\
    \
      Solid Waste Management
     in Recreational Forest Areas
    \

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^ Solid  Waste Management
4n Recreational/Forest Areas
              \
  The Solid Waste Management Office conducted this study (SW-16tsj

 for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the report was prepared by

               CHARLES S. SPOONER
                  - ••' :<';v;ion Agency
     1 Horlh \] ..^'. •...* ". i'. v'o
     Chicago, Illinois  60606

     U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
           Solid Waste Management Office
                   1971

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                         Environmental Protection Publication
                This publication is also in the Public Health Service
                numbered series as Public Health Service Publication
                No.  1991; its entry in two government publication
                series is the result  of a publishing interface reflecting
                the transfer of the Federal solid waste management
                program from the U.S. Public Health Service to the
                U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
                   Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office , 1971.
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S  Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402 - Price $1
           ENVIRONMENTAL niOT.ICIlCvI  AG£NCJT

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                                            FOREWORD
            The Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, requested the Bureau  of Solid Waste Management*
•*-.    to conduct a study of National Forest recreation areas. Its objectives were to establish waste generation rates
^    for major recreation  activities  and to determine the cost of solid waste handling for selected Forest Service
      Districts. The study was implemented by the Forest Service's San Dimas Equipment  Development Center in
      their  Equipment Development and Testing (ED&T) Project  1848: "A Systems Study of Solid Waste Disposal."
      The present report (SW-16ts)  resulted from the joint project and serves as both the Bureau of Solid Waste
**)    Management's report to the Forest Service and the ED&T project report.
O
 t           The  1968  solid waste  generation rates  for  all major  recreation activities in  the Forest Service are
e*~    described, as well as  the various methods of solid waste storage, collection, and  disposal encountered. Some
•^    proposed changes of these practices are also discussed in this report.
"0
f-          Solid waste generation rates  will enable officials to make more accurate estimates of the volume and the
^£>    weight of wastes generated by  various  recreation uses and by new recreation facilities. These  estimates will
      allow better selection of collection and disposal systems to meet expanding needs.

            The report  discusses  the economics  of, as  well  as the  equipment  used  in, the various solid waste
      handling systems encountered  during  the study.  Twelve  Districts not visited were  surveyed  by  letter and
      telephone. Data from these surveys provide  a method of describing District solid waste handling costs and
      guides to reduce them.

            The number of Americans visiting  our  parks  and recreation  areas has been  growing rapidly. It is hoped
      that this report will assist in maintaining the beauty and healthfulness of these areas and in preserving  them
      for the enjoyment of future generations.


                                                                                 RICHARD D. VAUGHAN
                                                                                 Assistant Surgeon General
                                                                                 Acting Commissioner
                                                                                 Solid  Waste Management Office
        This was the official name of the Federal solid waste management program at the time of this study, and thus is used throughout
         the report. The program has now been transferred from the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to the U.S.
         Environmental Protection Agency.
                                                       m

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                                  CONTENTS
                                                                                    Page

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS  	   1

RECOMMENDATIONS	   3

INTRODUCTION  	   5

PROCEDURES	   6
Site Selection	   6
Individual Studies  	   6
Measuring Recreation Use	   6
Obtaining Cost Information	10

RESULTS AND  DISCUSSION	11
Rates of Waste Generation  	11
     Campgrounds  	11
     Variation in the Solid Waste Generation Rate from Campgrounds  	11
     Picnic Grounds  	17
     Organization Camps  	19
     Recreation Residences  	19
     Winter Sports Areas  	19
     Recreation Sites Generating Minor Quantities of Solid Wastes	19
     Administrative Sites  	19
     Job Corps Civilian Conservation Centers   	20
     Resorts	20
     Value of Solid Waste Generation Rates 	21
Solid Waste Storage Practices	21
Solid Waste Collection Practices	24
Collection Cost Study	24
Improving Solid  Waste Collection  	25
Solid Waste Disposal	27
Planning New Solid Waste Handling Systems	28

REFERENCES  	29

BIBLIOGRAPHY	29

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS	30

APPENDIX 1   NATIONAL FOREST CAMP AND PICNIC SITE (DEVELOPMENT SCALE)	31

APPENDIX 2   DESCRIPTIONS OF INDIVIDUAL STUDIES	33

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                                                                                          Page

APPENDIX 3   VARIATIONS IN WASTE GENERATION RATE AND IN WASTE COMPOSITION  ... 71

APPENDIX 4   COSTS OF SOLID WASTE COLLECTION  	81

APPENDIX 5   SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT COST QUESTIONNAIRE	85

APPENDIX 6   EXECUTIVE ORDER 11282	89

TABLES

   1     Waste Generation Rates for Recreation Sites  	  2

   2     Locations and Dates of Studies  	  8

   3     Units of Waste Generation and Methods of Conversion  	10

   4     Picnic Waste Generated per Picnicker	17


FIGURES

   1     Location of study sites	  7

   2     Frequency distribution of the waste generation rate for 31 campgrounds  	12

   3     Cumulative distribution of the waste generation rate for 31 campgrounds	13

   4     Frequency distribution of the waste generation rate for 31 campgrounds  	14

   5     Cumulative distribution of the waste generation rate for 31 campgrounds	15

   6     Observed  composition  of camping and recreation  residence solid waste and comparison with
                  urban residence values	16

   7     Variation  in campground solid waste generation, Wayne—Hoosier National Forest  	18

   8     Pounds of solid waste per occupant day at four organization camps   	19

   9     Pounds of solid waste per corpsman day at two Job Corps Civilian Conservation Centers .... 20

  10     Pounds of solid waste per occupant day at resorts  studied  	20

  11     Types of solid waste containers observed  	22

  12     Economic effect of employing a second collector  	26
                                              VI

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                  SUMMARY  AND  CONCLUSIONS
      From  the  data for all the sites studied, the
rate  of waste  generation  for  each  activity was
averaged and the 90 percent confidence interval was
calculated (Table 1).
      The  22  cost  questionnaires  revealed  that,
although the  budgeted amount for handling  solid
wastes in each District varied greatly, an average of
70 percent was spent on collection manpower and
only 4 percent was spent on disposal. The remaining
26 percent was divided evenly  between the cost of
equipment and plastic liners. Collection and disposal
costs  per  estimated ton ranged between $28  and
$302  per ton, with a  median of $88. In some
Forest  Service  Districts,   collection   by  private
contract  was  less  expensive  than collection by
District  forces; in  other Districts,  the  reverse  was
true. Although the amount paid private contractors
was   influenced   by  many  factors,   competing
employment  opportunities  appeared  most
important.  Study   teams  found   no  established
methods for evaluating the relative economic merits
of the  two  systems.  Forest  Service  solid  waste
collection  crews were usually composed of two or
three  men. Long  travel distances  consumed many
man hours, making route miles a costly item.

      The following  conclusions were drawn from
the study:

1.     The solid waste generated in a recreation area
      can  be  related  to  the visitor use the area
      receives.
2.    Recreational  solid  waste generation  rates
      could not be shown to vary regionally  or with
      the level of campground development. *

3.    Few  Forest  Service   Districts  operated
      specially adapted  equipment for solid waste
      collection.  Most relied on equipment used for
      other tasks.

4.    Few  Forest  Service  Districts   used  any
      equipment for solid waste disposal even when
      it was available.

5.    In some Forest Service areas, private contract
      collectors could collect the solid wastes at the
      most reasonable cost;  in other areas, District
      collection crews provided the service at costs
      far below contract bids.

6.    Solid  waste  containers  in  Forest  Service
      recreation  areas are generally  well designed
      and  maintained.  Plastic  container liners aid
      both  container   sanitation   and  collection
      efficiency.

7.    The  distance  from   the   Forest   Service
      recreation  area to the disposal site and the
      intensity of recreation  use in the area had the
      most influence  on the  cost of solid waste
      collection.

8.    All   Forest  Service  land   disposal  sites
      encountered during the study were de facto
      dumps,   not  operated  to local,  State,  or
      Federal standards.
                                                         *Level of development denotes the degree to
                                                   which   the  area  has  been  improved  for  the
                                                   convenience of the recreator (See Appendix 1).

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                                              TABLE 1

                      WASTE GENERATION RATES FOR RECREATION SITES
                                                            Average rate of waste generation
      Recreation site                                         90 percent confidence  interval

Campgrounds (Ib/camper day)                                        1.26 +  0.08

Campgrounds (Ib/visitor day)                                         0.92 +  0.06

Family picnic area (Ib/picnicker)                                     0.93 +  0.16

Group picnic area (Ib/picnicker)                                      1.16+  0.26

Organization camps (Ib/occupant day)                                1.81 ±  0.39

Job Corps Civilian Conservation Corps Camps

      Kitchen waste (Ib/corpsman day)                               2.44 +  0.63

      Administrative and dormitory waste
        (Ib/corpsman day)                                          °.70 ±  °-66

Resort areas

      Rented cabins (with kitchens)
        (Ib/occupant  day)                                          1-46 ±  0.31

      Lodge rooms (without kitchens)
        (Ib/occupant  day)                                          0-59 ±  0.64

      Restaurants (Ib/meal served)                                   0.71 +  0.40

Overnight lodges in winter sports areas
   (wastes from all facilities) (Ib/visitor day)                          1-87 +  0.26

Day lodge in winter sports areas
   (Ib/visitor day)                                                  2.92 ± 0.61

Recreation residences (Ib/occupant day)                              2.13 + 0.54

Observation sites  (Ib/incoming axle)                                  0.05 + 0.03

Visitor centers (Ib/visitor)                                           0.02 + 0.008

Swimming beaches (Ib/swimmer)                                     0.04 + 0.01

Concession  stands (Ib/patron)                                        0.14    (1 site)

Administrative residences  (Ib/occupant day)                           1.37 ± 0.35

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                         RECOMMENDATIONS
1.    Forest Service compliance with Executive Order 11282 should develop in three stages: (1) Open burning
      must  be discontinued. (2) Individual Forest Service Districts must create small sanitary landfills for
      recreation and administrative solid wastes. (3) The  Districts  should then use these  sanitary landfills as
      models and convince small communities  using District  land to adopt similar techniques.  The Forest
      Service should insist on model operation of all solid  waste disposal sites permitted on its land.

2.    Individual Forest  Service Districts should use equipment  they already  own to operate  small sanitary
      landfills.

3.    The Forest Service San Dimas Equipment  Development Center should develop methods, equipment, and
      equipment  modifications that will  make  sanitary landfills practical in  Districts that have no  readily
      usable landfill equipment.

4.    Limiting collection to twice per week and increasing the storage capacity to hold  accumulated wastes
      can reduce solid waste collection costs in some Forest Service Districts.

5.    Forest Service District solid waste collection crews  are often larger than justified, and many should be
      reduced in size. One man can usually service even the largest recreation area for the least overall cost.

