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Eryka Reid

2016 Fall Newsletter

November 15, 2016 By Eryka Reid

Public Outreach

Partnering with Concord, NH to spread the biosolids love!

On June 24th RMI attended the 42nd Annual Market Days Festival in downtown Concord, NH. We shared a table with Concord General Services for a day filled with music, food and learning about biosolids! RMI worked with a local marketing company to create infographics that outlined the benefits of clean water, why soil is so important and what keeps soil healthy. We have included a copy of that handout with this newsletter just for you!

On July 29th RMI partnered with Concord General Services, the North East Biosolids & Residuals Association (NEBRA) and the Biosolids Committee of the Town of Gilmanton for an informational tour. We started the day at the Concord Hall Street Wastewater Treatment Facility where Dan Driscoll, Wastewater Operations Supervisor and Kristin Noel, Laboratory/Industrial Pretreatment Technician, gave us an excellent start to finish tour of the processes that take place at a wastewater treatment facility. After the tour we traveled to an RMI farm site in Gilmanton where biosolids are land applied as a fertilizer. At the farm site Mike Potash, RMI’s Field Service Assistant, walked us through the steps he takes when spreading biosolids on a field and then demonstrated how the biosolids are applied with the spreader. RMI was thrilled to participate in this event and we truly enjoyed spending the day educating and answering questions about biosolids!

Welcome Steve Nurme to RMI!

RMI is pleased to welcome Steve Nurme to our team as the Sales Manager. Steve holds a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from Plymouth State University and has over 20 years of sales experience. Steve is excited to lead the RMI Sales Team as we grow and reach out to more and more customers across the northeast.

His goal is to provide solutions for Building Healthy Soils.  Steve has a strong Sales Team covering all types of customers including farmers, gravel pit owners, golf courses, topsoil purveyors, compost facilities, road construction crews, athletic fields, and even a few landowners that want specialized food plots to attract deer on their woodlots.

Steve and his wife Jen along with their three boys and two dogs reside in New London, New Hampshire.  When he is not with his family or working at RMI, Steve can be found coaching ice hockey or playing guitar in a local band. He is an eclectic guy.

Contact Steve:

steve.nurme@rmirecycles.com

603-748-6356

Littleton Goes Green

The Town of Littleton, NH has shifted from disposal to recycling of their biosolids.  On August 1st they began a partnership with RMI which is a more environmentally-friendly and sustainable option for managing the solids from their wastewater treatment facility (WWTF).  And by shifting to recycling the Town is expected to save $17,000 annually!

The biosolids from the Littleton WWTF are transported to the RMI facility in New Hampton and are processed with wood ash from biomass power plants. The biosolids and wood ash are blended together and the final product is sold to farmers for spreading on corn and hay fields to meet their nitrogen and potassium fertilizer needs.  Biosolids replenish the soil and provide important nutrients for improving crop yields.

Biosolids recycling is a win-win for municipalities and the farmers that choose to use this valuable fertilizer.  The Town of Littleton is committed to sustainability and this expansion of recycling demonstrates their triple net bottom line for benefitting the environment, community, and the economy.

Planning Ahead for Spring

“Taking a soil sample is an important step in determining what your fields need”

The health of your soil will de-termine how successful your crop will grow. RMI wants to ensure hardy crop growth based on balanced soil fertility and organic matter. Make sure your fields are sampled and analyzed to get the most out of your soils. If you are planning to order any Heart & Soil Agri-cultural Products from RMI, then let us get your fields sam-pled so we can help you deter-mine what is needed for your cropping plan.

Get ready for the planting and growing season the right way and have RMI take a soil sample of your fields! Our qualified Field Services Team will come out to your farm and take soil samples. RMI sends the samples to an inde-pendent lab for analysis, and then will supply you with a nutrient management recommendation for each field. This recommendation can be used to determine which products will work best for your soil health and crop yields.

 

Spreader Rentals!

To help with you application needs RMI has 4 spreaders that can be rented when purchasing Heart & Soil® Ag. Products:

  • Adams Pull Type Hydraulic Driven Litter Spreader with a 20 ton capacity
  • Two 2016 Stoltfuz Bulk Material Spreaders with 8 ton capacity
  • 2015 Stoltfuz Spreader with 4 ton spreading capacity

 

 

New Logo Coming Soon!

RMI has been building healthy soils since November 1994. After 22 years we are changing things up just a bit. So next time you see us we will have a whole new logo! Here’s a sneak peak at the future of RMI!

