

3.  The Secretary urges us to apply the balancing analysis explicated in Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc., 397 U.S. 137, 142, 90 S.Ct. 844, 25 L.Ed.2d 174 (1970).   That analysis-weighing burdens against benefits-is inapposite, however, because this is not a law that “regulates evenhandedly to effectuate a legitimate local public interest” whose “effects on interstate commerce are only incidental.”   Id. at 142, 90 S.Ct. 844.   While we do not doubt the benefits to Puerto Rico’s citizens from extending the useful life of their landfills, the Philadelphia line of cases teaches that the Commerce Clause does not permit those benefits to be achieved at the expense of interstate commerce through discriminatory legislative means.

4.  Severability is not an issue.   Article 22 states:  “The provisions of this Act are independent from one another, and should any of its provisions be declared unconstitutional ․ the decision ․ shall not affect or invalidate any of the remaining provisions, unless the Court’s decision so state[s] expressly.”

5.  The foregoing discussion sufficiently disposes of UTI’s claim that Articles 6 and 17 violate the due process and equal protection clauses.

SCHWARZER, Senior District Judge.

Tire Irony-Used Tires In 2016 Sell In record Numbers!

Used Tires News-Deerfield Beach,Fl-The sales of Used Tires In the USA and from the USA topped all time highs in  2016.Used Tire sellers in America have sold over 45 Milion Used Tires in 2016.A number even shocking to the new tire industry.Used tire sellers reported the figures to The National Asociation of Used Tire Dealers this week.Sales were not just up in the Us but,also in Japan , South Korea and France, Germany,Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland and Spain.The economic conditions world wide have pushed used tire sales through the roof.

American used tires sold over 30 million units retail in the US others were sold as exports.The fastest growing sector in used tire retailing is again in online used tire sales.Brick and mortar sed tire shops and flat fix stores also saw brisk increases in sales.Online sellers are using theri own websites,Ebay and Amazon as well as facebook to sell used tires.

The US is also an importer of used tires for both domestic use as there are sizes we need not available in the US tire recyling system.The Us imports more from Germany than any other country with Japan, Spain,France and Korea not far behind.An estimated ten million used tires were imported to the US last year.

 

 

Happy and Healthy New Year from www.UsedTires.com

Jersey Proposed Used Tire Law Bad For Florida Used Tire Dealers

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Usedtires.com-Used Tire News-Deerfield Beach,Fl-Deerfield-News.com-Deerfield Beach,Fl-This morning I awoke to an Email from Modern Tire Dealer ,a tire industry trade publication about a New Jersey law being proposed at the behest of The Rubber Manufacturers Association .Their past lobbying and it appears current “lobbying” appears to be a pay for play situation where they write the law with government officials worldwide.
Who is the RMA they are Goodyear,Bridgestone Firestone, Michelin, Pirelli North America etc. The RMA has only one interest to damage and hinder used tire sales.The phenomennon of used tire restrictions and import bans started in the eighties and nineties.The new tire industry saw an increase in the exportation of used tires and they systematically waged a campaign country by country in Central and South America to eliminate the sales of used tires by restrictions.Now the RMA is going state by state to try the same nonsense which will effect Florida used tire sellers who sell online,today being Cyber Monday it is important to bring sunshine to these anti free commerce, anti trust violating laws.
There are dozens of used tire dealers selling from Florida via ecommerce,direct online sales and some of those used tires are being sold in New Jersey. Used tires are not dangerous if properly inspected and installed.A tire simply is not bad ,because it is used or was taken off of a vehicle, Reuse is Recycling .Safe used tires are a viable alternative for a sector of the tire buying public.A consumer should not be penalized because they can not afford a new tire when a perfectly safe used tire is available,the used tire they want to purchase is safer than the bald worn out old tire they need to discard and are driving on,is what is dangerous.
Educate not legislate that is what used tire consumers and sellers need.

The following is reprinted from MODERN TIRE DEALER.