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                                   INTRODUCTION
      The  Forest  Service has been aware of  the
growing solid waste problem in recreation areas for
some  time. In 1967, the  Forest Service, through its
Equipment  Development  Center  in  San Dimas,
California,  completed   a  study  of  a  mobile
incinerator. Although the results  of the  1967  study
provided  a  good  evaluation   of  the  mobile
incinerator, the Equipment Development Center did
not have  sufficient data to evaluate the costs of
existing, competing collection and disposal systems.
      The   problems  involved   in   gaining  this
background  information prompted the  Equipment
Development Center to request that  the Bureau of
Solid  Waste  Management  conduct  a study  to
establish waste generation rates for major recreation
activities and  determine the costs of solid waste
handling in representative Districts.
      The  project was  funded separately by  each
agency.   Both   the  Bureau   of  Solid  Waste
Management  personnel  and San Dimas Equipment
Development Center personnel participated in  field
studies. Personnel of the  Ranger Districts  visited
contributed valuable time and equipment in assisting
the study teams.

      A  review of the literature revealed that data
on the quantities of waste generated from recreation
activities and  on the  cost of waste  collection  in
those areas were unavailable from published sources.
The  conclusion  was reached that a  special  study
would have  to be conducted to gather  the needed
information.

      Weaver's  authoritative  study  of solid  waste
management   in  recreation  areas, 1  which  was
conducted in 1954, is inapplicable to  the type and
composition of  solid  waste generated today.  New
techniques  have  outmoded some practices	the
use of plastic container  liners  has eliminated the
need  for frequent  can  cleaning, the  attendant
collection practices and cleaning facilities, as well  as
increased the efficiency of collectors. The life style
of campers  has  changed	camping  hardware and
food   packaging  have   possibly   changed   waste
generation rates and composition. At the time  of
Weaver's  report, there  were no Federal efforts  to
control pollution or to encourage  the  standards for
disposal that now apply to all Federal installations.

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                                     PROCEDURES
                   Site Selection

      The study sites were chosen for the Bureau of
Solid Waste Management by the Forest Service and
were  locations that represented  various elevations
and climatological conditions.  The Weather Bureau's
temperature—humidity   index  values   for  the  4
hottest  months  of   the  year   were  used   1o
characterize  the  climate.  This  method   gave  a
reasonable   site  distribution  across  the   country
(Figure 1). Other  factors such as  recreation  area
accessibility  and  proximity  to urban areas  were
considered  in selecting the sites.
      Members  of  the  staff  of  the  Division  of
Technical  Operations,   Bureau   of  Solid Was:e
Management,  and   the  staff  of  the  San Dinus
Equipment  Development  Center,   Forest  Service,
scheduled and  conducted 11  studies between June
and  September 1968 and a  study of winter sport
areas in March  1969  (Table  2).  Details  of each
study are given (Appendix 2).

               Individual Studies
      Each  site  was studied  for  4 days, Friday
through Monday. The  weekends  were  chosen  to
ensure heavy recreation use. The study team arrived
on Thursday of the study week, discussed the study
with District personnel,  and  collected wastes from
the  study  area  to ensure  that  wastes collected
during the  study period would be generated during
that period.
      The  study on the Wayne—Hoosier  National
Forest in Ohio was extended to observe variations
in the waste generation rates over  a 3-wk period
and  to gather  data from picnic areas  from which
visitor-use figures could be easily obtained.
       Many  Forest  Service  engineers from regional
water and  sanitation  activities  participated in  ttie
studies. Each District furnished a truck, driver, and
platform scales.
      The  study team  collected solid wastes from
recreation  areas  on each day  of  the study. The
wastes  were  weighed  and  sorted  into  three
categories:   food wastes, other  combustibles; arid
noncombustibles. The waste quantities produced by
each  recreation activity were  correlated to the use
the  area had  received  during a  1—day period  of
waste accumulation.
            Measuring Recreation Use

      Measuring recreation use was a persistent and
difficult  problem. The  standard  measure of Forest
Service recreation use is the  "visitor day." A visitor
day  is 12—hr  use of a recreation facility by  one
person,  or use  by many  persons  whose  aggregate
time in an activity equals 12  hr.

      The  techniques   Forest  Service  recreation
personnel use  to estimate visitor  days  vary from
Forest to Forest. One  of the most  reliable is the
double sample  technique. On 12 randomly selected
days during the recreation season, District personnel
count the  visitor use each  activity  receives  while
also  counting some other variable such  as axles on
vehicles entering  and  leaving  the  area or the gallons
of  water  consumed.  A  functional  relationship
between  the   two counts  yields  a formula  to
estimate  visitor  use  (in  visitor  days)   from more
easily obtained counts of axles or gallons of water.
Each formula derived  is unique, and although its use
is  limited  to  the  area  where  it  was  empirically
derived, it yields statistically eliable use estimates.
      In  another  technique,   locally  convenient
measures of use were counted such as the number
of swimmers on a beach or the number of campsites
occupied. At  the  end of the  season these counts
were  converted to visitor days  by using subjective
conversion factors.

      At other Forests, personnel merely relate the
current  year's  use   to   that  previously  reported
without making an actual count.
      Although these methods of use measure were
adequate  for normal Forest Service reporting, none
was very  accurate over short  time intervals such as
the  1  or  4 days used  in the study. Therefore, the
study  teams  estimated use  at  most  study sites
independently  of the  Forest Service.  Counts  by
compliance  checkers or  periodically counting the
people  using  the  site  are  used  for this  report.
Measuring use  in  intermittent  activities  such as
boating and picnicking was  often  impossible, and
double  sampling, where it existed, proved unreliable
for verifying estimates.

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          TABLE 2
LOCATION AND DATES OF STUDIES
National
Forest
Allegheny
(Pennsylvania)
Cache
(Utah)
Deschutes
(Oregon)


Eldorado
(California)

Gallatin
(Montana)


Huron— Manistee
(Michigan)
Kaniksu
(Idaho)
Lincoln
(New Mexico)

National Forest
of Mississippi
Study
dates
June 26- July 1
1968
Feb. 28-Mar. 7
1969
July 12-15
1968


July 19-22
1968

July 10-15
1968


June 21-24
1968
July 19-22
1968
Sept. 5-9
1968

June 14-17
1968
Ranger
District
Sheffield"
Bradford"
Ogden
Fort Roclc*
Crescent


Lake Valley*

Hebgen
Lake


Manistee*
Cadillac
Sandpoini;*
Priest Lake
Clark Fork*
Cloudcroft*

Bienville
Strong River*
Campground
Buckaloons
Hearts Content
Minister Creek
Kiasutha
None
Paulina Lake
Prairie
East Lake
Cinder Hill
Princess Creek
Trapper Creek
Fallen Leaf

Bakers Hole
Beaver Creek


Sand Lake
Lake Michigan
Samowen
Pine
Sleepy Grass
Deerhead
Silver
Raworth
Shongelo
Other sites
Buckaloons — picnicking
Kiasutha — swimming, boating
Jakes Rock Overlook
Camp Cornplanter Organization Camp
Gelande Lodge (day use)
Ski lift area
Hill Air Force Base Lodge
Paulina Lake-boating, recreation
residences
East Lake-resort cabins, boating,
restaurant
Lava Butte Visitor Center
Cinder Hill— boating
Princess Creek— boating
Trapper Creek— boating
Crescent Lake— Organization Camp
Odell— Summit -lodge, cabins
Camp Richardson-cabins, restaurant,
lodge
Lake Tahoe Visitor Center
Camp Concord Organization Camp
Spring Creek— recreation residences
Cabin Creek— picnicking
Earthquake Visitor Center
Lakeshore "Block E"— recreation
residences
Administrative residences
Sand Lake -picnicking, administrative
residences
Hoxey Job Corps Civilian Conservation
Center
Garfield Bay— recreation residences
Priest Lake Ranger Station
Samowen-picnicking
Sleepy Grass— picnicking
Slide— picnicking

Raworth— picnicking
Shongelo— picnicking and swimming

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                                        TABLE 2 (CONTINUED)
                                LOCATION AND DATES OF STUDIES
National
Forest
Ozark
(Arkansas)
Study
dates
June 21-24
1968
Ranger
District Campground
Mt. Magazine* Spring Lake
Cove Lake
Other sites
Spring Lake— picnicking, swimming,
concession
Cove Lake— picnicking, swimming,
concession
Mt. Magazine— picnicking, lodge,
cabins
Rio Grande
   (Colorado)
Wasatch
   (Utah)
Wayne—Hoosier
   (Ohio)
Aug. 23-26
   1968
Alder*
Del Norte
Feb. 28-Mar. 7    Salt Lake
   1969
Aug. 13-Sept. 2   Ironton
   1968
Palisade
Beaver Creek
Big Meadows
South Fork

None
             Iron Ridge
             Oak Hill
Beaver Creek Organization Camp
Rustler Lodge
Alta Lodge
Snow Pine Lodge (day use)
Shallow Shaft Tavern

Big Bend Beach—concession
Vesuvius—picnicking, Job Corps
   Civilian Conservation Center
*  Forest Ranger Districts contributing data on cost of handling solid waste. Additional contributing Districts and
their National Forest are: Lakewood (Nicolet); Aurora, Isabella, and Kawishiwi (Superior); Wayah and Pisgah
(North Carolina); Redlands and Uncle Remus (Georgia); and Manilla and Vernal (Ashley).
       Study  teams did develop  proxy units  that
 could be converted to visitor days. A daily count of
 the number  of campers  spending  the  night (and
 assumed  to  have contributed wastes  from both
 evening and  morning meals),  for example,  led  to
 "camper day" units. Camper days  were converted to
 visitor days by subtracting the assumed number  of
 hours  the  average  camper spent on  noncamping
 activities (boating, swimming, etc.) and  dividing by
 12. The number of picnickers was counted without
 regard to  their  length  of  stay.  Because  most
                                picnickers  stayed for only one meal, the length of
                                their  stay  was  considered  irrelevant   to  waste
                                generation.  The  unit  "pounds  of  waste  per
                                picnicker" can be simply converted to "pounds per
                                visitor day" by multiplying by  12 and dividing by
                                the length of the average picnic in hours.

                                      A summary  of factors that can be used to
                                convert  the  units  of waste generation for each
                                recreation activity  to  waste  generation in terms of
                                visitor days is given (Table  3).

