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All I know is that JBI is starting to receive Crayola markers. The children wanted a recycling program and they got one. I cannot imagine they would ever cancel it now.
Why, of the things to suggest, would would pick something negative. There are many reasons to post those fees and that wasn't one of them. The main point being made is why would anyone want to pay tipping fees when they can give their scape plastic away for nothing.
Landfill Tipping Fees
PUBLISHED May 27, 2013 - WRN surveyed 327 MSW landfills across all 50 states, asking for the current one-time, per-ton, public tipping fee for municipal solid waste. We used the in-county rates for residents to find each state's average; the minimum charge rate used at some landfills was not included. At landfills that charge in cubic yards, we multiplied by the industry standard of 3.3. The PDF version includes map graphic, Excel version includes sortable data. Click to buy the 2013 Landfill Tipping Fees
State Highest Fee Lowest Fee Average Fee
1 Alabama $47.00 $26.00 $37.60
2 Alaska $85.00 $21.00 $60.88
3 Arizona $38.25 $30.00 $33.05
4 Arkansas $43.00 $33.00 $36.50
5 California $76.82 $34.37 $52.07
With that logic we'd all be living in caves with nothing.
I doubt all those children who signed the petition demanding a recycling program are investors and I don't think they're stupid at all.
so what you want is to ship that ton of markers to landfill? Wonder want all those children think of that idea.
Seems that the Crayola Colorcycle program is getting some attention.
(see video)
http://www.wasterecyclingnews.com/article/20130609/VIDEO/130609942/a-tip-of-the-glass-to-a-great-idea-that-never-took-off?utm_campaign=curbside_newsletter&utm_medium=curbside_email&utm_source=curbside_20130607&utm_content=article1
Sure - then why not just send everything to landfill and forget about the problem. Let those same children have to deal with the problem you prefer we create by not recycling. Every gallon JBII produces is cleaner and reduces the need to ship crude all the way from the middle east - you know the cost of that?
and 2 million markers are sold by Crayola every year.
Perhaps you can answer how much it would cost to continuously ship used plastic markers to a landfill.
I would say the cost to ship a box of markers is miniscule especially when you average every item on the truck. Are you saying that Fed-Ex should stop shipping all items? I would also suggest to you that every Fed-Ex truck has empty space some of which will now be utilized to ship the odd box of markers that kids petitioned to be recycled. The extra cost for the weight of a box of used markers to be placed in an underutilized shipment is infinitesimal.
well it would certainly be deemed a start-up if you compared JBII to other pyrolysis companies who what been in business much longer and are still not in start-up.
That may be true if the only item on the fed-ex truck was a box of markers - but I guess you already knew that they transport ten's of thousands of items together.
After school petition drive, Crayola finds way to recycle used markers
June 6, 2013
By Kerri Jansen @TheKerriJansen
Courtesy, Change.org After a campaign launched by California elementary school students gained nationwide support, Crayola announced the creation of a take-back program for used markers.
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Crayola has established "ColorCycle," a program to convert used markers into a liquid fuel source, after a campaign started by elementary school students exploded among Crayola consumers, parents and students.
A "Green Team" at Sun Valley Elementary School in San Rafael, Calif., created an online petition last May, and then a video, asking the international crayon and marker manufacturer to create a take-back program for the millions of spent markers generated each year.
At the time, Crayola told msnbc.com that "we do not have the facilities or a process that will enable us to offer a take-back program."
More than 90,000 signatures later, Crayola wrote to parent and Green Team adviser Land Wilson announcing it would coordinate the process of recovering used markers. Crayola's competitor, Dixon Ticonderoga Company, has also started a marker recycling program.
"Seeing the expression on the students' faces when they heard was priceless," Wilson said in a statement. "A year ago, they asked a company they love to step up and do the right thing. What's happened since has reached beyond what we imagined possible: thousands of signatures on their Change.org petition, major media coverage, endorsements, all because a small group of elementary school students from San Rafael asked them to help make the world a healthier, safer place."
Some of the shares that JOHN returned to the treasury went to an employee of JBI, Inc.
Nice to be part of that one in 10,000. Thanks for letting us know how very fortunate JBII shareholders are.
not to mention that the kids were demanding Crayola start a recycling program.
that's obviously wrong. Perhaps a little DD will assist.
no. Not sure what you're TRYING to communicate here. What does the Thorold MRF have to do with plastic being received from the farmers in Madison County who're having a problem recycling plastic on their farms.
Are you getting my point yet. Maybe you didn't understand the explanation that I provided the first time I offered it up
You don't know if the depreciation is accurate yet you think it is. You believe the CFO must have made a mistake but you're not sure what that mistake is.
If there is nothing to be gained on the bottom line and it has no effect on the net loss what it your point.
the investors
Some nice buying in the last hour.
just shy of 60,000 shares
$0.4550 6,545 OTO 15:44:07
$0.4550 5,000 OTO 15:40:16
$0.4500 2,500 OTO 15:40:09
$0.4500 2,500 OTO 15:39:39
$0.4500 17,500 OTO 15:35:21
$0.4500 2,500 OTO 15:35:15
$0.4400 17,500 OTO 15:35:09
$0.4400 2,500 OTO 15:35:03
$0.4400 2,546 OTO 15:03:18
I expect that many of you have the full document - perhaps one of them will provide it to you.
The market loves the fact that Rauber is gone and the writing on the wall that his travel mate will be following soon.
cheap shares - great time to average down.
Lots of speculation there and I believe you are wrong in most categories. I would have waited to post those thoughts until after the Q and May 15th deadline for the BoD.
Also number 3 is (we all believe) to come on line soon. This may allow for longer up-time and therefore higher revenues. Not to mention that HTF may also be a game changer.
#3 must nearing completion. I expect we'll see that this will be the model of the future.
You can buy a lot more shares now for a lot less money.
I expect that Processor # 3 should be ready any day now.
yeah - guess you're right - dam
we can only hope that that happened and he took the COO with him
You suggesting that mold on plastic is an issue?
His only COO experience is when he was the COO of finding a solution for Mold.
Tony Bogolin has served as Chief Operating Officer of the Company since June 2012. From 2009 until 2012, Mr. Bogolin served as the Director of Finance for RockTenn Company, where he was responsible for the oversight of all accounting and finance groups within the National Accounts group. From 2008 to 2009, Mr. Bogolin served as the Chief Operating Officer and Chief Finance Officer for Mold Solutions, where he was responsible for all finance and operations functions as well as business development and new market analysis. From 2006 to 2008, Mr. Bogolin was the Regional General Manager for McDaniel Fire Systems. From 2001 to 2005, he held various management positions at SimplexGrinnell. Mr. Bogolin has more than 27 years of operational and financial experience. He received a Bachelor of Science in Accounting in 1986 from Truman State University in Kirksville, Missouri.
Attention Investors/Potential Partners
Do your own research into this company then make your own decision whether to partner with or invest in JBII.
There are lots of facts to rely on.