From Deseret News archives:

Super sandwich bale — Utah man's idea nets wholesale recycling

Published: Tuesday, April 22, 2008 1:19 a.m. MDT
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The Super Sandwich Bale (which Ashby developed with colleagues John Sasine, Chuck Jongert, Marvin Acey) works like this: separate recyclable items from Wal-Marts all over the country are put in big plastic bags that are then wired together in bales at each Wal-Mart store. These bags are then trucked to an MRF, where they are re-baled — bales containing just hangers, for example — and sent off by train to plants that then turn those items into decking or carpet or agricultural film used on farms as far away as China. At Rocky Mountain Recycling's facility on 900 South and 2900 West, the bales are stacked 18 feet high and are a microcosm of consumption: empty boxes of Rice Krispie Treats and laxatives, reams of shredded paper, plastic bags full of other plastic bags.

Rocky Mountain Recycling also has another facility on 900 West and 3100 South, where trucks dump off the "curbside recycling" trash produced by Salt Lake households. The place smells sweet, the result of all those tiny drops of leftover soda in the tens of thousands of pop bottles that pass through the facility each week. All the recyclable trash gets put into separate bales to be sent somewhere to be made into something else.

Amid the constant hum of the baler's conveyer belt, the facilities operate two shifts six days a week, because, first of all, the world keeps producing more and more stuff, and second, there's big money in recycling these days. Plastic wrapping brings 20 cents a pound, and there are tons of it. Ashby has made a good living off all this. These days, he drives a Porsche.

Story continues below
His favorite book among the 1,800 books in his home library is "The Secret," the aggressively upbeat best-selling book and DVD that postulates, as Ashby puts it "you inevitably experience what you consistently expect." Ashby is such a fan of the book and its philosophy that he has handed out some 250 of the DVDs to people he meets on his business travels. And he travels all the time: 138 nights in motel beds last year, traveling to Wal-Marts and recycling manufacturers across the globe.

Ashby's hope is that "as we drill further into the waste stream, pretty much everything can be recycled."


E-mail: jarvik@desnews.com

Recent comments

RE: Mark
That he drives a Porsche isn't a bad thing. You have to...

almostatic | Sept. 2, 2009 at 2:30 p.m.

I think that the problem is in the use of the fossil fuels to make...

overconsumed | April 23, 2008 at 1:44 p.m.

I think it's more correct to say that we're a decade behind the trend...

RE:underconsumptionist | April 22, 2008 at 1:55 p.m.

Image

Jeff Ashby, who started out driving garbage trucks, is revolutionizing recycling at some retailers.

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