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                                              TABLE 3

                 UNITS OF WASTE GENERATION AND METHODS OF CONVERSION
Recreation
site
Campgrounds
Campgrounds
Unit expressing
waste generation
pounds/visitor day
pounds/camper day
Multiplier factors used
to express waste generation
in terms of visitor days
1
12 v (hours average camper
Picnic area


Organization camps

Cabins


Observation sites




Visitor centers


Swimming  beaches


Boat launching areas
pounds/picnicker


pounds/occupant day

pounds/occupant day


pounds/incoming axle
pounds/visitor


pounds/swimmer


pounds/boat
     spends in  camp daily)

12 -f (length of average
     picnic, in  hours)

             1/2

12 ~ (hours average guest spends
     at his cabin daily)

12 x (number of axles/vehicle)
     v (the average stay in hours
     x the average number of
     people/vehicle)

12 -f (length of the average
     visitor's stay, in  hours)

12 -f- (length of the average
     swimmer's stay,  in hours)

12 x (average number of persons
     per boat)  -f- (average length
     of boat use, in hours)
     Note:   To convert  1.26 Ib/camper day to Ib/visitor day:
             Ib/visitor day = (1.26 Ib/camper day)  x
                      12
                                                     (16.4 hr average
                                                     camper spends in
                                                     camp daily)
        0.92
             Obtaining Cost Information
      Questionnaires   to  discover  the  costs  of
 handling recreational  solid waste were distributed to
 representatives from  22  Ranger Districts (Table I).
 They were asked to describe the costs of manpower.
                supplies, and  equipment  for both  collection  and
                disposal operations. Each interview was recorded on
                the cost questionnaire  form (Appendix 5). Costs of
                solid   waste   handling for   each   District  were
                correlated with the recreation use regularly recorded
                in  the  Forest  Service   Recreation  Information
                Management (RIM) system.
 10

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                       RESULTS  AND  DISCUSSION
           Rates of Waste Generation

      Campgrounds.  The   average  rate  of  solid
waste generated at campgrounds was 0.92 Ib per
visitor day; the  standard deviation was  0.08, or 9
percent of the mean. The frequency and cumulative
distributions of visitor—day averages  of the waste
generation  rate   for  31  campgrounds  were
determined (Figures 2  and 3). From  these figures,
the waste generation rate that is exceeded on only a
certain fraction  of occasions  can be selected. This
curve is useful in determining the size of collection
and  disposal  facilities  to  handle waste generation
rates occurring, for instance, 90 percent of the time.

      Camping  waste  generation  rates can  also be
described  in   terms  of the  previously described
"camper  day."  The  frequency  and  cumulative
distributions of the  camper-day  averages  of this
waste generation rate  for  31  campgrounds on each
of the study days have also been charted (Figures 4
and 5). The average generation rate was  1.26 Ib per
camper day; the standard deviation was 0.10, or 8
percent of the mean. Waste generation expressed in
terms of camper days  is most useful  in estimating
quantities of  waste  that  accumulate  over  short
periods because camper days are  easily related to
campground capacity.

      Although  waste  composition  from
campgrounds varied greatly, the average composition
of the waste was: food wastes, 37 percent; other
combustibles,  30  percent;  noncombustibles,  33
percent.  When  the  composition  of  campground
wastes is compared with typical residential waste^
(Figure  6), it is apparent that campers generated a
higher percentage of food wastes than that found in
residential  areas.  Campers generated  less  other
combustible  waste, partly because they  did  not
receive newspapers or mail and because  they often
burned much of their waste in camp fireplaces. The
amount of noncombustibles was higher in camps
than in homes  primarily because of the  number of
convenient, disposable   bottles  and cans  used  in
camping.
      Variation  in  Solid  Waste  Generation Rate
from  Campgrounds.  There was speculation, at the
inception  of  the  study,   that   amounts  and
composition of solid waste generated in recreation
areas   might   vary   from   region   to   region.
Campgrounds were  studied as an indicator  of this
variation  because  they  contribute  the   largest
fraction of most District's solid wastes and  because
camping was the only activity contributing enough
samples   to   give  statistical   reliability   to   the
conclusions drawn from  the data.

      The data  were evaluated (Appendix  3),  and
analyses sought to detect the existence of statistical
differences between total waste generation rates in
23 campgrounds. Waste generation  rates were also
compared for  the three types  of waste composition
(food  wastes,  other  combustible  wastes,   and
noncombustible  wastes).  Campgrounds  were  also
grouped by level of development (see Appendix 1)
and by type of use: those that received overnight
use predominantly and those that were destinations,
where the campers visited for longer periods.

      An  analysis  was  performed  to   detect
statistical differences between  the total solid waste
generation rates in  different campgrounds.  The
conclusion  reached   was  that   there   are  no
statistically significant differences among the  average
total  waste generation  rates  in  the campgrounds
studied.

      In  considering  the  total waste  for  all 23
campgrounds,  the  day  on  which the  wastes were
generated (Thursday, Friday,  Saturday,  or Sunday)
was not a significant factor. Day of generation was
significant, however, when destination campgrounds
developed  to  level four  were  considered.  This
significance  was strong  enough to  make  day of
generation significant when both  level three  and
four  destination  campgrounds  were  considered
together, but not when level three  destination and
overnight campgrounds were considered alone.
                                                                                                11

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      Analysis  of variance  of solid waste generation
rate  by composition category was conducted on the
data from only 19  campgrounds; four campgrounds
with   incomplete   data  matrices  were  omitted.
Although previous discussion shows  that there were
no statistically  significant differences in total wastes
generated among campgrounds  when all 23  of them
were  considered,   there   was   a   difference   in
generation  rate  of  the  different  waste composition
categories.  At  any  one time, there  were apt to be
large  differences caused by both the regular  and
unpredictable variation  in the waste generation  rate
from a  particular  campground.  The  difference in
generation  by  waste  composition existed  because
the   Samowen   campground,   which   openly
encouraged  campsite  burning  of combustible
materials other  than food wastes, contributed data
showing  a low  percentage of such other combustible
waste.
      The  variation in the  daily waste generation
rate  from within a  particular campground prompted
an extended study  at the Wayne National Forest to
gather data to further investigate  this variation. Two
campgrounds on the same small  lake in  this Forest
were studied (Figure 7). The different rates charted
for identical days  are the result  of the combined,
highly variable waste generation  rates of individual
campers  at  each campsite.  A regression analysis of
the  data  charted   (Figure  7)  and  data  on  the
concurrent movement of campers showed  that the
waste  generation  rate  generally  increased  on  the
days  when  several  parties  left the area, apparently
leaving  accumulated or  disposable  items  behind.
Campers  arriving  or  staying  contributed lower,
though widely varying, waste generation rates.
      Several   circumstances   that  influenced
variations in  the generation  of wastes at individual
campsites were  individual burning, campers'  visitors,
trailer campers  with their  own trash  containers,  and
rain.  Efforts   to  encourage  campers   to  burn
combustibles  other  than   food  wastes  in  their
fireplace had  a noticeable  effect.  In  campgrounds
where  burning was not encouraged, some campers,
nevertheless,   always  burned  these  combustibles.
Some  campgrounds, particularly  in the  East, were
adjacent to small  towns  and local people  often
visited  their  friends  camping  there. An  evening's
visit   often   resulted   in  large  quantities   of
noncombustible waste.  The  opposite  effect was
encountered when campers  ate dinner, and perhaps
other meals, in town. These cases were accepted as
reasons for variations  in the daily camping  waste
generation rate.
      Another  factor   that   influenced   waste
generation  was the  frequency  with  which  the
camper deposited his wastes in the waste container.
Trailer campers who had trash cans in their trailers
and  emptied  them only every other day created
waste generation rates that varied considerably. Data
on  the effect of  rain  on solid  waste  generation
allowed no specific conclusion about it.  Subsurface
containers easily collected water that increased  the
weight of material collected, but this did not  occur
commonly   in   well—covered   above-ground
containers.
      Picnic Areas. Family picnickers generated an
average of 0.93  Ib  per  picnicker. Picnickers  in
organized groups generated more	an  average of
1.16 Ib per picnicker.
      Among  the  136 family picnics studied, there
was  a  very  small  variation in the rate  of  waste
generation: the standard deviation was only 0.07, or
8 percent of  the mean value. The  rate from  group
picnics varied more widely:  the  standard deviation
was  0.29, or  25  percent of the mean value.  There
was no indication that the length of time of  either
type of picnic influenced waste generation.
      Group picnickers' average generation rates for
the three waste components are compared with that
of family picnickers on a per pound basis (Table 4).
The  increase in noncombustibles generated by  group
picnickers came primarily from cans and bottles.
                                               TABLE 4

                             PICNIC WASTE  GENERATED PER PICNICKER
                                              (in pounds)
Picnic
type
Family
Group
Food
wastes
0.41
0.34
Other
combustibles
0.27
0.36
Non-
combustibles
0.25
0.46

Totals
0.93
1.16
                                                                                                  17

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      Organization Camps.  Scout, church, and city
camps with permanent facilities on National Forest
land are known as organization camps. There is no
significant  source of waste from these camps other
than from  the kitchen. Solid wastes were generated
at an  average rate of 1.81  Ib per camp—occupant
day or about 0.6 Ib per occupant per meal  served;
the standard deviation was  0.31, or  17 percent of
the mean.
      The  average  generation  rates  varied  in  the
four organization camps studied (Figure 8). Wastes
from  organization camps were primarily wet garbage
and  paper.  Boxes and  packaging  material were
frequently  thrown out at the beginning of the week
as shipments  were  unpacked.  The composition of
the average waste, by weight, was: food wastes, 59
percent; other   combustibles,   18   percent;  and
noncombustibles, 23 percent.
      Recreation Residences.  These  are defined as
private  homes located  within  a National  Forest;
they  may   be  occupied  on  an  intermittent  or
year—round  basis. A total of  90 such  recreation
residences   were sampled  during  the study. The
average rate  of  solid  waste generation was 2.13 Ib
per occupant day. The standard deviation was 0.44,
or 21 percent of the mean. The composition  of
average wastes,  by weight, was: food wastes, 24
percent; other   combustibles,   41   percent;  and
noncombustibles, 35 percent.
      Winter Sports Areas.  Many winter sport sites
are operated  through permits on  National  Forest
land. From a special study of two winter sport areas
in Utah, information was  gained on both  waste
composition  and  waste  generation   from  three
overnight lodges, two day lodges, a  tavern, and ski
                 1.77
                                      1.68
lift  base  area. Wastes, primarily from  rooms  and
kitchens of overnight lodges, were generated at an
average rate  of  1.87  Ib  per visitor day,  with a
standard deviation of  0.80,  or  43 percent of the
mean. The composition  of the  average waste, by
weight,  was:  food  wastes,  34 percent;  other
combustibles, 33 percent; and noncombustibles, 33
percent.
      Wastes  from all  facilities  in the  day lodges
averaged 2.92 Ib  per visitor day, with a standard
deviation  of 0.66,  or 23  percent of the mean.  The
composition of the average waste, by weight, in day
lodges  was:   food  wastes,  17  percent;  other
combustibles,  59 percent; and noncombustibles, 24
percent.
      Recreation  Sites Generating Minor Quantities
of Solid Wastes.   Observation sites, visitor  centers,
and boating and swimming sites generate  only minor
quantities  of  waste,  and  little data were collected
concerning   them.  Meaningful  use   figures   to
accompany the weight  data were often  difficult to
obtain.  At some  of the isolated sites, accurate use
counts were time consuming and impractical. The
following   solid  waste   generation  rates   are
approximate  (this  shortcoming  is   not  serious,
however,   since  these   activities   only   justify
containers  to  prevent littering):  observation sites,
0.05 Ib per incoming axle; visitor centers,  0.02 Ib
per visitor; swimming sites, 0.04 Ib  per swimmer;
boat ramps-, 0.24 Ib per boat; and concession stands,
0.14 Ib per patron.
      Administrative Sites.  The administrative  sites
studied   were:  administrative   residences,  work
centers, and  a mess  hall  at  a  firefighters camp.
Wastes were collected from staff residences at ranger
                                                                               2.01
                                                           1.83
             ALLEGHENY         DESCHUTES          ELDORADO          RIO GRANDE


