The Old Chemist Who Made A Logging Giant Buy Back Its Own Waste-mdue - Chainityai

The Old Chemist Who Made A Logging Giant Buy Back Its Own Waste-mdue

The morning Dale Morrison first came to my porch, his shoes were cleaner than anything on Ridge Road.

That was the first thing I noticed.

Not the car.

Image

Not the company badge clipped to his belt.

The shoes.

Men who expect the world to stay clean under them always look surprised when the ground has memory.

He stood in front of my porch steps in May of 1986 and told me North Cascade Logging had a harmless problem.

Their new debarking machines were fast, he said.

Too fast for the old disposal schedule.

Every day those machines stripped logs and produced a slurry of bark, water, and pine resin that nobody wanted to haul eighty miles.

He called it organic byproduct.

I had worked thirty-eight years at Hemlock Creek Paper Mill, so I knew what men meant when they polished an ugly word.

Waste.

That was what he meant.

He looked past me at the twelve acres my father had left me.

Rocky soil.

Steep grade.

A long fence beside the company road.

To Dale, it looked unused.

To my father, it had been a vessel.

“The soil remembers,” he used to say when I was a boy and too impatient to hear him.

Dale did not know my father.

He knew trucking fees.

He knew tipping costs.

He knew that paying an old retired man two hundred dollars a month would save his company more than he wanted to say out loud.

He smiled like he was doing charity and told me the company would build a berm to keep the material contained.

Then came the line that stayed with me.

“Sign the storage deal, old man, or I’ll make sure this town forgets you ever mattered.”

He said it softly.

That made it worse.

A shouted insult is only anger.

A soft insult is policy.

I let him finish.

Then I said I would need a contract.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *