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Los Angeles Times Find Page 1 of 2 <br /> rNext Doc] <br /> —_..__.----..._._.._._......................__ ews 0 Site Index <br /> gin _._ <br /> ........ _........ ............_............_ <br /> Friday, April 30, 1999 <br /> State Panel Urges Disposal Fee Hike to $2 Per Tire <br /> By VIRGINIA ELLIS. Times Staff Writer <br /> ACRAMENTO--Searching for more money to pay for <br /> 0 cleaning up hazardous, illegal piles of scrap tires, a state <br /> environmental board asked the Legislature on Thursday <br /> to increase the fee on new car tires from a quarter to $2. <br /> ADVERTISEMENT The Integrated Waste Management Board, which oversees the <br /> - -- - ---- -- disposal of about 30-million tires that Californians cast off each <br /> Q year, voted unanimously to ask for the hike. <br /> Lawmakers are expected to approve the recommendation. <br /> The proposed increase was a surprise to the tire industry, which <br /> _ - -- - -- had expected the board to recommend that it be raised to 75 <br /> Q w cents. <br /> "No one had ever imagined that it was going to be $2," said Ed <br /> King, executive director of the Western States Tire and <br /> Automotive Service Assn. "The consumer is going to pay for it. <br /> The price of a set of tires will now go up $8." <br /> Board member David Roberti of Los Angeles, a former <br /> legislator, said the increase would allow the board to speed up <br /> two essential functions: the elimination of tire piles and the <br /> creation of new markets for scrap tires. <br /> Tire piles are considered a major environmental hazard because <br /> of their susceptibility to fire. Once ablaze, experts say, they can <br /> burn for months, spewing clouds of foul, toxic smoke. A pile of <br /> 7 million tires that caught fire near Tracy has been burning <br /> since August. <br /> The board is required by law to eliminate illegal tire piles and <br /> to reduce the number of scrap tires deposited in landfills by <br /> encouraging recycling and other uses. <br /> Old tires are used in the manufacture of rubberized asphalt, <br /> playground mats and hoses, but those markets are not big <br /> enough to take all the scrap tires California produces. <br /> Bonnie Holmes-Gen, a lobbyist for the Sierra Club of <br /> California, said her group supports the fee increase and the <br /> board's plans to crack down on tire piles and encourage new <br /> markets for old tires. <br /> But she criticized the board for supporting the use of tires to <br /> fuel kilns that make cement, although she acknowledged that <br /> the kilns have passed all requirements of local air pollution <br /> control boards. <br /> She said environmentalists fear that the permit process does not <br /> file://C:\WINDOWS\TEMP\latime.html 4/30/99 <br />