Resource Management, Inc. Logo

 

Long-lasting Partnerships

September 21, 2016 By Eryka Reid

Biomass power plants have been a staple in New England electricity generation for the past thirty years. In addition to producing local, clean, renewable energy, these biomass power plants create thousands of tons of wood ash – which is good news for farmers! RMI has partnered with these biomass power plants to supply thousands of tons pH+Plus Green wood ash to farmers throughout New England each year.

The success of this partnership is based on the commitment to quality and environmental stewardship shared by both RMI and the biomass plants. Today we recognize two biomass Plant Managers that have been great partners with RMI and our farmers – and we wish them well on their next adventures!

Russ and John have been good friends to RMI and we thank them for their contributions to the wood to energy world!

Russ Dowd is retiring after 24 years as Plant Manager from the Pinetree Power biomass plant in Tamworth, NH. Russ has been zealous in his commitment to the biomass industry, and is particularly noted for his support of the NH Timberland Owners Association. Russ will likely be skiing and traveling a lot more, and spending time with his grandkids!

 

John Irving is retiring as Plant Manager after 31 years with the Burlington Electric Department in northern Vermont. John’s steady leadership and thoughtful management has kept his team together operating the 50 megawatt McNeil Station with an excellent track record. John will be enjoying his retirement by hopping on a sailboat and heading down the coast to the Caribbean in October.

Drought and Biosolids

September 2, 2016 By Eryka Reid

It is safe to say that the summer of 2016 has been a tough summer for farmers throughout New Hampshire. In a Concord Monitor article posted on August 30, 2016, New Hampshire’s agriculture commissioner Lorraine Merrill states that “19 of the state’s 120 dairy farms have closed this year” due to low milk prices and the ongoing drought. And Bill Yeaton, of Yeaton Farm in Epsom, guesses that “7 or 8 more dairies in New Hampshire would close by year’s end.”

As you can see from the picture below extreme drought conditions persist in the southern portion of the state, while abnormally dry conditions continue through the central and northeast portions of the state. According to the NOAA Climate Prediction Center this drought is expected to continue until the end of November. With no end in sight farmers are looking for options.

Looking for ways to combat these struggles and to help farms stay afloat, New Hampshire farms are hoping for funding from the state’s milk farmers’ emergency relief fund. Thanks to Gov. Maggie Hassan farmers can now apply for emergency relief loans from the US Farm Service Agency. 

While these may be immediate fixes, what can be done to help solve these problems in the future? That is where biosolids come in!

For years farmers have reported that soils that use biosolids, as a soil amendment, appear to be more drought resistant than crops that received other soil amendments. Biosolids add organic matter that help absorb and store moisture which in turn improves the soil structure and the soils water holding capacity making it naturally drought resistant.

An example of corn grown in biosolids can be seen on the right. This corn is from a farm in Tunbridge, Vermont and as you can see their soil looks healthy and their corn looks even better!

Margaret from Maine by Joe Monninger

August 5, 2016 By Eryka Reid

Looking for a new book to add to your summer reading list? Well look no further than Margaret from Maine written by New Hampshire local Joe Monninger.

“Brought together by war, separated by duty, a love story for the ages.

Margaret Kennedy lives on a dairy farm in rural Maine. Her husband Thomas—injured in a war overseas—will never be the man he was. When President Obama signs a bill in support of wounded veterans, Margaret is invited to the nation’s capital. Charlie King, a handsome Foreign Service officer, volunteers to escort her. As the rhododendron blossoms along the Blue Ridge Highway, the unlikely pair fall in love—but Margaret cannot ignore the tug of her marriage vows.

Joseph Monninger’s Margaret from Maine is a page-turning romance that poignantly explores the dilemmas faced by those who serve our country—and the men and women who love them.”

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The best part about this book…it talks about biosolids!

In the background scenes of the tale, there unfolds a very minor bit about taking care of the farm and fertilizing the fields. On page 109 we read about Margaret talking with Ben her father-in-law, the dairy farmer, about using biosolids:

Ben says: “Noel Grummond came over from the county and wanted to talk about using biosolids out on the two north apple meadows”….“They’re looking for sites where they can spread biosolids and get them out of landfills. Has to be at least twenty acres and we have about that up there.  Some activists are worried about the heavy metals, mercury, mostly, and selenium, but I don’t know.  We don’t graze the livestock up there.  It’s all apples.”

“Do they pay something?”