New Jersey Assembly Helps Define Unsafe Used Tires
Facebook Twitter Google+ Mail Posted on November 22, 2016
The New Jersey Assembly has left no doubt as to its view on unsafe used tires. By a vote of 72-0 on Nov. 21, it unanimously passed legislation to prohibit the sale of unsafe used tires that pose a risk to New Jersey motorists and the public.

The bill, A 3896, would impose a $500 fine for a first offense on any business that sells a tire that exhibits any one of several unsafe conditions such as worn-out tread, visible damage, or improper repairs. Subsequent violations may be enforced under the state’s Consumer Fraud Act.

The bill was introduced by Assemblywoman Shavonda E. Sumter (D-Paterson). It must now pass through the Senate to become law.

The bill is supported by the Rubber Manufacturers Association (RMA), the Tire Industry Association and the New Jersey Gas Station-C-Store-Automotive Association.

The National Highway Safety Administration says that worn-out tires are three times more likely to be involved in a crash than tires with sufficient tread depth. NHTSA crash statistics indicate that about 200 fatalities and 6,000 injuries are attributed to tire-related causes annually.

RMA research shows that more than 30 million used tires are available for sale nationally each year.

According to the RMA, the legislation does not ban all used tire sales. It targets used tires that have specific, well-established, unsafe conditions.

“This is a common-sense, pro-safety, pro-consumer bill,” said Anne Forristall Luke, RMA CEO and president. “Preventing these unsafe used tires from operating on New Jersey roads will reduce the risk of crashes and save lives. It’s that simple.”

Tires worn to 1/16th of an inch are considered worn-out and are dangerous because they no longer provide sufficient grip on the road, particularly under wet conditions. Tires with damage exposing steel belts or other internal components threaten a tire’s structural integrity. Improperly repaired tires can suffer loss of inflation pressure or have hidden damage that may contribute to tire failure. Tires with bulges indicate possible internal damage that can lead to tread separation.

“We are grateful to Assemblywoman Sumter for her commitment and hard work to pass this legislation to improve motorist and highway safety,” says Luke. “We also wish to thank Chairman Paul Moriarity (D-Turnersville) for his leadership in passing the bill in the Assembly Consumer Affairs Committee.

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Third Quarter Used Tires Sales Set Record

img_5076img_0644 Usedtires.com- Used Tire News Deerfield Beach Fl- The Third quarter used tires sold number is another record breaker topping 35 million used tires sold. This is a combination of used tires exported sold retail at used tire shops and internet sales.Again the fastest rising sector is the online direct to consumer used tires being sold.Used tires dealers have found a niche market through Amazon.com and ebay as well as used tire dealers own websites.Used tire exports and used tires wholesale b2b is the largest sector of the used tire industry accounting for over 80 percent of the totalusec tire msrket in and from US.

Used Tire News-Deerfield Beach Fl

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Even the used tire guy needs a nail repaired from his used tires once in a while.Used tires rough enough to withstand minor tire repairs and still have tens of thousands of miles of useful tread life left Even Michelin in their new commercial for “Pilots” say safe when new “safe when worn” negating the false propaganda new tire makers for decades have spewed about used tires and their safety.

Used tires have been tested driven on any defect that occurred in the manufacturing process which as we all know is way more dangerous to drivers. Over the course of tire manufacturing deaths from new tires and injuries caused are far greater than the almost nonexistent damages caused by used tires in service.

So Forty million US used tires sold in the past year were not sold to “fools” but to prudent consumers of Used Tires looking for an alternative to high priced new tires and recycling saving the environment while buying a used tire. Reuse, Reduce and Recycle. Buy American made used tires.

Used Tire Sales at all Time High!

