Photo of: John Dean

John Dean This is Me

View Title...

Anchorage Regional Composting Facility
Anchorage, Alaska

Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 3 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...

Employment History

View...

Board Membership and Affiliations

View...

 Web References

  1. 1. Grist | Out on a Limb | Trash gold mine | 10 June 1999
    www.gristmagazine.org/limb/lim - [Cached]

    Published on: 6/10/1999   Last Visited: 3/9/2004

    John Dean is never still when he's at his composting and recycling facility, tucked behind the airport in Anchorage, Alaska. Dressed in his usual baseball cap and a T-shirt that reads "Compost -- Because a Rind Is a Terrible Thing to Waste," Dean splits his days between the seat of a backhoe and his mobile-home office. One minute he's loading chocolate-brown compost into a customer's pickup. The next he's yelling at a worker who's scooping compost from the wrong row.

    John Dean and his Sneetch-starring machine.

    "Hey, not that pile," he shouts on a recent Saturday before sprinting over to tap the worker's shoulder.

    Dean then turns his attention to his brand-new glass crusher, which pulverizes glass containers, dumps the glass grit through a series of bucket conveyors, and runs it through sifting screens. He scoops up a golden handful and lets it run through his fingers. "Looks good," he says, flashing a grin before dashing off to the next task.

    Dean, 68, could be spending his retirement chasing balls around a golf course. Instead, the former engineer has chosen the challenge of turning Alaska's trash into products that can be sold and used right here in the state.

    "You've got to do what you like," says Dean, who is trim and bespectacled and looks like somebody's grandfather.
    ...
    But it works like a charm and is one of only four large-volume glass crushers in the country capable of making sandblasting grit to industry standards, Dean says.

    A pain in the glass.

    Anchorage residents use about 12,000 to 15,000 tons of glass containers annually. Dean expects to divert a substantial amount of that from the landfill and sell the resulting glass grit for sandblasting oil pipelines, ships, cars, and other machinery, cutting down on the need to import sand from the Lower 48.

    Dean also expects to sell glass grit for construction projects, septic fill, and even road work. He might also polish some of the larger chunks and sell them for decorative purposes. Eventually, he hopes to recycle full bottles of beer and wine discarded by companies because the contents are too old. He has an idea to pump the liquid over to his rows of compost, to feed the microbes that make the soil. "We'll get the bugs drunk," he jokes.

    Playing in the Dirt

    Dean just started crushing glass last month, but founded the Anchorage Regional Composting Facility six years ago. He began experimenting with compost about a decade ago because he couldn't bear to throw grass clippings into the landfill. Most people said composting couldn't happen on a large scale in Alaska. "It's too cold here," people said. "Can't be done."

    Dean didn't listen. He was composting on a small scale and teaching workshops at local garden stores when a group of horse owners and landscapers approached him with the idea of starting a composting facility. The landfill had raised its rates for green waste and people wanted a cheaper alternative. Dean thought it was worth a try. He won a $5,000 state grant to experiment with winter composting and spent about another $22,000 of his own money to get the project going.

    "It worked great," he said, even when temperatures dipped below zero. "The compost got hot." Dean's facility thrives today and his compost, which he calls "Alaska Gold," is prized by local gardeners.

    He figures he has about $1.5 million tied up in the nonprofit venture, through a combination of grants, loans, and some of his own money. The center hasn't made a profit yet, but Dean expects that will change once the glass operation is running at full capacity.
    ...
    Dean says he has always looked for unusual projects that few others wanted to gamble on. As reading Buckminster Fuller has taught him, it's best to find something that needs to be done and not worry about money. It will come, he says.
  2. 2. TRASH TO TREASURE III Conference
    www.can-o-worms-alaska.net/pro - [Cached]

    Published on: 10/3/1997   Last Visited: 4/12/2004

    John Dean, with the SBA and NorthRim Bank, put together a package that was approved.
    ...
    John Dean
    ...
    John Dean, President

