(a) The department of environment and conservation is directed to develop a program to manage the waste tire program for beneficial end use.

Ask a legal question, get an answer ASAP!
Click here to chat with a lawyer about your rights.

Terms Used In Tennessee Code 68-211-867

  • Board: means a board, established to manage the affairs of a municipal solid waste management region, except in §. See Tennessee Code 68-211-802
  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Department: means the department of environment and conservation. See Tennessee Code 68-211-802
  • Landfill: means a facility, permitted pursuant to part 1 of this chapter, where solid wastes are disposed of by burial in excavated pits or trenches or by placement on land and covering with soil or other approved material. See Tennessee Code 68-211-802
  • Recycling: means the process by which recovered materials are transformed into new products, including the collection, separation, processing, and reuse of recovered materials either directly or as raw materials for the manufacture of new products. See Tennessee Code 68-211-802
  • Shredded: means shredded, chipped, chopped, quartered, sliced at least circumferentially, or otherwise processed and rendered not whole in a manner to effectively prevent a tire from floating, as determined by the board. See Tennessee Code 68-211-802
  • Tire: means the continuous solid or pneumatic rubber covering encircling the wheel of a motor vehicle. See Tennessee Code 68-211-802
  • Waste tire: means a tire that is no longer suitable for its original intended purpose because of wear, damage or defect. See Tennessee Code 68-211-802
(b) For the purposes of this section, “beneficial end use” includes the following:

(1) Cement manufacturing;
(2) Burning of tire-derived fuel in contained industrial boilers for the capture of energy;
(3) Production of tire-derived fuel, provided the department approves the planned use of the processed tire material;
(4) The crumbling or pyrolysis of tire material, provided the processor provides for the planned use of the processed tire material under such requirements established by the department;
(5) Recreational applications, including, but not limited to, playgrounds, running tracks, and walking paths; or
(6) Any use otherwise deemed appropriate by the department of environment and conservation and for which either the board has promulgated rules or the department has developed and published policies; provided, that this section shall not be construed to require or mandate the use of products or materials resulting from waste tires. The board shall not promulgate any rules, and the department shall not establish any policies mandating the use of products or materials resulting from waste tires. It is the specific intent of the general assembly that any use of products resulting from the waste tire program is entirely voluntary on the part of the end user.
(c)

(1) The department is authorized to use funds available from the solid waste management fund to contract directly with an approved beneficial end user or its designated agent for recycling of waste tires. Each beneficial end user or agent awarded such a contract shall demonstrate to the department’s satisfaction the ability to provide collection, management and transportation to its facility of all eligible and available waste tires generated within the area or county specified by the department. Any such contract shall be subject to approval by the county legislative body of each county in whose territory the contract shall be operative. Any such contract shall also require an appropriate performance bond from any entity producing tire-derived fuel or crumbling or pyrolysis of tire material to ensure proper storage, transportation and ultimate sale or disposal of such materials.
(2) From funds available from the solid waste management fund, the department may provide grants to assist counties in locating, collecting and appropriately disposing of waste tires. Any county receiving a grant under this subdivision (c)(2) after July 1, 2000, shall not assess a tipping fee on the waste tires received at a county waste tire collection site so long as the amount of the grant covers the cost of the county’s waste tire management program.
(3) From funds available from the solid waste management fund, the department may provide grants to local education agencies, municipalities or counties to utilize recycled shredded tires for recreational applications.
(4) Any county or entity requesting or applying for a grant or entering a contract with the department shall submit, prior to being approved for a grant or contract, a workplan and budget to reflect the expenditures of the grant or contract. The grants or contracts are to fulfill the objective of recycling waste tires and to assure that all expenditures of the contracts, grants, or any additional local tipping fees are not exceeding the cost of the county’s waste tire management program.
(d)

(1) A landfill shall not accept whole, unshredded waste tires for disposal. Landfill operators shall segregate whole, unshredded waste tires at landfills and provide a temporary storage area for such tires until transported to an appropriate facility to be used for an approved beneficial end use as defined in this section, or the tires are shredded and disposed of pursuant to subdivision (d)(2) and regulations promulgated by the board.
(2) A county may not dispose of shredded waste tires in a landfill after July 1, 2002, if the county’s net cost for shredding, transporting and disposing of waste tires exceeds the cost of an available beneficial end use. Nothing in this subsection (d) shall prohibit a county from electing to participate in a beneficial end use for waste tires at a cost that exceeds the county’s net cost for shredding, transporting and disposing of waste tires in a landfill.