Scrap Company Makes Plans for Aleutian Clean-Up

Tuesday, July 02 2013


Crushed scrap sits next to Ron Moore's metal compactor. (Audrey Carlsen/KUCB)

Over the past year, a Virginia-based company has been helping Unalaska get rid of millions of pounds of scrap metal. They’re finally nearing the finish line, and now, they’re looking to expand to nearby islands.

It’s a problem that Unalaska has been dealing with for years – how to get rid of the huge volumes of unwanted scrap metal that pile up around the city. Shipping anything off of the island is expensive, and given the low price of scrap metal, it’s been hard to find a company that thinks it’s worth it.

"I think if it was a non-family business coming up here, I doubt they’d be able to do it," says Richard Moore. He’s the son of Ron Moore, who owns a scrapping company based out of Norfolk, Virginia. The Moores approached the city last year with an offer to help, and got a $60,000 contract in return. In March 2012, the whole family moved to Unalaska to begin collecting, removing, and selling scrap metal. Richard Moore says they ended up staying much longer than expected.

"We originally planned to be here for about three months and we’re still here. It started [out] a clean-up project and now just more scrap just keeps generating and we haven’t got a chance to get it all cleaned up yet," says Moore.

Moore estimates that his father’s company has shipped 200 to 300 loads, totalling eight to nine million pounds of scrap metal. That includes around 600 crushed vehicles, as well as old processing machinery, boat trailers, yard equipment, and home appliances.

City officials estimate that 70 to 75 percent of the island’s scrap has been removed since last summer. But there’s still more to be done.

The family plans to stay in Unalaska for another year or so before heading east to Sand Point to do a similar clean-up. Moore says that after that, they’ll take on other communities.

"Actually, we’d like to clean up the entire Aleutian chain, to tell you the truth. We’re going to try to get everybody cleaned up for years to come," says Moore.

But although demand is high, Ron Moore – that’s Richard Moore’s father – says metal scrapping isn’t a very lucrative endeavour in the Aleutians. At least not for now.

"It’s not making a whole lot of money, I can tell you that," says Moore. "Price of steel is way down."

With the variable pricing of metals, Moore says it’s a huge gamble to rent land in Alaska to store the scrap while waiting for prices to go back up. But he says he can afford to eat the losses thanks to reduced shipping rates from Samson Tug and Barge – the company responsible for transporting Moore’s collected scrap from Unalaska down to Seattle.

So while Moore isn’t making a fortune recycling metal in the Aleutians, he says he’s sticking around on principle.

"We tell you we gonna do something, we gonna do it," says Moore. "I told you I’m gonna clean up Dutch Harbor, I’m gonna clean it up."

Which means that Moore might be around for quite a while. Without a longer-term solution to the problem of scrap metal accumulation, Unalaska will probably be needing his services again in the near future.


Brian Delsocora on Tuesday, May 13 2014:

dorothy yang on Monday, July 08 2013:
At least it's scrap metal and not toxic waste that needs to be hauled away.
Hi Dorothy yang just replying on you're comment about scraping metal is just scraping needless to say it's more than that I've work with this guys and we sometimes do encounter such hazardous and toxic material, everyday had its on risk too think about where dealing with steel and out there where all of the element being thrown at us anything goes all I'm saying is all job has it's on risk but scraping like Moore's are doing to Aleutian islands is good deeds indeed... Thanks

dorothea Berntsen on Thursday, January 23 2014:

I live in King Cove, AK and I work with the Belkofski Tribe in the Environmental Dept as an Assistant. We are trying to get enough scrap metal to do a haul out, but unfortunately there isn't enough to make it worth it. I ran across this email and we would like to join in this process if it still going. Please contact me and let me know if anyone is interested in helping us out that would be great.

dorothy yang on Monday, July 08 2013:

At least it's scrap metal and not toxic waste that needs to be hauled away.

an appreciative local... on Saturday, July 06 2013:

A big Thank You to the whole Moore family for cleaning up "our" island. It has made a noticable difference. Thanks Again!

PayAttention on Tuesday, July 02 2013:

Nice work Ron, you are much appreciated in Unalaska.

Vikinggirl on Tuesday, July 02 2013:

The Moore family has done a tremendous job removing scrap from our island. The 60 thousand dollar contract with the City was for items at the landfill only and didn't even cover the cost of shipping the specialized equipment from Virginia to Unalaska. Ron, Yvonne and their sons Robert and Richard have been working on their own for most of the last year to clean up the rest of the island, and it is at a significant financial risk to the family. Like Ron said, if they say they are going to do something, they do it.
We are so very lucky to have them! Thank you to the Moore family for cleaning up a mess that many said could not be done.


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