    Anchorage Regional Composting Facility, Anchorage, AK

    The compost facility was started in October of 1993.
  3. 3. Grist | Out on a Limb | Trash gold mine | 10 June 1999
    www.gristmagazine.com/limb/lim - [Cached]

    Published on: 6/10/1999   Last Visited: 4/7/2004

    John Dean is never still when he's at his composting and recycling facility, tucked behind the airport in Anchorage, Alaska. Dressed in his usual baseball cap and a T-shirt that reads "Compost -- Because a Rind Is a Terrible Thing to Waste," Dean splits his days between the seat of a backhoe and his mobile-home office. One minute he's loading chocolate-brown compost into a customer's pickup. The next he's yelling at a worker who's scooping compost from the wrong row.

    John Dean and his Sneetch-starring machine.

    "Hey, not that pile," he shouts on a recent Saturday before sprinting over to tap the worker's shoulder.

    Dean then turns his attention to his brand-new glass crusher, which pulverizes glass containers, dumps the glass grit through a series of bucket conveyors, and runs it through sifting screens. He scoops up a golden handful and lets it run through his fingers. "Looks good," he says, flashing a grin before dashing off to the next task.

    Dean, 68, could be spending his retirement chasing balls around a golf course. Instead, the former engineer has chosen the challenge of turning Alaska's trash into products that can be sold and used right here in the state.

    "You've got to do what you like," says Dean, who is trim and bespectacled and looks like somebody's grandfather.
    ...
    But it works like a charm and is one of only four large-volume glass crushers in the country capable of making sandblasting grit to industry standards, Dean says.

    A pain in the glass.

    Anchorage residents use about 12,000 to 15,000 tons of glass containers annually. Dean expects to divert a substantial amount of that from the landfill and sell the resulting glass grit for sandblasting oil pipelines, ships, cars, and other machinery, cutting down on the need to import sand from the Lower 48.

    Dean also expects to sell glass grit for construction projects, septic fill, and even road work. He might also polish some of the larger chunks and sell them for decorative purposes. Eventually, he hopes to recycle full bottles of beer and wine discarded by companies because the contents are too old. He has an idea to pump the liquid over to his rows of compost, to feed the microbes that make the soil. "We'll get the bugs drunk," he jokes.

    Playing in the Dirt

    Dean just started crushing glass last month, but founded the Anchorage Regional Composting Facility six years ago. He began experimenting with compost about a decade ago because he couldn't bear to throw grass clippings into the landfill. Most people said composting couldn't happen on a large scale in Alaska. "It's too cold here," people said. "Can't be done."

    Dean didn't listen. He was composting on a small scale and teaching workshops at local garden stores when a group of horse owners and landscapers approached him with the idea of starting a composting facility. The landfill had raised its rates for green waste and people wanted a cheaper alternative. Dean thought it was worth a try. He won a $5,000 state grant to experiment with winter composting and spent about another $22,000 of his own money to get the project going.

    "It worked great," he said, even when temperatures dipped below zero. "The compost got hot." Dean's facility thrives today and his compost, which he calls "Alaska Gold," is prized by local gardeners.

    He figures he has about $1.5 million tied up in the nonprofit venture, through a combination of grants, loans, and some of his own money. The center hasn't made a profit yet, but Dean expects that will change once the glass operation is running at full capacity.
    ...
    Dean says he has always looked for unusual projects that few others wanted to gamble on. As reading Buckminster Fuller has taught him, it's best to find something that needs to be done and not worry about money. It will come, he says.

Recent Updates
People Updates  7-17-2008,   People Updates  7-16-2008,   People Updates  7-15-2008,   People Updates  7-14-2008,   People Updates  7-13-2008,   People Updates  7-12-2008,   People Updates  7-11-2008,   Recent People Updates
Recent Company Updates
Company Directory
Medical Devices & Equipment , Insurance , Software Development & Design ...