“Yes. Not much, but they do.  We more or less leave the field empty for one summer.  There will be some smell.  But it’s supposed to be safe and it’s good for the soil if we ever want to use it.”

“Well, Noel’s a trustworthy sort.”

“I’ve always thought so.”

And later in the story (pg 228) another farmer wants to get in on the biosolids deal and visits Ben in the barn:

“Just checking in” Blake said, “and Donny wanted me to ask you about the biosolids deal.  He thought he might be able to use it on a field he has under contract up to the Davidson’s place.”……

“What’s he want to do with that pasture?” Ben asked.

“Turf, I guess.  Donny has the idea he can grow turf up here and sell it down in the Boston area or over in Portland.  Suburbs, I suppose.”

“Well, people from Boston will buy just about anything.”

“That so?”

“It’s what I hear.” Ben said, giving her a dry smile.  “But the biosolids might work on the Davidson place.  It would make the turf grow pretty thick.”

“That’s what Donny was thinking.  He figures it’s free fertilizer.”

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Pick up a copy today and get lost in this wonderful story of love, loss and farming!

https://www.amazon.com/Margaret-Maine-Novel-Joseph-Monninger/dp/0452298687

Water those bees!

July 20, 2016 By Eryka Reid

With the ability to tend to at least 2,000 flowers a day and with wings that beat up to 10,000 times per minute bees are amazing! But with all that hard works come thirst and have you ever considered where bees get their water from? Is there anything you can do to help?

Check out this article put together by healthy holistic living and see what you can do to make a difference in the day to day lives of these extremely important insects.

http://www.healthy-holistic-living.com/make-bee-waterer-help-hydrate-pollinators.html?t=NGMO

The pollinator garden we planted last year is doing its thing and we will definitely be adding some of those ingenious bee baths!

Cheers to pollinating and happy bees!

Littleton Goes Green with RMI!

July 13, 2016 By Eryka Reid

Thanks to Robert Blechl for the Caledonian Record for writing up this wonderful article! RMI is so excited to be working alongside the Littleton Wastewater Treatment Plant helping them recycle their biosolids!

Littleton Goes Green: Wastewater Plant Bio-Solids To Get Recycled

LITTLETON — In Littleton, what comes around will soon go around.

On Aug. 1, the Littleton Wastewater Treatment Plant will begin recycling its bio-solids, after entering into a contract with Resources Management Inc., of Holderness.

The Littleton plant generates about 800 tons of wastewater solids annually as a byproduct of its treatment process.

According to the figures, Littleton’s move from bio-solid disposal to recycling is expected to save the town roughly $17,000 annually, RMI president-owner Shelagh Connelly said Thursday.

“That translates to the tax rate,” said Littleton Board of Selectmen Chairman Milton Bratz.

For many years, Littleton did not recycle the plant’s bio-solids and had paid to dispose of them at a landfill.

Several weeks ago, however, the town entered into a contract with RMI – for three years, with three additional years renewable – after searching for a more environmental-friendly and sustainable option and putting the process out to bid.

Bio-solids have a high nitrogen content, similar to commercial fertilizer, and can be used on farm fields and golf courses, with the benefits of keeping soils healthy, recycling natural resources and promoting sustainable communities, said Connelly.

“The savings for Littleton adds up, and just as importantly, Littleton is going to a recycling program over disposal and is committed to the environmental and green aspects of beneficial use,” she said.

The bio-solids from Littleton will be transported to the RMI facility in New Hampton and will be processed with wood ash from the Pinetree Power Plant in Bethlehem.

“We blend it together and it gets tested for fertilizer,” said Connelly.

In N.H., corn and hayfield growers are the primary users and RMI has several farmers who buy the material that is like cow manure, she said.

Instead of commercial fertilizer, which can impact groundwater, the bio-solid blend that typically gets spread on fields in the spring or fall is a more natural solution, said Connelly.

RMI, founded in 1994 with the goal of finding sustainable solutions for communities, local agriculture and the environment, has contracts with municipalities across New England and into parts of New York State.

In N.H., Connelly estimates the company handles about 35 percent of the state’s daily flush.

In recent years, more communities have made the shift to bio-solid recycling, she said.

There is a growing awareness by communities that water treatment facilities are actually water resource recovery facilities, as nutrients are going in and there is a lot of energy that can be captured for uses that include electricity, she said.

Connect with Town of Littleton, NH:

Visit: http://www.townoflittleton.org/public_works.php

Connect with RMI:

On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rmirecycles

Visit: http://www.rmirecycles.com/

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