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Recycling Industry Advocate and Leader Jerry Simms to Receive ISRI’s 2019 Lifetime Achievement Award

Mar 7, 2019, 14:13 PM by Mark Carpenter
Jerry Simms

(Washington, DC) – In recognition of his outstanding contributions to the recycling industry, the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI) will award its 2019 Lifetime Achievement Award to Jerry Simms of Atlas Metal & Iron Corp. of Denver (retired). Simms’ career in the recycling industry spanned more than four decades, during which he successfully led a number of key regulatory and legislative victories for the industry through his involvement with ISRI.

“One of the great privileges of being ReMA Chairman is the opportunity to announce the Lifetime Achievement Award winner,” said Brian Shine. “This year the honoree is Jerry Simms and what a deserving winner he is. He has always been an ReMA mentor to me. Conducting himself with class and professionalism he has a special gift to include input from everyone around him and then make thoughtful decisions that always promoted the best interests of our industry and its members"

Simms was a leading advocate for Superfund reform to protect scrap recycling companies. In 1991, he wrote to ReMA encouraging the organization and the industry to aggressively fight Superfund’s injustices. He argued that the law unfairly made scrap recycling companies liable for contamination that other companies caused. His letter called for rallying ReMA members at the grassroots level and leveraging their political power to effect change on this critical issue. His efforts culminated in the passage of the Superfund Recycling Equity Act in 1999. Simms’ work in mobilizing his colleagues around the industry demonstrated the power of grassroots advocacy. His effort helped build a political structure at the trade association: the Grass Roots Implementation Team or GRIT, and set him on a path of leadership.

“I had the enormous pleasure of working closely with Jerry on Superfund all the way through his term as Chair, and beyond,” said Robin Wiener, president of ISRI. “There is no stronger advocate for ReMA and the recycling industry than Jerry. He showed us the power one person can have, bringing together an entire industry to fight for a cause. His dedication to ReMA and recycling is endless. Beyond his work for the recycling industry, he is an incredibly special person who I feel incredibly lucky to have been able to work so closely with.”

In addition to his work on GRIT, Simms filled a variety of other ReMA leadership positions, including chair of the government affairs committee, member of the stormwater steering committee, nonferrous division director, director-at-large, chair of the ReMA PAC Leadership Council, member of the national board of directors, and head of task forces that have addressed SREA, automotive mercury switches, and other issues. He also led the membership criteria subgroup, part of the industry image task force, which helped draft ISRI’s code of conduct.

Jerry Simms ascended to ReMA Board Chair, serving from 2012-2014. During his tenure, he continued his strong push for ISRI’s advocacy efforts with particular emphasis on reinvigorating ISRI’s state program, led the efforts to further strengthen ISRI’s delivery of safety resources and support to all of our members, and worked tirelessly to strengthen the industry’s image among the general public. His successes included fighting for the industry on the EPA’s rule of definition of solid waste, EPA’s authorization of plastics recycling from shredder fluff and expanding resources to fight metals theft.

“When working in concert, ReMA and our members can achieve any successes we need in the battles that confront us, be they legislative, regulatory, or public perception,” said Simms.

Simms was first introduced to the scrap recycling industry while in high school in Cleveland. Then, after graduating college he moved to Colorado, where he, his brother Bob, and a cousin decided to form a scrap company, Mile High Metals before starting his career at Atlas. Today, he lives in Boulder, with his wife Terry. They have four daughters, and three grandchildren.

The award presentation will take place during ISRI’s Annual Convention and Exposition, April 8-11, in Los Angeles. ISRI2019 will be the recycling industry’s largest gathering of the year with more than 5,000 recycling professionals expected to attend.

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The Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries, Inc. (ISRI)
is the "Voice of the Recycling Industry™." ReMA represents more than 1,300 companies in 21 chapters in the U.S. and more than 40 countries that process, broker, and consume scrap commodities, including metals, paper, plastics, glass, rubber, electronics, and textiles. With headquarters in Washington, DC, the Institute provides education, advocacy, safety and compliance training, and promotes public awareness of the vital role recycling plays in the U.S. economy, global trade, the environment and sustainable development. Generating nearly $117 billion annually in U.S. economic activity, the scrap recycling industry provides nearly half a million Americans with good jobs.