              Figure 8.  Pounds of solid waste per occupant day at four organization camps.
                                                                                                  19

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stations and at  one  Job Corps Civilian Conservation
Center.  The  average  waste  generation  rates were
1.37  Ib  per  person per day from homes around
ranger stations and  1.77 Ib per person per day from
the homes of the Job Corps Center  staff.
   2.83
                2.10
                          0.81
                                        0.36
                                      n
 MANISTEE
               WAYNE   MANISTEE
             WAYNE
   KITCHEN WASTES
ADMINISTRATIVE
       AND
   DORMITORY
     WASTES
      Figure   9. Pounds  of  solid  waste  per
corpsman  day  at  two  Job  Corps   Civilicin
Conservation Centers.
      Quantities of wastes from work centers varied
greatly:  between 5 and 100 Ib of dry trash per day
depending on the activity in  shops.  There was no
measure of activity to correlate with waste quantity.
      One barracks for firefighters was studied. The
most significant waste  contribution came from the
kitchen, at a rate of 0.98 Ib  per person per meal
served.
      Job  Corps   Civilian  Conservation
Centers. Wastes  from  two   Job  Corps  Centers
studied were classified  into two categories:  kitchen
wastes,  and   combustible   administrative  and
dormitory wastes.
      Kitchen   wastes  were produced  in  slightly
greater  quantities   than  in  restaurants  and
 organization  camps. Waste generation is  stated in
 terms  of corpsman  days. Because  of the variable
 number  of bagged  lunches,  one corpsman day was
 approximately three corpsman meals.
      Average waste generation for one center was
 2.83   Ib  of kitchen  waste  and  0.81  Ib  of
 administrative arid  dormitory waste per corpsman
 day. At  the  other center, 2.10  Ib of kitchen waste
 and 0.36 Ib of administrative and dormitory wastes
 per corpsman day were generated (Figure 9).  The
 average  amount  of kitchen wastes  for  the  two
 centers was 2.44 Ib per corpsman day (or about 0.8
 Ib per  meal served).
     Resorts.   The  resorts  studied  contained
restaurants, rented cabins with kitchens, and rented
rooms  without kitchens.  Wastes at  the  restaurants
studied were  generated at a rate similar to the rate
for kitchen  wastes at  Job  Corps  Centers and
organization   camps:  0.71  Ib per meal served. In
cabins, wastes were generated at an  average rate of
 1.46 Ib per occupant day, with  a standard deviation
of 0.38,  or  26  percent of  the  mean. In  rented
rooms, wastes were generated at an  average rate of
0.59 Ib per occupant day, with  a standard deviation
of 0.28,  or  47  percent of  the mean (Figure  10).
Wastes  from rooms without kitchens were primarily
paper whereas wastes from cabins with kitchens also
contained small amounts of food wastes.
                                                          1.46
                                                                                     0.59
                              RENTED
                              CABINS
                               WITH
                             KITCHENS
                                LODGES
                                   AND
                                RENTED
                                 ROOMS
                                Figure  10. Pounds of solid waste per occupant
                          day at resorts studied.
 20

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      Value  of Solid Waste Generation  Rates.  The
solid  waste  generation  rates  established  in  this
report allow  Districts to predict the total amount of
waste they will receive  in a  given week or season.
This information can be  used  to estimate the size of
storage  facilities,  collection  vehicles, and  sanitary
landfill space needed in an area.
      After estimating the volume of solid waste in
storage  containers,  collection trucks, and enclosed
transfer  sheds,  a density of 170 Ib per  cu yd*
appears applicable in calculating  the related weight
values.
      The  density  of   solid  wastes  in   sanitary
landfills varies with  the compaction imparted by the
techniques and  equipment   used.  There  is  most
compaction when waste is spread and compacted in
thin  layers,  not  exceeding  2  ft in  depth.  The
compaction imparted by various equipment types is
not   well  documented, but  for landfill  design
purposes,  a  density  of 600  Ib per  cu  yd  is
reasonable  in small  Forest Service sanitary landfills.
      Small  sanitary  landfills  for recreation and
administrative wastes will contain  about 40 percent
cover  material  when   completed because  small
quantities are frequently covered.  Required sanitary
landfill volume for each  season would  then be:
             V =
                    0.6 x 600
360
where  V is volume in cubic yards and P is waste in.
pounds.

           Solid Waste Storage Practices

      Because  adequate   solid  waste   storage  is
important to  campground  aesthetics, good storage
facilities   are  expected.  Except   for  solid  waste
storage capacity in overflow camping areas and the
use of paper  container liners in one district, solid
waste storage  in the Forest Service was found to be
adequate.

      Forest  Service  solid waste storage containers
are generally  well maintained.  Although the study
members encountered many different configurations
of solid  waste storage containers (Figure 11), most
     *Division of Technical Operations has estimated that
170 Ib  per cu yd is the average density of solid wastes as
collected. This figure is based on past experience. Density
was not regularly measured during the study.
 employed standard G.S.A. welded 32—gal cans with
 lids.  Most  cans had  fastened—down  lids,  were
 designed  to  stay  upright,  and were on  concrete
 pads. All  above ground  containers were reasonably
 water tight.
      Districts  generally provided adequate  storage
 capacity. The only consistent exception  to this was
 found in  overflow camping areas. One campground
 that  was   frequently  marauded  by  bears  had
 elaborate "mail box" hoppers locked to each can to
 keep bears from feeding on garbage. The  only can
 serving the  overflow  camping section of this  same
 area, however,  held   only  about one—third of the
 wastes deposited there daily. The rest of the waste,
 stacked around  the can, was easy bait for bears.
      The  containers cost  between  $35,  for the
 simple  post  and concrete   pad, and $125, for the
 elaborate   bearproof  cans  (Figure  11).   Where
 improvements had been made on the basic can and
 post (lid fasteners, locks, etc.), the small increase in
 cost  was believed justified; this study did not find
 otherwise.
      Reasons  for  container  placement  were as
 varied as  the container designs encountered. Where
 cans  were placed beside the road  under "garbage"
 signs,   the  conspicuous   container  supposedly
 discouraged  littering  by openly  suggesting its use.
 Where  cans were  hidden  underground   beneath
 camouflaged  green lids or where inconspicuous cans
 were used,  the  enhanced  campground beauty was
 believed   to discourage   litter.  Each   of   these
 unverified   assumptions   probably  has   merit.
 However,  our  observations  suggest   that  the
 prominence   of  containers  was  not  of  prime
 importance in campground litter control.
       When  each  campsite had  its own container,
 the camper was  more careful of litter than when the
 container  was  shared  with  neighbors.  Shared
 containers were usually placed between  campsites
 on ground that neither  camper felt  responsible for
 keeping  clean.  A  personal  can  at the  campsite
 openly   exhibited   the  camper's   housekeeping,
 however, and the site was usually well kept.
      At  picnic  areas  and   other  areas  used
 intermittently,   prominently  displayed  containers
 were absolutely necessary  for  litter control.  The
 picnicker  or  hiker did not  always  feel the need to
 control his clutter at a site he was visiting for only
 a short time. Prominently displayed, densely spaced
 containers were the only answer in these areas.
      Almost every District in  the  Forest Service
used plastic can liners. The  Districts surveyed spent
between  $22 and $1,460 on plastic  liners, with a
median of $200  per District each season.
                                                                                                    21

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   Container held off the ground by posts. Lid held
on by a rubber strap.  Plastic liner in place.
    Paper container liner
Container with lid attached to post by a chain
Pivoting bearproof containers
                            Figure 11. Types of solid waste containers observed.
 22

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Container with lid attached to post
Bearproof "mail box" container
                                  Subsurface container
                                 Figure 11. (continued)
                                                                                           23

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       In  the Forest Service  Districts, plastic liners
 increased  collection efficiency. A  collector couid
 empty several cans  before returning to the truck. A
 two—man   crew  could  work  independently;  one
 working with  the truck, the other tying bags from
 the  cans  he  emptied and  then  placing them  at
 curbside. The liners reduced the needed frequency
 of can cleaning and  added generally to recreation
 area  sanitation. Because  the  liners were  frequently
 changed,  there was  little chance for messy deposits
 to form on the bottom of the can. Periodic cleaning
 required  only hosing  down with  a  fire pumper.
 Open trucks could be used  for  collection  because
 the wind did not blow the solid  waste when it was
 enclosed  in  plastic liners  and  properly stacked.
 Unmodified pickup trucks could then be used  for
 solid waste collection as  well as for other tasks. Use
 of the liners allowed intermediate refuse  storage. Cln
 two  Districts  surveyed, wastes were  collected from
 the  recreation areas and then moved to enclosed
 bins  for  later transfer  to  larger  trucks going  to
 disposal sites.  The filled plastic liners, tied shut wi th
 twists, could easily await weekly collection.
      Kraft paper can liners were  encountered on
one Forest. There were no  apparent advantages to
their  use.   Instead,  when  compared  with  plastic
liners, they cost  nearly three  times as much, weie
brittle and  easily torn, required more time to  unfold
and   place  in cans, and were not easily tied  or
twisted closed.
      Solid waste storage by permittees in  winter
sport areas was often poorly conducted  because of
heavy snows  and  poor access.  This can  be  serious
because  these  facilities  are  often  in   protected
watersheds. Operating standards specified in land  use
permits for  these  areas  should receive  immediate
enforcement,   and   those that  specify   less than
Federal standards should be rewritten.

