[3] In 1996, the company's facilities were converted to natural gas with a $124,000 grant by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection.
[4] The company operated by purchasing the syrup from Coca-Cola, mixing it, and distributing it to the surrounding areas.
[8] Cameron Coca-Cola sponsored championship harness racing at The Meadows Racetrack and Casino.
[5] In 2008, following the sale, the Cameron operation moved to Kalama – in Washington state but on the Columbia River near Portland, Oregon – and was re-christened the Cameron Family Glass Packaging LLC, with the goal of producing wine bottles for the wine industry in the Western United States.
[15] The 175,000-square-foot (16,300 m2) facility, which cost $109M to build, became the first new glass plant built in the nation in over 30 years to exclusively produce wine bottles.
[2][16] It became the largest such plant to be operated on an "eco-friendly" basis, with an electric furnace using hydroelectricity generated by the Columbia River.