Deerfield Beach,Fl-Used Tire News- Used Tire Sales over 23 Million for first half of 2016
The Natonal Used Tire Dealers Association reporting 2016 sales in excess of 23 Million for the first 6 months.
Used tires again selling like hotcakes due to economic factors selling at a higher pace a than ever.The lackluster economy has created not only a spike in Domestic Brick and Mortar used tires being sold but an INCREDIBLE JUMP IN ONLINE USED TIRES BEING SOLD at Amazon and ebay and sites like USEDTIRES.COM

Twenty years of a Permanent Injunction Against Puerto Rico Protecting “Used Tire Dealers”

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USEDTIRES.COM LOVES OUR FEDERAL JUDGE JUAN PEREZ GIMENEZ- Twenty years of a Permanent Injunction protecting used tire dealers Constitutional Rights to sell used tires.The ” Dormant Commerce Clause ” guarantees interstate commerce unfettered from unconstitutional state enacted laws.In 1996 The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico enacted law 171.Which was invented by New tire makers and “lobbied”local Legislators to eliminate the sale of used tires in Puerto Rico.This created a David v Goliath situation except our opponent became Puerto Rico not the new tires makers who had the Legislators propose and enact law 171 . Fortunately the system can work. There can be a remedy for the little guy if you perservere.The Constitutional question of interfering with interstate commerce even under the guise of protecting landfill space as laudable as it may be ,can not do so only by putting the burden on out of state sellers based on origin.Used tires coming from the US or elsewhere into Puerto Rico are protected by the US Constitution.

Twenty years of a Permanent Injunction Against Puerto Rico Protecting “Used Tire Dealers”

USED TIRE DEALERS GATHER AT REIFEN MESSE IN ESSEN GERMANY!

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USED TIRE NEWS-Derfield Beach Fl-This week in Essen Germany the worlds largest gathering of used tire dealers took place.Used Tire sellers and buyers from over 43 Countries took part in the Reifen Messe.Tire Industry giants and startups meet every other year for one of the largest Tire Industry Conventions in the world.
GEBRAUCHTREIFEN- ANKAUF UND VERKAUF-ALTREIFEN ENTSORGUNG

THE WORLD’S LEADING FAIR OF THE TIRE INDUSTRY

Things are running very smoothly at REIFEN, the world’s leading trade fair: Till May 27, 675 exhibitors from 43 countries will be showcasing their innovations for the sector at Messe Essen. The trade fair company has also hit a new personal best with regard to exhibitor numbers, which are at their highest in the history of REIFEN. Another record has been set by the event organisers in terms of the exhibition surface area: for the first time, REIFEN will be occupying just over 60,000 square metres. The proportion of international exhibitors has also remained high at over 70 per cent.
The REIFEN is the world’s undisputed leading fair of the tire industry and has been a meeting place for the industry’s decision-makers since 1960. In cooperation with the automechanika, it unlocks new markets and sales potential. REIFEN is both a showcase for innovations and source for new ideas.
REIFEN AT YOUTUBE
Youtube
< IMPRESSIONS REIFEN 2016 >

SPAINS SCRAP TIRE FIRE!

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SESENA SPAIN-One of Europes largest scrap tire piles has been set on fire.This phenomena is not unusual as the US and Europe and other countries have for decades have been challenged by scrap tires and how and what to do with scrap tires.
Lets clear up the difference between a Used Tire which is still a reeusable product that can be reused as a “used tire” on a vehicle,a scrap tire is a discarded unusable as a tire but may have use as Tire Derived Fuel or can be recycled in another way. Used Tires are a commodity and are sold worldwide.
The US still has many scrap tire piles.I personally have visited dozens some just in the last few years in Lancaster Pa and the Poconos.The largest pile I visited was in Boudin Maine had an estimated 25 Million scrap tires.
Scrap tire piles pose hazards such as mosquito infestation and potential fire risks.solution
Solution “Cradle to Grave Recycling” putting the responsiblity on the “Tire Makers” not the tire retailers and scrap tire processors.Goodyear,Firestone Michelin Pirelli Continetal,Toyo and all of the other brands you may not have heard of they made the product they need to be held responsible for its proper recycling this is the solution.
About 8,000 apartment dwellers had already left their homes in Sesena, a central town near Madrid, as the thick smoke poured out from the fire that started before dawn, the regional government of Castilla-La Mancha announced.Officials now have the tire fire under control.
The Spanish government has allowed thousands of residents to return to their homes following a massive tire fire that smothered the town of Sesena in toxic smoke.

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