         Solid Waste Collection Practices

       Solid wastes in recreation areas were collected
by District  forces  or  private  contractors.  Some
Districts contracted  for  private  collection  during
the  season of heavy  recreation  use and deployed
Forest  Service crews  only during  seasons of ligit
use.  There was  no evidence to  suggest that  one
system was always  less expensive  or more efficient
than  the  other. Attitudes toward private collection
varied from District to District and were based on
past experience with local contractors.
       Forest  Service  and  private   collectors  used
open  pickup  or   stakebed   trucks  most   often.
Volume,  rather  than  weight, usually determined
truck selection. In Districts where  additional truck
volume  was required, an  added stock rack increased
the  bed  height  or the  truck pulled a  trailer. A
3/4—ton pickup  can carry about 9 cu yd of solid
waste before  exceeding  designed  weight  capacity
since the  waste  density averages only 170 Ib per cu
yd.
      A  crew  of one   or  two  men was  usually
assigned the task, of waste  collection. These crews
were often assigned other  tasks  such as cleaning
toilets,  supplying firewood, and  maintaining walks
or   drainage.   Containers   were   spaced  for  the
convenience of users and for litter control, not to
minimize  the cost of collecting from them.
      Solid waste containers must be emptied either
when they are full or before their  contents become
offensive. Collection twice weekly  is recommended
to   control fly  breeding.  Since  each  collection
involves manpower and probably  many travel miles,
collection more  than twice  weekly is unnecessarily
expensive. Containers at  campsites should be spaced
between waste  sources  so  they  will be  full twice
each week,  provided  that  the  spacing  provides
adequate litter control.

                Collection Cost Study

      Cost  information   was  obtained  from  22
Districts in 15  Forests.  The  staff  member most
familiar with  solid  waste handling  in  the  District
was  asked to itemize the seasonal cost  of plastic
liners, collection manpower, collection truck rental
and  mileage, and  the  cost of disposal. The sum of
these costs  was related  to the seasonal route miles
traveled in collection as  well as seasonal picnic area
and  campground use retrieved from the  Recreation
Information Management  (RIM) system. Picnicking
and  camping  activities  contributed  the  most  solid
waste,  and for that reason, were used  in  the
correlation.  Details  of  the  analysis are  found in
Appendix 4.
      Data  describing the economics of collection
varied  greatly.  Because  some   interviews   were
conducted by mail  and   telephone, there may have
been   misinterpretations.   District   accounting
techniques  also  made it  awkward  to retrieve the
desired  information. A third source of variation was
the  questionable  reports of  visitor  use by some
District Rangers to the RIM  system.
      Conclusions  from  the  collection  cost study
data include:  (1)  Cost  per estimated ton  of solid
waste collected  and disposed of  in  each District
ranged  from $28 to $302,  with a  median of $88.
  24

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(2) The number of plastic liners used on each of 22
Districts was linearly related to the weight of solid
waste  collected in  those Districts.  (3)  Collection
route miles traveled was  the  variable most highly
related  to solid waste  handling costs,  followed by
campground capacity and thousands of picnic visitor
days.
      An  equation to describe  this relationship  was
developed from a stepwise regression analysis:
   C = 0.77 RM +  1.13 PAOT + 27.6 PVD - 403

where:         C =  Total solid  waste handling cost
                    for  the time period considered,
                    in dollars,

            RM =  Collection  route miles traveled
                    during  the   time  period
                    considered including distance to
                    dispoal site,

          PAOT =  Capacity of the  campgrounds in
                    number of campers, and

           PVD =  Thousands of picnicker visitor-
                    days  incurred   over  the time
                    period considered.

      The  precision of  the equation is illustrated
(Figure A4—1, Appendix 4).


         Improving Solid Waste Collection

      When solid waste containers in camping areas
are spaced between two  or  three campsites, they
require  more  frequent collection than  when each
site  has its   own  container.  Frequent  collection,
particularly in remote  areas, adds to  the total travel
distance  involved  in   collection   and   disposal.
Supplying  more  containers  reduces  the  needed
collection frequency and the route miles traveled.
      Using the average  waste  generation rate  for
one  camper,  1.26 Ib per camper  day, and an average
density (as  collected)  of  170 Ib per cu yd, and a
solid waste container reasonably full at 24 gal, each
container  will accommodate  the   wastes  of  16
camper  days. When five persons per  campsite is
assumed, one  can,  spaced between every three sites,
will  hold  wastes  accumulated  in  1.1  days. This
situation will   require  collection  daily. If containers
are spaced between each two sites,  they will hold
the  wastes  that accumulate  every  1.7  days,  and
collection every  2 days will  be adequate. A solid
waste container at every site, however, will hold the
wastes  accumulated  in  3.4 days and will  require
collection only twice  a week.
      An example will  illustrate the economy of
reduced   collection   frequency.  A  well—occupied
campground  of  48  campsites  served  by   16
containers will require collection six  or seven times
a week. If  the campground  is  15 miles from the
work center, collection entails at least 180 miles of
travel each week. If the campground Vere provided
with 32  more cans, collection  would be  reduced to
twice weekly. The District would spend  about  $50
for  each   of  32  new  containers,  or  $1,600.
Distributed  over 5 years, this cost  amounts to only
$320 a  year. At  least  120 collection route miles
would  be  saved each week  by  decreasing  the
collection  frequency.  Over  a  12—wk  recreation
season,  this would  amount   to 1,440  miles.  By
applying the formula for total solid  waste handling
costs (Appendix 4), a  reduction  of 1,440 route
miles would  mean  a saving  of $1,110, or  a  net
saving  of $790 each season  after subtracting  the
cost of  cans. The saving resulting from less frequent
collection far outweighs the cost.

      As  previously  mentioned,  two   men were
usually  assigned  the  job  of waste  collection.  In
many  cases  this  was   an  uneconomic  use  of
manpower.  Although the  use  of two men ensures
the quickest collection, the long travel times to  and
between recreation areas offset the contribution of
a second collector.  No  private collectors observed
employed two  men. The value  of employing  a
second collector can be analyzed graphically (Figure
12)  given  the  travel  time   (to  and   from  the
recreation area) and the collection  time in the area.
The   decrease  in  collection  time   necessary  to
economically justify the travel of a second collector
is illustrated.  This assumes both collectors are paid
at the same rate; a second collector paid  more than
the first collector will have to contribute  even more
toward reducing collection time.
      The  use  of transfer sheds to reduce  the
frequency of haul from  recreation  areas to disposal
sites may be justified in  Districts where the seasonal
cost of  manpower, supplies, and equipment used in
the  transfer—shed storage, collection, and disposal
system is lower than it could be with  the  use of any
other system.  Modifying a  collection system with an
innovation  such as  a  transfer  shed may  reduce
seasonal  cost but, at the same time, not reduce it as
much as an  entirely new system.
                                                                                                    25

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                Solid  Waste Disposal

      The economic questionnaires submitted to 22
Districts  indicated that an average  of less than  4
percent   of   their  solid   waste   handling  money
financed  final  disposal. About  one—half  of  the
Districts reported no expenditure for disposal  at all.
Nearly  every  Forest Service District has a different
approach toward disposal  of solid  wastes  because
nearly  every  District  is affected  by different local
circumstances.
      Many   Districts  use   community  dumps
operating on  National Forest land; other Districts
prohibit community dumps, but use their own small
dumps for recreation wastes.  Most Districts practice
open burning when  the forest  fire hazard  is not
great,  but there is little incineration  on  National
Forest land.  Some Districts, feeling a responsibility
to  provide  disposal areas  to  nearby communities,
freely  offer sites. Some of these  Districts limit the
number of these sites; others do not. Most Districts
require the city  or county to  operate  the disposal
site  according to standards  cited in the special land
use permit they issue.  In most cases, these standards
specify that  the  site  be  operated  at  the  level
required by State laws and local ordinances.

      At  this  time, few local  areas have  standards
for land  disposal  site operations; and  in  remote
areas,  few  States  are able  to  enforce  existing
legislation. Study  personnel found no land disposal
sites that conformed to local standards where they
existed.
      At  the  District  level, there was widespread
misunderstanding  of  Federal  standards concerning
open  dumps   on  Forest  land.   The   May  1966
Executive  Order   No.  11282 ("Control  of Air
Pollution  Originating  from Federal Installations")
revised  Mar. 28,  1969 (Appendix 6),  regulates all
disposal   operations   on   Federal  land,  whether
federally,  municipally,  or  privately  conducted.
Standards to implement the objectives of the Order,
Title 42 of the Code  of Federal  Regulations, Part
76.8  (Appendix  6),   prohibit  open  burning  on
Federal lands  and require that  "refuse shall not be
left in  dumps," and must be compacted and covered
every  evening after  the  landfill has  been  used
regardless of its size or isolation. The methods used
should be in accordance with those described in the
Bureau  of  Solid  Waste Management  publication
Sanitary Landfill Facts.^

      Incineration, which  is  also covered  by the
Executive Order, is little used in the Forest Service
for economic reasons.  Where  incinerators operate,
they undoubtedly  do so in violation of  the  strict
emission standards set by the Order.
      Capital and maintenance costs of incinerators
cannot   compete  with  free dumps.  The  mobile
incinerator, used  in  experiments and field studies
conducted  by  the  Forest  Service, has  proven
expensive, and like some small incinerators, probably
will  not  meet  Federal  air   pollution  control
standards.
      The value of incineration  in recreational areas
is  questionable.  Between 21 and 45  percent of the
components   of   solid   waste   encountered   at
campgrounds  are  noncombustibles.  Another  10
percent of the remaining combustibles will probably
remain unburned in the ash. As a result, only 45 to
70  percent  of  the  weight  will  be  reduced  by
incineration and about  80  percent  of the volume.
The remaining  organics in the  residue  will  still
require   daily  cover.  Although  incineration  will
reduce waste  volume,  the  Forest  Service will not
benefit   from  the  reduction   because  the   small
volumes  handled are not difficult to transport and
because  disposal sites  need not be remote  from
recreation areas.

      The problems of acceptably disposing  of
Forest Service recreation and administrative wastes
should  receive  increased  attention.  Each District
must   see that  their   wastes  receive   acceptable
disposal,  whether  in  Forest  Service—operated
sanitary  landfills or city—operated sanitary landfills
or  incinerators.  Disposal,  even   without   open
burning,  in private,  city, or Forest  Service dumps
sets an unacceptably bad example.

