New Beginnings

By |  February 1, 2014

A Texas Native American tribe gets into the aggregates business, and helps fellow tribal members along the way.

Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas

The reservation’s caliche pit is located on the U.S.-Mexico border near the basin of the Rio Grande and just south of Eagle Pass, Texas. In the past three years, the construction division has produced more than 400,000 tons of material for reservation projects.

In the native tongue of the Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas, it’s called E-No-Ko-Ski-Eh-Pi-I-Ki, or New Beginnings.

The three-year-old construction and labor program is dedicated to helping at-risk tribal members learn a new trade and maintain employment. It has helped more than 115 tribal members since its inception, according to Rene Trevino, founder and manager of New Beginnings. At the same time, the program serves to improve the reservation’s infrastructure and reduce its dependence on outside contractors.

Nestled on the U.S.-Mexico border near the basin of the Rio Grande and just south of Eagle Pass, the Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas is a longstanding Indian nation deeply devoted to its culture, traditions and community. The New Beginnings program reflects the tribe’s commitment to its members and the land on which they live.

Trevino is a young tribal member and Kickapoo warrior who returned to his homeland determined to develop an opportunity that would give other at-risk tribal members second chances. He approached Tribal Administrator Don Spaulding about cultivating a program and soon after E-No-Ko-Ski-Eh-Pi-I-Ki, or New Beginnings, was born.

“It’s all about helping tribal members in their personal growth, improving their self-esteem and teaching them a new trade,” Trevino said.

In recent years, the Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas has invested heavily in the reservation’s infrastructure. More than $130 million has been invested in tribal projects over the last three years, including an 8,900-ft., 249-room hotel expansion on the Kickapoo Lucky Eagle Casino, Texas’ only casino, as well as building a school, justice center, medical clinic, 2,500-vehicle parking lot, community center, government building, gaming commission building, convenience store, roads and 40 homes in a new subdivision. So far, the construction division has produced more than 400,000 tons of material.

New Beginnings

Rene Trevino (left), manager of New Beginnings, worked with Tribal Administrator Don Spaulding to cultivate a program dedicated to helping at-risk tribal members to learn a new trade and maintain employment.

Into the aggregates business
“We noticed that there was a lot of opportunity for the tribe to make some money off of its own projects,” Spaulding said. “We thought, ‘Why are we paying somebody else to provide this material?’ So we figured we’d try to get into the aggregate business since there was so much base material needed and there was so much readily available here on the reservation that belongs to the tribe.”

But creating a construction division that could run an aggregate processing plant with little experience and equipment was no easy task. The material comes from a caliche pit on the reservation and is a calcium carbonate mineral classified as a Texas Department of Transportation Type 2 material, often substituted for crushed limestone in road building and construction in southern Texas.

“It’s a sandy material with a lot of fines that compacts really well,” Spaulding said. “It’s good material, and we’ve been using it everywhere.”

After comparing a number of manufacturers, Trevino and Spaulding developed a relationship with Larry Smith, manager of T-K-O Equipment in Texas, and John McGimpsey, regional sales manager for KPI-JCI and Astec Mobile Screens.

KPI-JCI and Astec

A KPI-JCI and Astec Mobile Screens SuperStacker stockpiles material from a caliche pit on the reservation. The material is a calcium carbonate mineral classified as a Texas Department of Transportation Type 2 material.

“With the help of Larry and John, we were able to determine what kind of equipment we would need, and we developed a pretty extensive inventory of machines,” Spaulding said.

Initially starting with a Kolberg 271K screen, Trevino and Spaulding soon realized they would need higher production equipment to produce the wide variety of material the reservation required, including a 3-in.-minus for select fills and sub-base for roads, a 1.5-in-minus flex base, oversize material from 4-in. to 9-in. for gabion baskets, as well as 2-in., 1.5-in., 3/8-in., and 5/8-in. for landscaping stones and pipe bedding.

From there, the tribe purchased two 30-in. x 80-ft. radial stackers, two 30-in. x 60-ft. radial stackers, a FT2516 Fold ’n Go and a SuperStacker, all from KPI-JCI and Astec Mobile Screens. The operation also considering purchasing a variable frequency screen for finer materials, Spaulding said.

Versatility
“One of the reasons we went with the FT2516 Fold ’n Go is the flexibility it offered us with the different materials that we produce,” Spaulding said. “It allows us to screen material up to 3 to 4 in., and we’ve had as small as 1 millimeter harpwire screen on that machine. It’s really just been phenomenal on the production – we’re really happy with it.”

By combining the Kolberg 271K and the FT2516 Fold ’n Go, they have been able to make a multitude of products by running both machines together, Spaulding said.

KPI-JCI and Astec

Pictured is a KPI-JCI and Astec Mobile Screens SuperStacker, which stockpiles material from the aggregates processing plant.

“We’ve made as many as four different products by using both of those machines in conjunction with each other,” he said. “It also offers us the flexibility when we just need to make a small amount of material that the 271K can handle and we don’t have to shut down the production on the FT2516 Fold ’n Go.”

“We’re doing a lot more than we ever thought we could do,” Spaulding added. “We’re really proud of Rene’s people working out here, they’re learning a lot. The Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas wants to support products that are made here in the U.S., and the service we get from T-K-O Equipment and KPI-JCI and Astec Mobile Screens has been outstanding.”

In the future, when the tribe has completed its ongoing projects, Trevino hopes the construction division will be established enough to sell material commercially as well as produce enough material for the reservation. But his ultimate goal is to keep the E-No-Ko-Ski-Eh-Pi-I-Ki program running and continue to provide a new beginning for his fellow tribal members.

“We’ve got the machines now and plenty of material,” Trevino said. “I’ve seen a lot of growth around the reservation, and I want to keep it going. There are a lot of people who have experienced life’s difficulties and just need a second chance.”

Take note
The material comes from a caliche pit on the reservation and is a calcium carbonate mineral, often substituted for crushed limestone in road building and construction in southern Texas.

Photos: KPI-JCI, New Beginnings

Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas

One of the products the reservation needed was oversize material from 4-in. to 9-in. for gabion baskets, which are used as a retention wall and to prevent erosion.

Kolberg

The New Beginnings construction division initially purchased a Kolberg 271K screen.

KPI-JCI and Astec

The KPI-JCI and Astec Mobile Screens FT2516 Fold ’n Go provided the construction division the higher production equipment necessary to produce the wide variety of material the reservation required.

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