Cement plant closure to be permanent ... Holcim took over operations from St. Lawrence Cement in January 2008. Cement has been produced at the facility for about a century, and the plant was ...
A little-known fact about the Waterfront is that the southernmost piece along the River was owned by the City until the early 1990s. In an amazingly short-sighted move, Hudson sold this prime real estate for a rock-bottom price to Independent Cement, later renamed St. Lawrence Cement, now known as Holcim.
Aug 07, 2000· The news comes as St. Lawrence Cement is planning to move its manufacturing operations from the Smith's Landing plant to a proposed new $300 million plant across the river in the Columbia County ...
Jan 16, 2009· New York state is home to three Portland cement plants: the LaFarge plant in Ravena, the St. Lawrence plant in Catskill, and the Glens Falls plant in Glens Falls. Collectively, these three plants discharge roughly 500 pounds of mercury emissions in New York's air each year – about 20 percent of all mercury emitted annually in the state.
Lawrence Cement Forum, 2002 Below is information on a forum concerning a proposal by St. Lawrence Cement to build a mega plant in Hudson, NY. It would have polluted the air and water of the East Coast all the way to Maine.
Hudson is a city located along the west border of Columbia County, New York, United States.As of the 2010 census it had a population of 6,713, the second-largest in the county, following the nearby town of Kinderhook.Located on the east side of the Hudson River and 120 miles from the Atlantic Ocean, it was named for the river and its namesake explorer Henry Hudson.
St. Lawrence Cement Company, LLC 4303 Route 9 Hudson, New York 12534 Re: F-2004-0863 Army Corps of Engineers/New York District Permit Application #2000-00943-YN St. Lawrence Cement Company, LLC - Greenport Project - Hudson River Town of Greenport/City of Hudson, Columbia County and Town of Catskill, Greene County DEC #4-1040-000011
ST. LAWRENCE CEMENT PLANT DEFEATED After fighting for over six years to build a cement plant on the Hudson waterfront in the community of Hudson, St. Lawrence Cement has officially withdrawn its application for the plant. The New York State Department of State found the [.]
GREENPORT - Officials at St. Lawrence Cement Tuesday outlined elements of the Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the plant the company hopes to build 100 feet below the ridgeline of
CRH Canada and US is proud to provide cement to customers across Canada and in the US from our cement plants in Joliette, Québec and Mississauga, Ontario. The plants are supported by a broad distribution network of 14 terminals located across Canada and the US.
Hudson River Power Plants: Permitted to Pollute . Together the four major power plants on the Hudson River between Haverstraw and Marlboro withdraw about 5 billion gallons of cooling water per day at peak – four billion in Westchester-Rockland alone – and kill most of the aquatic life in .
Dec 07, 2001· These proceedings concern the application of St. Lawrence Cement Co., LLC (SLC) to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC or Department) for permits to construct and operate a cement manufacturing plant in the Town of Greenport (Town) and the City of Hudson (City) in Columbia County to produce approximately 2.6 million ...
However, there are also a number of plants listed that stopped burning tires, have a permit to burn tires, or have been determined "at risk" for tire incineration by the source researchers. We will keep this list as up to date as possible, but there is always a possibility that the information for any given facility is .
Get this from a library! Stopping the plant : the St. Lawrence Cement controversy and the battle for quality of life in the Hudson Valley. [Miriam D Silverman]
Nov 18, 2003· Editorial urges Gov George Pataki to block construction of St Lawrence Cement plant just south of Hudson, NY, saying it will be eyesore in region increasingly dependent on .
Friends of Hudson, the 4,000-member citizens group best known for its key role in the successful six-year fight to prevent a coal-fired proposal by St. Lawrence Cement in Columbia County, will aggressively analyze the application and encourage citizens to make their views known to the State.
New York state officials called on St Lawrence Cement to provide more data to better gauge the environmental impact a proposed expansion of its Hudson, NY, plant would have on the surrounding area including the Northwest Corner of Connecticut.
Apr 20, 2005· A Canadian company, St. Lawrence Cement, wanted to build a plant that could produce two million tons of cement a year in the town of Greenport and along a stretch of riverfront in the city of Hudson.
Dec 06, 2002· Saint Lawrence Cement Company, LLC - First Interim Decision, December 6, 2002 First Interim Decision, December 6, 2002. STATE OF NEW YORK DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION 625 Broadway Albany, New York 12233-1010. In the Matter - of - the Application for a State facility permit for air pollution control pursuant to Article 19 of the
St. Lawrence Cement spent $58 million (U.S.) dollars over more than six years in a failed effort to build a massive, coal-fired plant that would have overwhelmed the small but historic City of Hudson (NY) — population 7,500.
Apr 13, 2017· The LeHigh Cement plant was first opened by the Alsen American Portland Cement Company in 1902, two years after the German company bought the land. The owner built apartments for the workers, and about 300 mostly Eastern European immigrants lived in the hamlet in the 1910s, according to the Catskill Daily Mail.
Cranesville Block is Upstate New York's concrete, block, aggregate supplier. Located from Hudson Valley to Capital Region to Western NY, Cranesville delivers and pours concrete for all job types and sizes. Cranesville is a supplier of ready mix concrete in Albany, Amsterdam, Schenectady, Troy, Syra
HUDSON, NEW YORK AND MONT ROYAL, QUEBEC -- In a press release issued late Sunday afternoon, the Canadian-based and Swiss-owned St. Lawrence Cement company officially announced that it is abandoning its six-and-a-half-year quest to build a massive new coal-fired cement plant in Hudson and Greenport, New York, along the majestic Hudson River.
Canada's St. Lawrence Cement Group Inc it has been denied a key zoning application to build a cement plant in New York state to replace an older one in nearby Catskill. The company said New York's Department of State had said late on Tuesday the replacement plant would not be consistent with its coastal zone policies.