      The best way to  improve existing community
disposal  sites on  Forest  Service  land  is to  first
demonstrate  sanitary landfill techniques on  Forest
Service  wastes in  separate  model sanitary landfills.
Trenches for these landfills could be dug by private
contract, just as they are  for some dumps. Nearly
every District has equipment that can compact and
cover  small  amounts  of  solid, waste  after each
collection, which as  a  minimum should be twice a
week. Small  tractors  can in some cases be used and
still be ready for other assignments if the sanitary
landfill  is  located  near   its   storage   area.
Four—wheel—drive  pickups with blades, although
not imparting optimum compaction, might  do an
adequate job. If these trucks are used for collection,
they have the added advantage of already being  at
the disposal  site when  compaction  and  cover are
needed.
                                                                                                    27

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            Planning New Solid Waste
               Handling Systems
      This report defines  the  major problem areas
in managing solid wastes handling systems and also
offers  suggestions  on  how  to  improve  the  three
major  components  of  handling systems: storage,
collection, and disposal.
      New  storage  and   collection  systems  or
existing ones improved  to include the suggestions in
this  report  will  not be drastically  different  from
those existing in  most Districts. Knowledge that the
number  of  route  miles collection crews travel is
costly  will  encourage reduced crew  sizes, enlarged
interim  storage  capacity,   and  reduced  collection
frequency.  Sanitary  landfills  will be located near
major  waste generating areas to reduce route  miles
of collection, but near enough to equipment storage
areas to  allow otherwise idle equipment to be used
for compaction and cover.
      Private  collection and disposal  will become
more  expensive  as strict  disposal  standards  are
enforced.  As solid waste management receives more
attention, however, more enlightened analysis of the
costs and benefits of private collection and disposal
will  ensure that, when private  collection is selected,
it will represent a true cost saving.
      The need and the means to end open burning
and   open  dumping have   been  shown.  Sanitary
landfills  located   near  equipment  garages  permit
existing equipment to be used with a minimum of
interruption to other assigned  tasks. The innovation
of a  collection-disposal vehicle  is needed that will
allow  sanitary  landfills to  operate   near   waste
sources,  with a   reduction  in  the   number of
collection route miles traveled.

      Sanitary landfills  need be operated only on
collection  days.  Careful  management of  storage
systems will reduce the need for  frequent collection,
and  infrequent collection will reduce the frequency
of disposal and will reduce  solid waste management
costs.
  28

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                                   REFERENCES
1.    [Weaver, L.]  Refuse sanitation in the national parks. Unpublished report. U.S. Department of Health,
           Education, and Welfare, Apr. 1955. 70 p.

2.    Sorg, T. J., and H. L. Hickman, Jr. Sanitary landfill facts. Public Health Service Publication No. 1792.
           Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1970. 36 p.
                                 BIBLIOGRAPHY
Columbia  Basin  Inter—Agency  Committee and Pacific Southwest Inter—Agency Committee. Administrative
      guide covering public health problems in recreational areas. Reprinted, Washington, U.S. Department of
      Health, Education, and Welfare, 1961. 41 p.

U.S. Department of Health,  Education, and Welfare. Environmental  health guide  for travel trailer parking
      areas; with a recommended ordinance. Chicago, Mobile Homes Manufacturers Assoc., Jan. 1966. 33 p.


Environmental health practice in recreation areas; a guide to the planning, design, operation, and maintenance
      of recreational areas. Public Health Service Publication No. 1195. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
      Office,  1965. 134 p.

Hickman, H. L., Jr. Characteristics of municipal solid wastes. Scrap Age, 26(2):305-307, Feb. 1969.

Report  of a  refuse  sanitation and  incinerator  evaluation  study in  Everglades National Park,  Florida.
      Unpublished report. U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Feb. 1959. 17  p.

RIM [recreation  information management] handbook. Forest Service Handbook 2309.11. U.S. Department of
      Agriculture, Sept. 1967. (Loose-leaf.)

Pacific Southwest Inter—Agency Committee and Columbia Basin Inter-Agency Committee. Suggested design
      criteria  for refuse  storage, collection, and disposal in  recreational areas.  Reprinted, Washington, U.S.
      Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1963. 19 p.

Trailer—mounted incinerator evaluation tests.  Equipment Development and Test Report 2300.  Unpublished
      report. San Dimas, Calif.,  U.S. Department of Agriculture, Feb. 1968. 31 p.

Weaver, L. Refuse and  litter control in recreation areas.  Public Works,  98(4): 126-128, 160, Apr. 1967.
                                                                                            29

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                          ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
     The Bureau  of Solid Waste Management's
Division of Technical Operations acknowledges the
contributions  of  all participants  of this study.
District and Regional Forest Service personnel who
helped  arrange and conduct  each District study are
listed with each study site description (Appendix 2).

     The study team  members visited the Lake
George District on the Ocala National Forest before
establishing a  method  or  a  schedule  of study.
Personnel  from that District,  from the National
Forests of Florida,  and from  the Forest Service
Region 8  provided the initial influence and guidance
that  were instrumental in conducting the studies
forming the basis for this report.
     Walter Weaver and Richard Spray of the San
Dimas Equipment Development Center coordinated
the participation  of  the  Forest  Service  in  the
project,  and  they also  conducted  three  of the
studies.  Their  zeal and  guidance  was essential to
success.

     Members  of the  Technical  Assistance  and
Investigations  Branch,  Division   of   Technical
Operations, participating in the field work were:
Morris G. Tucker, Harry  R. Little,  F. Owen Irvine,
Howard  R.  Ludwig, Ronald A. Perkins, and Charles
S. Spooner.* Statistical work was done by Betty L.
Grupenhoff and Albert J. Klee, Operations Analysis
Branch, Division of Technical Operations.
                                                      *Mr.  Spooner  is  now  Environmental  Engineer,
                                                  Department  of Health  and Environmental  Protection,
                                                  Metropolitan  Washington  Council  of  Governments,
                                                  Washington, D.C.
30

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                               APPENDIX 1
                     NATIONAL FOREST CAMP AND PICNIC SITE*
   ENVIRONMENTAL MODIFICATION
LEVELS OF:


    &
RECREATION EXPERIENCES


Minimum site modification. Rustic or
rudimentary improvements designed for
protection of the site rather than comfort
of the users. Use of synthetic materials
avoided. Minimum controls are subtle. No
obvious means of regimentation. Spacing
informal and extended to minimize
contacts with others. Motorized access not
provided or permitted.
Little site modification. Rustic or
rudimentary improvements designed for
protection of the site rather than comfort
of the users. Use of synthetic materials
avoided. Minimum controls are subtle.
Little obvious regimentation. Spacing
informal and extended to minimize
contacts with others. Motorized access
provided or permitted. Primary access over
primitive roads.
Site modification moderate. Facilities
designed about equally for protection of
site and comfort of users.
Contemporary/rustic design of
improvements is usually based on use of
native materials. Inconspicuous vehicular
traffic controls usually provided. Roads
may be hard surfaced and trails formalized.
Development density about three family
units per acre. Primary access to site may
be over high— standard well-traveled roads.
Visitor Information Service, if available, is
informal and incidental.
DEVELOPMENT
SCALE
1
primitive







2
secondary
primitive







3
inter-
mediate












Primitive forest environment is
dominant. Rudimentary and isolated
development sites beyond the sight or
sound of inharmonious influences.
Maximum opportunity for experiencing
solitute, testing skills, and compensating for
the routines of daily living. User senses no
regimentation. Feeling of physical
achievement in reaching site is important.
Near primitive forest environment.
Outside influences present but minimized.
Feeling of accomplishment associated with
low standard access is important but does
not necessarily imply physical exertion to
reach site. Opportunity for solitude and
chance to test outdoor skills are present.



Forest environment is essentially
natural. Important that a degree of solitude
be combined with some opportunity to
socialize with others. Controls and
regimentation provided for safety and
well— being of user sufficiently obvious to
afford a sense of security but subtle
enough to leave the taste of adventure.





  * From: RIM [recreation information management] handbook. Forest Service Handbook 2309.11.  U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Sept. 1967.
                                                                              31

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Site heavily modified. Some facilities
designed strictly for comfort and
convenience of users, but luxury facilities
not provided. Facility designs may tend
toward and incorporate synthetic materials.
Extensive use of artificial surfacing of roads
and trails. Vehicular traffic controls present
and usually obvious. Primary access usually
over paved roads. Development density of
three to five family units per acre. Plant
materials usually native. Visitor
Information Service frequently available.
High degree of site modification.
Facilities, mostly designed for comfort and
convenience of users, include flush toilets
and may include showers, bath houses,
laundry facilities, and electrical hookups.
Synthetic materials commonly used.
Formal walks or surfaced trails.
Regimentation of users is obvious. Access
usually by high— speed highways.
Development density of five or more
family units per acre. Plant materials may
be foreign to the environment. Formal
Visitor Information Service usually
available. Designs formalized and
architecture may be contemporary. Mowed
lawns and clipped shrubs not unusual.
(Class 5 sites only provided in special
situations or close to large cities where
other lands are not available.)
4
secondary
modern









5
modern

















Forest environment is pleasing and
attractive but not necessarily natural.
Blending of opportunities for solitude and
socializing with others. Testing of outdoor
skills on site mostly limited to the camping
activity. Many user comforts available.
Contrasts to daily living routines is
moderate. Invites marked sense of security.




Pleasing environment attractive to
the novice or highly gregarious camper.
Opportunity to socialize with others very
important. Satisfies urbanites' need for
compensating experiences and relative
solitude but less intensive than in classes 1
to 4. Obvious to user that he is in secure
situation where ample provision is made for
his personal comfort and he will not be
called upon to use undeveloped skills.









