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While social responsibility is an
ideal to most companies, at BOOM Environmental Products, it
is considered part of a long-standing family tradition to develop
a business that creates valuable products with recycled material.
Founded by Reuben Weinstein. BOOM is a third generation
business committed to recycling and conservation. The Weinstein
family continues to develop innovative recycling methods and
techniques to launch their respective businesses. Beginning
some 85 years ago with Jacob Weinstein, the family established
A. Weinstein & Son, a wool trading and blending company.
He later branched off into buying recycled wool and selling
it to be processed in the manufacture of other products.
Following in this tradition, his son, Charles Weinstein. started
Trans American Spinning Mills in 1946 and broadened the company's
products through the purchase of recycled wool and synthetics
to manufacture yam and blankets. He developed a new niche,
utilizing nylon tow from World War II glider towing line and
recycling the material for the manufacture of yarn for sweaters.
In 1981, Charles and his son, Reuben launched American Engineering
Fabrics (AEF), dedicated to the manufacturing of polyester
and polypropylene geotextiles for the construction industry.
In the third generation, Reuben Weinstein, implemented this
same innovative thinking with BOOM Environmental Products.
When the Exxon Valdez hit the rocks, it instantly sparked
the emergence of the absorbents industry. Weinstein was ready
to meet the challenge by quickly turning the family's textile
company in a new direction.
In 1989, BOOM Environmental Products, a sales and distribution
arm of AEF, seized the opportunity to adapt its geotextile
materials into fiber-locked absorbents. At the time, melt-blown
polypropylene was the most commonly- used absorbent, but fiber-locked
absorbent proved more durable and reusable.
For marine spills, fiber-locked polypropylene is designed
with hydrophobic fibers ---- meaning it floats and won't absorb
water. The material can be custom-shaped, depending upon the
application.
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Its oil-cleanup fabrics were used at
the Exxon Valdez spill
During the Valdez spill, for example, it was
sewn into 10-foot-long booms that could be easily connected
to form as long a span as needed.
According to Weinstein, part of the reason Boom was able
to quickly respond to the Valdez spill was because it could
take advantage of Trans-American's industrial fabricating
capabilities.
Currently, BOOM produces a series of customized packages
to full fill various spill control needs. BOOM offers its
fiber- locked absorbent materials, in many sizes and applications,
such as pads, booms, rolls, sweeps, pillows. BOOM products
have applications in a variety of industries, including use
on the space shuttle during 1997.
To compete, the company tries to stay ahead in the market
and provide its customers with the convenience of purchasing
everything they need from one place. BOOM is a distributor
of drain blockers, degreasers, and pressure washers, which
when combined with BOOM's own products, make for a total spill
control system. BOOM's product line includes floating booms
hung with vinyl tuibidity curtains that keep silt from killing
fish during bottom dredging, boat bilge booms, barrel covers
and loose absorbents. In addition, BOOM has developed a unique
partnership with industrial launderers and dry cleaners in
California, Wisconsin, Alabama, Oklahoma, Ohio and Indiana.
For $150 a pound, customers have their used absorbent materials
dry cleaned and returned. After 100 cleanings, the materials
undergo a final treatment, ending up as rags or simply discarded.
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"This is complete recyclability. After
sopping up chemicals and oil, most absorbents are classified
as hazardous solid wastes and must be disposed of properly.
By dry cleaning or laundering the absorbents and returning them
to the user, companies face less liability because of improper
disposal, and the material does not end up in landfills. The
waste oil is refined, blended and used as fuel for firing cement
kilns; the used absorbents can be thrown out or used to make
asphalt," said Weinstein.
Now, the company is responding to the unique needs of a
new industry by designing a low-linting absorbent cloth for
use in high resolution media manufacturing and clean room
environments. BOOM was charged with the manufacture and custom
development of an absorbent to wipe up spills in the x ray
development and coating process.
"Everywhere that oil and chemicals are exchanged you're
going to have spills," said Weinstein, adding the company
has the products to clean up messes, whether its from manufacturing
or materials processing.
As testimony to the company's commitment to social responsibility,
BOOM Environmental Products recently announced a partnership
with the Falmouth Mass.-based Whale
Adoption Project as part of an on-going effort to preserve
and protect wildlife and the environment. Through this affiliation,
BOOM will donate a portion of its sales proceeds to the project,
an initiative designed to protect and preserve the many species
of the popular mammals.
"We pride ourselves in our commitment to customer satisfaction
and environmental protection," said Weinstein 'Through
our high quality, comprehensive line of products and knowledgeable
staff, we work as partners with our customers to provide innovative
solutions to spill control problems."
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