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How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 11:56 am
by valerie
Maybe you could get some of these!! (For that large Super Bowl party!!)

;)



http://www.latimes.com/news/printeditio ... &cset=true

How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 12:08 pm
by Marie5656
It said I had to register to get in. I am not in the mood, feeling a bit lazy today.

How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 12:12 pm
by valerie
Hmmm doesn't happen to me, I NEVER register to see anything, I just

don't bother!



:-6



(Melting those ice cubes!!)

How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 1:26 pm
by Lulu2
Here, Val...let me help!

Unneeded ice is a Florida headache, cubed

Officials hope to find a taker for the unused hurricane stockpile.

By Carol J. Williams, Times Staff Writer

January 7, 2007



MIAMI — Wanted: a charity with lots of freezer space. Or a town in need of flooding.

Neither scenario is likely for Florida's State Emergency Response Team, which confronts a peculiar dilemma imposed by last year's dearth of hurricanes: The agency has almost 9 million pounds of ice cubes worth $1.8 million — bagged, bundled and costing the state $90,000 a month in storage fees.

The ice was bought and positioned in Jacksonville and Bartow warehouses to be on hand for distribution during electricity outages that never happened.

Water, like most consumables, eventually spoils, and Florida's ice overstock is due for disposal before the June 1 start of the 2007 hurricane season. That approaching use-by date prompted an unusual appeal last week from emergency planners: They asked any nonprofit group eligible for government donations to take the ice off Tallahassee's hands.

There are strings attached, though. The ice is packaged in plastic-wrapped pallets of 360 bags each, so that is the minimum amount the state will part with. Delivery is included, but only if the recipient will take a whole truckload of 22 pallets, or almost 40,000 pounds.

"It's a one-time issue predicated on the very positive fact we did not get hit" by a major storm in the 2006 hurricane season, said Mike Stone, spokesman for the Division of Emergency Management.

A repeat of the overflow won't occur, because state emergency preparedness officials are getting out of the ice storage business, Stone said. The government now contracts with private suppliers throughout the state, like major grocery-store chains, to have sufficient quantities on hand through hurricane season and available for state purchase and public distribution.

But last year's leftovers are still a problem. Under state guidelines governing public spending, the emergency planners can give it only to registered charitable entities or other state agencies, none of which have expressed a need for the frozen surplus that fills 225 truck trailers parked in rented cold storage.

One local public relief group, Lake and Sumter Emergency Recovery of Central Florida, is interested in a share of the stock but hasn't yet nailed down a place to keep it, said Stone.

What will happen if, as seems likely, the demand for freezer-burned ice continues to flag through the winter?

"Eventually, at some point, we would find a way to return it to the earth from whence it came," said Stone, noting that state officials were looking for a drought-plagued corner of the Sunshine State in which to melt away their problem. "On one level, it would be the ultimate recycling project."



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How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 1:35 pm
by valerie
So, it happened to you, too? That's really weird, EVERY time I click

on my link, I see the article no prob!!



Thanks!



Dang 'puters anyway...



:-5

How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 1:36 pm
by Lulu2
(I'm registered there...use the service a lot, so I just logged in & got it.)

How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 1:56 pm
by cars
"ICE CUBES" are a happy thing for me these days! (I'm happy easily) Our 7 yr old fridge we inherited with/in our FL villa 3 yrs ago went on the fritz, last month. :wah:

Actually I was happy, cause we (I) had to make the Ice Cubes since it didn't have an automatic Ice maker in it! :-2 Well of course, (we) I had to have an Automatic "ICE-MAKER" in our new fridge, it does, it's great, & it makes me happy every time I hear the automatic Ice tray dump Ice in the Ice bin! :)

How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 2:21 pm
by valerie
That's funny, Cars... one time I heard a story about people who adopted

a GSD, and she was working out GREAT except they couldn't figure out

why sometimes she'd start barking in the middle of the night... it was the

ice maker on the fridge dropping cubes and I guess the poor girl dog

thought it was somebody up to no good!!



;)

How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 2:26 pm
by cars
valerie;508325 wrote: That's funny, Cars... one time I heard a story about people who adopted

a GSD, and she was working out GREAT except they couldn't figure out

why sometimes she'd start barking in the middle of the night... it was the

ice maker on the fridge dropping cubes and I guess the poor girl dog

thought it was somebody up to no good!!



;)




Right val, the first time it dropped during the night two weeks ago, it woke me up too. But fortunately, then I rememberd it was just the Ice maker! :)

How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 6:42 pm
by Lulu2
Val, I "sit" for a Doberman who's learned to operate the ice lever himself! Saves everyone's time, ya' see.

How old are YOUR ice cubes?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 6:43 pm
by Marie5656
I have emptied the ice cube bin in the freezer..just in case.