 
May/June 2008
Vol. 18, No. 4.
Tread Lightly on … the Air
A look at the latest buzz phrase defining our species’ impact on the world, our “carbon footprint”
By Daniel P. Duffy
Peer-Reviewed Feature: Clovis Landfill Reclamation Project
This landfill reclamation will pay for itself over timeand the project will also reap non-monetary benefits.
By Luke Serpa
Automating Scale-House Operations at Landfills
New, efficient technology is changing the way many landfills size up waste.
By Carol Brzozowski
Complete Automation in Reach
Several haulers find advances in equipment are increasing their profitability and putting them a step closer to complete automation.
By Don Talend
Landfill Compactors and Heavy Equipment
Compact, compact, compactand save landfill airspace. It’s an old song and we all know the words.
By Neal Bolton
Making a HaulProfitably
With margin pressures greater than ever, haulers learn what transfer trailer
configurations work best for their specific operations.
By Don Talend
The World of Commercial and Institutional Collections
Nonresidential collections have unique demandsfor the collector and the
customer alike.
By Chace Anderson
Is the Climate Finally Right for Waste-to-Energy?
This fledgling industry’s future is looking greener every day.
By Ed Ritchie
Transitions in the Stream
Changes in recycling patterns require preparations, operationsand results.
By Daniel P. Duffy
Rolloffs: Essential Elements on the MSW Landscape
The rolloff container is the silent partner, often in the background on job sites.
By Peter Hildebrandt
Peer-Reviewed Feature: Life Cycle Analysis for LFG
The effect of man-made emissions on the phenomenon of climate change is readily evident in the burgeoning carbon market.
By Tej Gidda, Tanya Bogoslowski, Duncan Millar, and Frederick A. Mosher
Routing for the Future
When success demands efficiency, businesses increasingly turn to technology to remain competitive.
By Lori Lovely
Peer-Reviewed Feature: Expecting the Unexpected
Two catastrophic events can completely alter the responsibility, costs, and emergency responses needed during post closure.
By Robert J. Schoenberger

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