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Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Too Much Progress

Posted by pattya on February 25, 2009

When I first moved to my neighborhood, it was the quietest place in town.  My house was way out on the outskirts, and even though my lot was a pretty average size, I had plenty of room because my neighbors all had the good sense to leave two lots in between theirs and mine when they bought.

Even though we were only about a twenty-minute commute from the city, everything was perfectly serene, which was nice for me since I came from the Midwest.  I’d been a little nervous about taking a job in a big city on the West Coast until I found this area.  The commute was the best part of living where I did.  Sure, it was twenty minutes, but there was no traffic, no cops and no construction as far as the eye could see.

Over the years, though, the commute has gotten worse and worse.  About four years, ago, people started moving into my neighborhood, which wasn’t so bad-I like having a good sized community-but the traffic to the city started getting a little bit heavier with each passing month.  It was no rush hour, but it was getting a little crowded on the two-lane highway.  Unfortunately, around the same time, people started moving out of the city and building out, and every few months the construction would creep farther out.

Now, they are building malls and condos all the way up to within a couple miles of my neighborhood, and they are widening the highway to accommodate the higher volume of traffic.  Instead of open land as far as the mountains on my commute, the only view I have is of scaffolding, cranes, gravel screening machines, compost screens and various other construction machines and materials.  The worse part is the bulldozers and portable screening machines on the highway going from one site to another that hold up traffic at all times of day.

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Save Your Back Using a Portable Material Screener

Posted by Buzz on July 22, 2008

 

In localized work where relatively small amounts of material need to be moved, workers may resort to using shovels. Though this is a low-tech, low-cost method, construction related injuries, many which are caused by shoveling, affect thousands of people every year. In addition to a portable screener that is easily transportable, lawnmower sized screeners are even more portable and can be taken by pickup truck to a location. With these, one does not have to endure the stress of sifting through materials by hand. The machine will do it automatically, without injuries, medical bills, and lost time.
 
Some topsoil screening machines can handle topsoil, sand, gravel, and compost. This provides an even better alternative and the machine can take on the dangerous work of sorting heavy materials. The mid-sized models can be hauled onto a large pickup as well. Smaller versions of the more industrial gravel screening machines, they provide a great advantage for workers in small-scale material screening projects – without the worry of people getting hurt using them. For companies, this means less time with workers out of the job, legal costs, and looking for new employees. Individuals and loved ones do not have to deal with the heartbreak and aggravation of a serious injury.
topsoil screening machine
 

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