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Wednesday, Dec. 31
The Indiana Daily Student

Ryan Weaver, 39, is a firefighter in Frankfort, Ind. He serves 10 days a month. For another two he trains as a medic on a SWAT team. By nature he's a rescuer. However, he spends a majority of his time saving the rural victims and their property desecrated by meth cooking and use. Ryan's company, Bio-Recovery Specialists, offers, among many of its services, meth lab cleanup. The Indiana State Police places these houses on a list of condemned homes that require inspection and cleaning within six months, with or without home insurance as a safety net. Ryan and his employees offer them a helping hand. They are the compassionate faces behind a lucrative operation with 30 competitors in the state affected greatest by the drug. Kale Wilk and Kale Wilk

The cleanup man

Ryan Weaver, 39, is a firefighter in Frankfort, Ind. He serves 10 days a month. For another two he trains as a medic on a SWAT team. By nature he's a rescuer. However, he spends a majority of his time saving the rural victims and their property desecrated by meth cooking and use. Ryan's company, Bio-Recovery Specialists, offers, among many of its services, meth lab cleanup. The Indiana State Police places these houses on a list of condemned homes that require inspection and cleaning within six months, with or without home insurance as a safety net. Ryan and his employees offer them a helping hand. They are the compassionate faces behind a lucrative operation with 30 competitors in the state affected greatest by the drug.