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White Rock Adds Fourth Scale, Remote Ticket Printers
(January 2001)
To
help truckers make even better time, White Rock Quarries has added a fourth
outbound scale and installed remote ticket printers at the end of each weigh
station. For the majority of customers, this will eliminate the need to stop at
the scale house to pick up a weight ticket.
Future improvements will include the installation of a radio frequency card
system so most trucks can also bypass the scale house on the way in, further
reducing turnaround times.
White Rock Quarries' four outbound weigh stations
(top photo) and new remote ticket printers at each station (above right) mean
outbound trucks can get back on the road faster, with less delays at the either
the scales or the scale house.
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In Memoriam:
Ed Giersdorf: A Gentle Giant With A Love For Big Equipment
(November 2000)
In
the end, the big man with the big heart and a lifelong love for big equipment,
found that his heart just couldn’t quite keep up.
Ed Giersdorf, the burly Manager of North American Coal Corporation’s
Florida Dragline Operations and a close working associate of White Rock
Quarries, died of heart failure on November 18, 2000. He was 51.
Ed played an integral role in White Rock’s conversion from using several
smaller draglines to employing one massive 58-cu. yd. walking dragline to serve
its excavating needs. With an office at White Rock’s Miami facility, Ed
oversaw the daily management of the exclusive dragline operation.
"I had the highest regard for him, personally
and professionally," said Jim Hurley, WRQ’s Executive Vice President.
"He was a close friend and will be greatly missed," said WRQ’s
Operations Manager, Raymond Maddy.
Ed is survived by his wife, Carolee, two sons, Justin and Seth, among other
relatives.
A native of Washington State, Ed followed his father into the construction
industry, learning on the job at an early age.
After attending college on a football scholarship and serving in the military
as a Drill Sergeant, Ed went to work for a large coal mining company in
Centralia, Washington, where he was exposed to his first electric walking
draglines.
He quickly worked his way to an operating
position, but continued looking for ways to become even more involved. In 1974,
he took a salaried position and started working his way through the management
ranks.
At age 28, he reached the capacity of Mine Superintendent, making him
responsible for some of the largest equipment in the world.
He left the mining industry for about five years to work as a General
Superintendent for a large highway construction company, then returned in 1984
when he was hired by a subsidiary of The North American Coal Corporation in
North Dakota.
In 1995, he was chosen to head a new project in South Florida for the parent
company. He moved to Coral Springs and began working with White Rock Quarries to
assemble the work group that would operate and maintain the dragline.
His management and leadership were instrumental in establishing and
maintaining the successful dragline operations that are such a critical part of
White Rock’s success, and he will truly be missed.
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