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News Release

20 Hired and 24 Million Pounds of Metal Processed

March 22, 2010, Walla Walla, WA (Corrected Version) –Stubblefield Salvage and Recycling, LLC (SSR-1) at 980 NE Myra Road in Walla Walla has hired twenty full-time employees and recycled over twenty-four million pounds of iron during the last twelve months.

A lot has changed,” said Lily Stubblefield-Shoop, CEO and day-to-day operations manager, “since Dad, Emory Stubblefield, passed away a little over a year ago. Our first goal was to takle the huge cleanup task at the old multi-function junk yard at the end of Offner Road and modernize the way our family has done business for more than sixty years.

We've-focused our regional metal processing business on one specific segment of recycling --processing used metals, including iron, cast iron and nonferrous materials such as copper, brass and aluminum. We no longer process whole automobiles and do not provide hulk-hauling or wrecker services.”

SSR-1's business philosphy is 'same-day'

Trees Replace 100 Tons of Scrap Iron

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Whitman College Students Volunteer: Walla Walla County Conservation and Whitman College teamed up with Stubblefield Salvage and Recycling, LLC to create a natural buffer between their scrap processing center and Mill Creek.November 17, 2008, Walla Walla, WA (NR 11-08-02) –Trees and shrubs were planted along Mill Creek near the new Myra Road extension bridge by volunteers from Whitman College. Dr. Delbert Hutcheson of Whitman College and Mike Denny of the Walla Walla County Conservation District led the project today at 595 Offner Road. This is a collaborative effort to improve the environment between Stubblefield Salvage and Recycling, LLC and the Walla Walla County Conservation District.

A New Name for Emory Stubblefield Co

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Emory Stubblefield: Running his business, July 2008Emory Stubblefield: Running his business, July 2008November 12, 2008 Walla Walla, WA –The Emory Stubblefield Co, located at 980 NE Myra Road in Walla Walla has changed its name and business structure. The new structure includes Emory and his three surviving children, Lily Shoop, Lenora Thompson and Al Stubblefield.

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