Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Fryer grease rustlers on the prowl

Fryer grease rustlers on the prowl



OMAHA, Neb (Reuters) – Used fryer grease rustlers are roaming restaurant alleys again across the country.
Grease thefts have spiked whenever fuel prices climbed during the last four years and this spring is no different, said Tom Cook, president of the National Renderers Association.
"It's on the rise and it's because of higher oil prices," Cook told Reuters in a telephone interview. "I have one member who told me it's costing his business $1 million a year."
Recyclers typically contract with restaurants to pick up the waste product. The grease is cleaned and sold for use as biofuel, livestock feed and other products.
An Omaha recycler has filed theft reports with police in Omaha and Lincoln in Nebraska, and Sioux City, Iowa. Thieves recently beat him to about 4,200 pounds of used grease from six Lincoln fast-food restaurants.
Processed fryer oil is not trash. It is called yellow grease and is traded. Its value is driven by higher prices of gas and ethanol.
Recyclers and collectors pay restaurants about 18 cents a pound for grease. After further processing, it can be sold for 42 to 45 cents a pound, said Cook, who is based in Alexandria, Virginia.
Yellow grease was trading for less than 8 cents a pound in 2000.
Cook said he plans to conduct an industrywide survey to determine the extent of the losses. Many restaurant owners don't realize what they are losing and local law enforcement agencies have other crime-fighting priorities, he said.
One way to curb demand for stolen grease is to alert potential buyers, especially in the feed industry, to only buy from known sources to ensure the product they receive is free of impurities and moisture, Cook said.
"The price (of yellow grease) is real good right now," he said, "and those who steal it are really getting a good deal because they're not paying for it."
(Editing by Jerry Norton)

Friday, April 15, 2011

The winner in the Bonds’ trial is baseball

http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news;_ylt=AkYIGhVkNDheSlhcDYA2nS85nYcB?slug=jp-passan_bonds_barry_steroids_041411

The winner in the Bonds’ trial is baseball


Here is the War on Steroids in a nutshell: Greg Anderson, the personal trainer who refused to testify against Barry Bonds, spent more time in prison on contempt-of-court charges than any athlete convicted of steroid-related offenses and every chemist that manufactured the drugs.
The obstruction-of-justice charge that stuck to Bonds this week likely will lead to zero jail time, and it was typical of the latest in America’s unwinnable wars, all of which are wonderful in theory and defective in practice. Causes that require the hearts and minds of people fade when people stop caring, and by the time Bonds left a San Francisco courthouse, even the most ardent anti-steroid devotees had to ask: All that, for this?
Barry Bonds can wave with confidence he probably won't even draw jail time.
(Associated Press)
The millions of tax dollars wasted pursuing athletes instead of, you know, criminals. And the thousands of man-hours approved by government higher-ups, and their bosses, and their bosses’ bosses, to fulfill a cause that went stale years ago. All that bought a few low-level guilty verdicts.
The winner wasn’t the government, even if it got Bonds’ pelt, and the winner wasn’t Bonds, either, not with his reputation stained and the tire tracks of the alphabet agencies imprinted in his back. Major League Baseball, in a most curious twist, won the war aimed directly at the problem it created.
Baseball ignored a decade of its players treating themselves as pharmacological experiments. Records fell, outrage boiled and the sport trembled. The benefit of performance-enhancing drugs was obvious. They may have been just as prevalent in football, but quarterbacks weren’t throwing 90-yard spirals and cornerbacks weren’t running 3.9 in the 40. Integrity was compromised and the fans lost interest.
Then something happened: Steroid overload. Even the most rational fans that disliked the moral implications of PED use came back to the game. The public recognized that complete eradication of drugs was impossible, and forgave enough that criminal proceedings long past their due date left everyone yawning.
Five years ago, the Bonds trial would have led the evening news. Now it wasn’t the trial of the century, decade, year, month, or even day. The guilty verdict stirred interest more for its obtuseness – the jury nailed Bonds for dancing around a question in sworn testimony, the same question he later answered – than the fact that the single-season and career home run leader was convicted in a federal court.
Almost certainly Roger Clemens’ trial will prove the same anticlimax, a prosecution more for the sake of the prosecutors and law enforcement than the public. That’s what the War on Steroids turned into: a vanity game. The initial pursuit to help MLB clean itself up was fair, because even when shamed publicly baseball took years to adopt a worthwhile drug program. When the original BALCO case became a feeder for the government’s pursuit of Bonds, and when the Mitchell Report birthed another round of Congressional grandstanding – of the people, by the people and for the people, huh? – it got out of hand.
These cases were supposed to provide closure, and in a sense they did: The majority of people realized they really don’t care anymore. As baseball’s biggest scandal in decades nears its end, the only chatter left about steroids concerns their effect on Hall of Fame voting, a fairly benign consequence for such a hullabaloo.
The tarnish on the game lessens by the day. While Bonds’ prime is not a time MLB embraces and his records stand aside an invisible asterisk, it can be argued that baseball lost more fans to the strike in 1994 than to steroid indignation. Attendance, after all, suffered far worse after the strike than it did amid any of the steroid issues.
In the future, the odd PED case will pop up, and if the user is a superstar, like Manny Ramirez(notes), the news will serve as a reminder of these last two decades, when embarrassment abounded. The only question is whose was worse: that of the players who torpedoed their reputations by injecting and ingesting PEDs, or of the myriad others in suits whose boldness turned hypocritical?
The same selfishness that pervaded steroid users afflicted those on the opposite side. The anti-doping fiends profited off the drug testing they insisted upon. The moral police used the time-honored canard – the safety of children – to advocate against PED use. The cops and government turned power into score-settling trials.
It’s no wonder baseball came out so well. Turns out MLB was no worse than the people running the War on Steroids.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Baseball 2011

THE ONDECK CIRCLE

This is it for MLB,Little League ,High School and College Baseball!

Are you ready for the season? Have you got your gameplan and tickets ? What teams are you following? This is my sample gameplan . You want to spread out your different levels of Fandom . I follow my High School alma Mata so I check out their away games in the town I live in,fortunately they play in the town I work in, against the school I work at, shhhh!!! As for my college its a tough one , unless I play hookey one day and skip down to the Northshore of Boston.

The kids are at three different levels so their will be many minivan shuffles over the next ten to twelve weeks. Their will be lots of double shuffling! We love the Red Sox and we are excited about the Futures at Fenway in July 10,2010 and we also love the Seadogs. The Dogs play Harrisburg on June 28,2010 in Portland . Stephen Strassburg will probably be gone by then to the Majors,but we love the Dogs!

We got three standing room Sox Pax and we will enjoy them .Baseball camp is in July! Throw in the two or three more Seadogs games throughout the summer. Plus we have our local New England College Baseball League Affiliate the Sanford Mainers and we are set for a great season! Follow your teams have fun and stay limber. You never know when you have to throw a batting Practice. Also sign up for your basball camps early its a great time for the kids. I like the Sanford Mainers camp. I will give you a link to the Mainers WWW.SANFORDMAINERS.COM Have fun and score a game or two with the little ones or your friends or other half.