Titan to host community information workshops
Carolinas Cement Company (Titan) to host three community information workshops in September and October
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 12, 2008
CONTACT:
Kate McClain
Corporate Communications
kmcclain@titanamerica.com
(757) 858-6517
WILMINGTON, N.C. - Carolinas Cement Company will host three community
information workshops this fall, announced Kate McClain, corporate
communications manager for Titan America LLC. Carolinas Cement Company is
undergoing due diligence to receive state and federal permits for a
state-of-the-art cement manufacturing facility to be located on the former
Ideal Cement site in Castle Hayne, N.C.
Carolinas Cement Company will host the workshops to educate New Hanover
County residents about construction plans and to give local residents an
opportunity to interact one-on-one with company representatives. Topics to
be discussed include employment and vendor opportunities, the cement
manufacturing process, environmental and community stewardship, economic
benefits and company history.
Workshop dates and locations include:
Tuesday, Sep. 16, 4 - 8 p.m.
North Branch, Cape Fear Community College
Castle Hayne
Tuesday, Oct. 7, 4 - 8 p.m.
Schwartz Center, Cape Fear Community College
Downtown Wilmington
Monday, Oct. 27, 4 - 8 p.m.
UNCW Executive Development Center
Wilmington
Carolinas Cement Company is a subsidiary of Titan America LLC. Titan America
LLC is headquartered in Norfolk, Va. and is one of the premier heavy
building materials producers in the eastern United States. Titan America
operations include cement plants, ready-mixed concrete plants, concrete
block plants, quarries, import and rail terminals and fly ash benefication
facilities. For more information about Carolinas Cement, visit
www.carolinascementproject.com.

Here’s an excerpt from an email Titan circulated today. The spin is laughable. Did everyone see today’s paper about the US Fish and Wildlife Service getting involved?
Carolinas Cement has announced plans to construct a
state-of-the-art cement plant in Castle Hayne. The plant
will create high-paying jobs, sustainable tax revenues and
at the same time - respect the environment and conserve
natural resources.
To introduce ourselves to the community, Carolinas Cement
will host three Community Information Workshops this fall.
Company representatives and industry experts will be on
hand to provide an overview of the project and answer
any questions you may have.
[Reply]
I did see the piece in the paper today, Ranald - That looks like a pormising development.
I also just heard from a parent whose child plays in the Port City Soccer league — Apparently Titan has sponsored PCS this year and their name (CCC) appears on the kids jerseys.
Particulate matter and neurotoxins are apple pie!
[Reply]
I suppose any business can sponsor a team, but it’s a bit weird to find out that a cement company that still doesn’t exist (at least not locally) sponsors local soccer instead of the usual Joe’s Garage or Rocco’s Pizza or Mandy’s Market.
And just to get more Orwellian, CCC is historically known as the Civilian Conservation Corps, FDR’s workforce often credited with preserving the nation’s natural resources.
[Reply]
Titan issued another press release today, this one featuring defensive posturing, media intimidation and obfuscation:
Carolinas Cement issues clarification of government agencies’
recommendations on wetlands mitigation
WILMINGTON, N.C. – Carolinas Cement has announced a correction to recent media reports that claimed that three state and federal organizations recommended the company identify a new site for its proposed cement plant off of Holly Shelter Road in Castle Hayne, N.C. Company officials stated that published reports in local media resulted in gross misunderstandings and potential loss of credibility for the company.
According to scoping comment letters submitted to the Corps of Engineers by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the N.C. Division of Water Quality and the N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries, select areas within the company’s 1888 acre site were deemed unmitigatable. These areas, described as “forested wetlands,” and “tidal freshwater wetlands,” refer only to the property bordering the Northeast Cape Fear River and Island Creek – and make up only a small percentage of the proposed site. The proposed Carolinas Cement site includes plans for both a cement manufacturing plant and a limestone quarry operation. These letters were submitted to the Corps of Engineers in response to its July 1 scoping meeting and refer to a small portion of the proposed quarry operations.
“Unfortunately, these letters – which were submitted as a normal part of the Environmental Impact Statement process, not as a protest – were misinterpreted by some to mean these agencies are recommending we abandon the former Ideal Cement plant site,” said Jay Willis, Corporate Engineering Environmental Manager for Titan America, parent company of Carolinas Cement. “That is simply not the case. The cement plant itself is not even within the areas highlighted in the comment letters. The majority of the quarry area does not include the type of wetlands that these agencies have characterized as unmitigatable.”
“We are developing alternatives and conducting studies as part of the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) process with the Corps of Engineers. We believe through this process that an acceptable alternative will be developed — within our existing plant and quarry site — that protects the most valuable of the wetlands of the highest concerns to the various state and federal agencies.”
Carolinas Cement Company is a subsidiary of Titan America LLC. Titan America LLC is headquartered in Norfolk, Virginia and is one of the premier heavy building materials producers in the eastern United States. Titan America operations include cement plants, ready-mixed concrete plants, concrete block plants, quarries, import and rail terminals and fly ash benefication facilities. For more information about Carolinas Cement, visit http://www.carolinascement.com.
[Reply]