32

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                                   APPENDIX  2
                           DESCRIPTIONS OF INDIVIDUAL STUDIES


     The agencies involved in these studies and their organizational structure, with the abbreviations used in
Appendix 2, are as follows:


     U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare                        HEW

     Public Health Service                                                  PHS

     Consumer Protection and Environmental
       Health Service                                                      CPEHS

     Environmental Control Administration                                   ECA

     Bureau of Solid Waste Management                                     BSWM

     U.S. Department of Agriculture                                         USDA

     Forest Service                                                        FS

     San Dimas Equipment Development Center                              SDEDC

     Washington Office                                                    WO

     National Forest                                                      NF

     Ranger District                                                      RD


       In the  tables of Appendix  2, a dash indicates that no data were available, a zero  indicates that the
observed Value of an item was zero, and blanks mean that the corresponding items were not  studied.
                                                                                          33

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                                      INDEX OF SITES STUDIED




Forest                                                                                            Page






Allegheny National Forest, Pennsylvania	   35




Deschutes National Forest, Oregon  	   39




Eldorado National Forest, California	   45




Gallatin National  Forest, Montana	   47




Huron—Manistee National Forest, Michigan	   49




Kaniksu National  Forest, Idaho	   51




Lincoln National Forest, New Mexico  	   53




National Forest of Mississippi	   55




Ozark National Forest, Arkansas	   57




Rio Grande National Forest, Colorado	,	   61




Wayne—Hoosier National Forest, Ohio	   63




Winter Sports Areas:




      Cache National Forest, Utah	   67




      Wasatch National Forest, Utah	   69
 34

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                         SOLID WASTE STUDY, JUNE 26 - JULY 1, 1969

                       ALLEGHENY NATIONAL FOREST,PENNSYLVANIA
SITES STUDIED:
     Hearts Content Campground (1)
     Minister Creek Campground (2)
     Buckaloons Campground (3) and Picnic Area (5)
     Kiasutha Campground (4), Swimming Area (6), and Boat Ramp (7)
     Jakes Rock Overlook (8)
     Camp Cornplanter Organization Camp (9)
PERSONNEL:
     Study Team:  Charles S. Spooner and F. Owen Irvine, BSWM, ECA; and Walter S. Weaver, SDEDC, FS.
     Local Staff:  James Sleeper, Region 9, FS; and Richard Schmeltzer, Marienville RD, Allegheny NF.
                               ALLEGHENY NATIONAL FOREST

                      GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE
                                                         Day of waste generation
       Area
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
(1)   Hearts Content Campground

Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/car/lper day
Composition (percent*)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles

(2)   Minister Creek Campground

Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles
   16.3
   26.7
    0.61
   16
    1.02
   37.2
   25
    1.49
   15
    2.48
  27.0
  26.7
   1.01
  16
   1.69

  39
  18
  43
  22.0
  33.4
   0.66
  20
   1.10

  38.3
  19.5
  42.2
   94.0
   71.7
    1.31
   43
    2.19

   61.6
   17.2
   21.2
   42.8
   70.0
    0.61
   42
    1.02

   32.3
   21.7
   46.0
 100.0
 165
   0.61
  99
   1.01

  48.5
  21.2
  30.3
  64.0
  85.0
   0.75
  51
   1.25

  43
  18
  39
                                                                                          35

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                        ALLEGHENY NATIONAL FOREST  -  CONTINUED
                                                           Day of waste generation
        Area                                 Thursday        Friday         Saturday         Sunday

(3)   Buckaloons Campground

Pounds of waste generated                       98.2          104.0           215.4           192.0
Visitor days contributing                        118.9          152.7           188.9           198.2
Pounds/visitor day                                0.83           0.68            1.14            0.97
Camper days contributing                       102            131             162            170
Pounds/camper day                               0.96           0.79            1.33            1.13
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes                               23.0           35.6            41             37
     Other combustibles                         27.5           24.4            24             22
     Noncombustibles                           49.5           40.0            35             41

(4)   Kiasutha Campground

Pounds of waste generated                      426.4           325.9          668.0          578.4
Visitor days contributing                        666            672            688            675
Pounds/visitor day                                 0.64           0.48            0.97            0.86
Camper days contributing                       444            448            459            450
Pounds/camper day                                0.96           0.73            1.45            1.28
Composition (percent)
      Food wastes                                47.9            37.5           40.7            42.2
      Other combustibles                          24.0            36.1            35.2            27.3
      Noncombustibles                            28.1            26.4           24.1            30.5

(5)   Buckaloons Picnic Area

Pounds of waste generated                          6.3            11.1            21.0            34.2
Picnickers contributing                            —             13               7              —
Pounds/picnicker                                —              0.85            3.0            —
Composition (percent)
      Food wastes                                23             37             45              37
      Other combustibles                          27             23             21              22
      Noncombustibles                            50             40             34              41

(6)   Kiasutha Swimming Area

Pounds of waste generated                                                       53.6            18.7
Swimmers contributing                                                         425             600
Pounds/swimmer                                                                0.13            0.03
Composition (percent)
      Food wastes                                                              33              12
      Other combustibles                                                        32              43
      Noncombustibles                                                          35              45
 36

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                       ALLEGHENY NATIONAL FOREST  - CONTINUED
                                                          Day of waste generation
        Area
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
(7)  Kiasutha Boat Ramp

Pounds of waste generated
Boats contributing
Pounds/boat

(8)  Jakes Rock Overlook

Pounds of waste generated
Number of incoming axles
Pounds/incoming axle

(9)  Camp Cornplanter Organization Camp
   9.0
  74
   0.12
  0.75
 80
  0.01
                                47.5
                                83
                                 0.57
  16.1
 328
   0.05
                               13.5
                               45
                                0.30
   1.0
 52
  0.02
Pounds of waste generated
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
487 0
220
2.21

74.2
13.1
12.7
162
196
0.83

46.3
28.9
24.8
354
150
2.36

62.1
18.1
19.8
     * All percents by weight.
                                                                                           37

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38

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                            SOLID WASTE STUDY, JULY 12-15,  1968

                            DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST, OREGON

SITES STUDIED:

     Prairie Campground (1)
     Paulina Lake Campground (2), Boating Area (14), and Recreation Residences (11)
     East Lake Campground (3), Resort Cabins (10), Restaurant (12), and Boating Area (15)
     Princess Creek Campground (4) and Boating Area (16)
     Trapper Creek Campground (5) and Boating Area (17)
     Cinder Hill Campground (6) and Boating Area (18)
     Crescent Lake Organization  Camp (7)
     Odell-Summit Lodge (8) and Cabins (9)
     Lava Butte Visitor Center (13)
PERSONNEL:
     Study Team: Harry R. Little, Ronald A. Perkins, and Howard R. Ludwig, BSWM, ECA; Ransom H.
        Martin, TVA (assigned for training to the BSWM); and Richard H. Spray, SDEDC, FS.
     Local Staff:  Douglas C. Roth, Region 6, FS; and Bert Houston, Fort Rock RD, and Lyle Greenwood,
        Crescent RD, Deschutes NF.

                                 DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST
                       GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE

                                                         Day of waste generation
        Area                                Thursday        Friday        Saturday        Sunday

(1)   Prairie Campground

Pounds of waste generated                       15.5           14.5            8.5           34.0
Visitor days contributing                         22             15             18              7
Pounds/visitor day                                0,70           0.97           0.47           4.86
Camper days contributing                        22             15             18              7
Pounds/camper day                               0.70           0.97           0.47           4.86
Composition (percent*)
     Food wastes                               25.7           30.9           17.0           41.2
     Other combustibles                         32.9           27.8           29.8           22.0
     Noncombustibles                          41.4           41.3           53.2           36.8

(2)   Paulina Lake Campground

Pounds of waste generated                       264.0          109.5          188.0          231.0
Visitor days contributing                        206            182            221            188
Pounds/visitor day                                1.28           0.60           0.85           1.23
Camper days contributing                       155            137            166            141
Pounds/camper day                               1.70           0.80           1.13           1.64
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes                               32.6           35.2           26.4           26.8
     Other combustibles                         31.5           39.8           29.5           30.8
     Noncombustibles                          24.6           20.1           36.2           37.3
     Fish cleaning wastes                        11.3            4.9            7.9            5.1
                                                                                            39

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                DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST  - CONTINUED
Area
(3) East Lake Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
Fish cleaning wastes
(4) Princess Creek Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(5) Trapper Creek Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(6) Cinder Hill Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
Fish cleaning wastes

Thursday

166.5
153
1.09
115
1.45

37.5
26.4
30.1
6.0

181.5
162
1.12
122
1.49

33.6
40.3
26.1

228.5
158
1.44
119
1.92

37.0
29.7
33.3

209.0
246
0.85
185
1.13

28.2
37.6
32.8
1.4
Day of waste
Friday

118.5
197
0.60
148
0.80

30.7
35.0
27.0
7.3

122.5
176
0.70
132
0.93

44.1
34.4
21.5

146.0
193
0.76
145
1.01

46.0
31.0
23.0

210.0
315
0.67
237
0.89

26.2
38.6
35.2
0.0
generation
Saturday

166.0
202
0.82
152
1.09

27.6
31.0
35.2
6.2

146.5
216
0.68
162
0.90

42.3
33.3
24.4

234.5
325
0.72
244
0.96

40.6
32.3
27.1

329.0
301
1.09
226
1.46

26.8
29.0
37.7
6.5

Sunday

206.5
138
1.49
104
1.98

37.0
19.2
39.8
4.0

160.5
158
1.01
119
1.35

44.4
31.9
23.7

217.5
193
1.13
145
1.50

38.0
30.7
31.3

215.0
128
1.68
96
2.24

26.7
32.1
37.6
3.6
40

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DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST -  CONTINUED
Area
(7) Crescent Lake Organization Camp
Pounds of waste generated
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(8) Odell-Summit Lodgef
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Meals served
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles

Thursday

129.0
96
1.34

57.3
34.1
8.6

8.5
—
7

52.9
35.3
11.8
Day of waste
Friday

175.5
58
3.03

59.0
26.8
14.2

44.5
-
25

47.2
27.0
25.8
generation
Saturday

0







26.0
—
48

32.7
23.1
44.2

Sunday

80.0
75
1.07

3.7
25.6
70.7

37.0
-
57

37.8
20.3
41.9
(9) Odell-Summit Lodge Cabins (without kitchens)
Pounds of waste generated
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(10) East Lake Resort Cabins
Pounds of waste generated
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
(11) Paulina Lake Recreation Residences1^
Pounds of waste generated
Cabins contributing
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
6.5
3
2.20

70
15
15

53.0
35
1.51

12.5
4
14
0.89

38.5
15.3
46-2
10.0
19
0.53

25
60
15

87.5
57
1.53

73.0
4
15
4.86

80
20
0
26.0
19
1.62

38.4
38.4
23.2

145.5
66
2.20

107.0
4
15
7.13

83
0
17
21.0
15
1.40

26.2
40.5
33.3

111.0
25
4.44

18.5
3
14
1.32

40
20
40
                                                       41

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                DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST  - CONTINUED
Area
(12) East Lake Resort Restaurant §
Pounds of waste generated
Number of meals served
Pounds/meal
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(13) Lava Butte Visitor Center
Pounds of waste generated
Visitors contributing
Pounds/visitor
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(14) Paulina Lake Boating Area
Pounds of waste generated
Boats contributing
Pounds/boat
(15) East Lake Boating Area
Pounds of waste generated
Boats contributing
Pounds/boat
(16) Princess Creek Boating Area
Pounds of waste generated
Boats contributing
Pounds/boat
(17) Trapper Creek Boating Area
Pounds of waste generated
Boats contributing
Pounds/boat

Thursday

69.5
14
4.96

8.6
87.3
4.1

30.5
500
0.06

8.2
60.7
31.1

9.5
19
0.50

7.5
11
0.68

1.0
40
0.02

0.0
24
0.0
Day of waste
Friday

24.0
39
0.62

43.8
39.5
16.7

5.5
289
0.02

9.0
72.8
18.2

3.0
22
0.14

1.0
11
0.09

0.0
28
0.0

1.0
34
0.03
generation
Saturday

40.0
23
1.74

31
54
15

14.5
350
0.04

6.9
79.3
13.8

1.0
19
0.05

0.0
24
0.0

1.0
26
0.04

2.0
46
0.04

Sunday

68.0
12
5.67

16.3
38.9
44.8

4.0
500
0.01

0.0
37.5
62.5

7.5
16
0.47

5.0
15
0.33

1J3
11
0.09

3.0
29
0.10
42

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                         DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST  -  CONTINUED
                                                         Day of waste generation
       Area                                Thursday        Friday        Saturday        Sunday

(18) Cinder Hill Boating Area
Pounds of waste generated
Boats contributing
Pounds/boat
9.0
23
0.39
3.0
28
0.11
16.0
33
0.48
10.5
7
1.50
   * All percents by weight.
   t Wastes were collected from lodges, boat ramps, office, and kitchen.
   ^ Wastes from one home on Saturday consisted of 50 Ib of wood chips.
   § This restaurant was a small hamburger stand.
                                                                                             43

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44

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                            SOLID WASTE STUDY, JULY 19-22, 1968

                         ELDORADO NATIONAL FOREST, CALIFORNIA
 SITES STUDIED:
      Fallen Leaf Campground (1)
      Camp Richardson Cabins (2), Restaurant (3), and Lodge (4)
      Lake Tahoe Visitor Center (5)
      Camp Concord Organization Camp (6)
      Spring Creek Recreation Residences (7)
 PERSONNEL:
     Study Team:  Harry R. Little and Howard R. Ludwig, BSWM, ECA; and Richard H. Spray, SDEDC, FS.
     Local Staff:  Robert McLaughlin, Region 5, FS; and James Olson, Lake Valley RD, Eldorado NF.

                                 ELDORADO NATIONAL FOREST

                      GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE
                                                         Day of waste generation
        Area
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
(1)  Fallen Leaf Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent*)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles

(2)   Camp Richardson Cabins
Pounds of waste generated
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles

 (3)   Camp Richardson Restaurant
 Pounds of waste generated
 Meals served
 Pounds/meal served
 Composition (percent)
      Food wastes
      Other combustibles
      Noncombustibles
  520.0
  640
    0.81
  640
    0.81

   22.2
   38.3
   39.5
 708.7
 705
   1.01
 705
   1.01

  28.7
  35.6
  35.7
                 258.5
                 180
                   1.44

                 26.6
                 44.4
                 29.0
                  69.5
                 183
                   0.38

                  72.6
                  23.0
                   4.4
  857.5
  795
    1.08
  795
    1.08

   28.7
   31.5
   39.8
               288.5
               180
                 1.60

                23.8
                43.5
                32.7
                196.0
                228
                  0.86

                 69.3
                 24.2
                  6.5
 712.5
 644
   1.11
 644
   1.11

  34.2
  39.6
  26.2
                164.5
                180
                  0.92

                 28.5
                 51.3
                 20.2
                  51.0
                 141
                   0.36

                  37.2
                  52.9
                   9.9
                                                                                             45

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                        ELDORADO NATIONAL FOREST
                CONTINUED
        Area
Thursday
                                                           Day of waste generation
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
(4)   Camp Richardson Lodge

Pounds of waste generated
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles

(5)   Lake Tahoe Visitor Center

Pounds of waste generated
Visitors contributing
Pounds/visitor
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles

(6)   Camp Concord Organization Camp

Pounds of waste generated
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles

(7)   Spring Creek Recreation Residences
    5.8
  .503
    0.012

    0
  100
    0
  129.1
   94
    1.37

   68.6
   23.8
    7.6
                  10.0
                  37
                   0.27

                   0
                  80
                  20
   3.0
 413
   0.007

   0
  70
  30
 218.5
  90
   2.43

  25.6
  26.5
  47.9
                  8.0
                 58
                  0.14

                  0
                 75
                 25
    6.5
  625
    0.010

    0
   75
   25
  169.0
   95
    1.78

   73.4
   20.7
    5.9
                  24.5
                  25
                   0.98

                   0
                  82
                  18
   4.5
 536
   0.010

   0
  70
  30
 173.5
  97
   1.79

  65.7
  28.5
   5.8
Pounds of waste generated
Cabins occupied
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
67.0
7
30
2.23

20.3
27.6
52.1
94.5
14
54.5
1.73

36.5
33.3
30.2
113.0
12
65.5
1.73

31.6
48.5
19.9
149.5
12
52.5
2.85

19.8
31.6
48.6
      *   All percents by weight.
46

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                           SOLID WASTE STUDY, JULY 10-15, 1968
                          GALLATIN NATIONAL FOREST, MONTANA
SITES STUDIED:

     Beaver Creek Campground (1)
     Bakers Hole Campground (2)
     Cabin Creek Picnic Area (3)
     Earthquake Visitor Center (4)
     Lakeshore "Block, E" Recreation Residences (5)
     Administrative Residences (6)

PERSONNEL:

     Study Team: Charles S. Spooner and F. Owen Irvine, BSWM, EGA; and Walter S. Weaver, SDEDC, FS.
     Local Staff: Howard Challinor, Assistant District Ranger, and Guy Hanson, Recreation Technician, Hebgen
        Lake RD; and Larry  Cronenwett, Project Engineer, Gallatin NF.

                                 GALLATIN  NATIONAL FOREST

                       GENERATION AND  COMPOSITION OF  SOLID WASTE
                                                         Day of waste generation
        Area                                Thursday         Friday        Saturday        Sunday

(1)  Beaver Creek Campground

Pounds of waste generated                       356.8          318.2          330.0          356.8
Visitor days contributing                        217.5          156.0          220.5          117.0
Pounds/visitor day                               1.64           2.03           1.50           3.05
Camper days contributing                       145            104            147             78
Pounds/camper day                              2.46           3.06           2.24           4.57
Composition (percent*)
     Food wastes                              28.7           42             30.5           39.0
     Other combustibles                          27.4          25             25.8           21.5
     Noncombustibles                           43.9           33             43.7           39.5

(2)  Bakers Hole Campground

Pounds of waste generated                       229.0          166.2          254.8          210.5
Visitor days contributing                        242.7          346.3          448.9          420.9
Pounds/visitor day                               0.94           0.48           0.57           0.50
Camper days contributing                       283            297            385            361
Pounds/camper day                              0.81           0.56           0.66           0.58
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes                              34             39.3           35.6           42.3
     Other combustibles                         31             28.3           31.0           20.5
     Noncombustibles                           35             32.4           33.4           37.2
                                                                                          47

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                     GALLATIN NATIONAL FOREST - CONTINUED

Area Thursday
(3) Cabin Creek Picnic Area
Pounds of waste generated
Estimated picnickers contributing
Pounds/picnicker
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(4) Earthquake Visitor Center
Pounds of waste generated 17.0
Estimated visitors contributing 785
Pounds/ visitor 0.022
Composition (percent)
Food wastes 8.8
Other combustibles 58.8
Noncombustibles 32.4
(5) Lakeshore "Block E" Recreation Residences
Pounds of waste generated
Cabins contributing
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(6) Administrative Residences
Pounds of waste generated
Homes contributing
Occupants
Pounds/occupant
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
Day of waste
Friday

14.1
10
1.4

19.5
47.9
32.6

10.8
622
0.017

13.9
35.2
50.9

61.3
6
29
2.12

33.0
17.1
49.9

38.5
4
31
1.24

29.4
37.4
33.2
generation
Saturday

21.7
20
1.1

38.7
26.5
34.8

13.2
619
0.021

6.1
31.8
62.1

61.5
4
27
2.28

50.8
11.8
37.4

17.8
4
14
1.27

16.9
19.5
63.6

Sunday

76.0
36
2.1

36.5
25.9
37.6

25.3
778
0.033

32.0
23.3
44.7

9.4
3
10
0.94

_
—
-

31.8
4
14
2.28

45.7
28.3
26.0
    *  All percents by weight.
48

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                           SOLID WASTE STUDY, JUNE 21-24, 1968

                      HURON-MANISTEE NATIONAL FOREST, MICHIGAN
SITES STUDIED:
     Lake Michigan Campground (1)
     Sand Lake Campground (2), Picnic Area (3), and Administrative Residence (4)
     Hoxey Job Corps Civilian Conservation Center (5)
PERSONNEL:
     Study Team: Charles S. Spooner and F. Owen Irvine, BSWM, ECA; and Walter S. Weaver, SDEDC, FS.
     Local Staff: James Sleeper, Region 9, FS; and Kenneth Ruehle, Manistee RD, Huron-Manistee NF.
                            HURON-MANISTEE NATIONAL FOREST

                      GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE
                                                         Day of waste generation
       Area
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
(1)   Lake Michigan Campground

Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent*)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles

(2)   Sand Lake Campground

Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles
    4.3
    3.33
    1.29
    2
    2.15

    8.0
   33.2
   58.8
   89.8
  281.7
    0.32
  169
    0.53

   34.0
   26.4
   34.6
  15.0
  30.0
   0.50
  18
   0.83
 125.0
 281.7
   0.44
 169
   0.73

 42.5
 21.9
 35.6
   37.5
   68.3
    0.55
   41
    0.91

   53.5
   13.2
   33.3
  316.4
  378.4
    0.84
  227
    1.39

  53.2
  18.7
  28.1
  43.5
  96.7
   0.45
  58
   0.75

  45.5
  16.5
  38.0
 149.5
 335.1
   0.45
 201
   0.74

  45.9
  22.9
  31.2
                                                                                            49

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                    HURON-MANISTEE NATIONAL FOREST  -  CONTINUED
                                                          Day of waste generation
        Area                               Thursday         Friday         Saturday         Sunday

(3)   Sand Lake Picnic Area

Pounds of waste generated                       38.0             0.0            25.5            24.5
Picnickers contributing                           —                             —             —
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes                              51                             32             45
     Other combustibles                        15                             29             34
     Noncombustibles                          34                             39             21

(4)   Sand Lake Administrative Residence
Pounds of waste generated 8
Occupant days contributing 6
Pounds/occupant day 1 .33
(5) Hoxey Job Corps Civilian Conservation Center
Kitchen wastes:
Pounds of waste generated
Corpsmen days contributing
Pounds/corpsmen day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
Administrative and dormitory wastes:
Pounds of waste generated
Corpsmen days contributing
Pounds/corpsmen day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
Staff residence wastes:
Pounds of waste generated
Staff days contributing
Pounds/staff day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
6
6
1.00


396
160
2.47

54
39
7

78
160
0.49

0
100
0

54
28
1.93

32.0
37.5
30.5
7 5
6 6
1.16 0.83


451
139
3.25

68
23
9

169
139
1.22

0
100
0

169
98
1.73

20
41
39
    *  All percents by weight.
 50

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                           SOLID WASTE STUDY, JULY 19-22, 1968

                           KANIKSU NATIONAL FOREST, IDAHO
SITES STUDIED:
     Samowen Campground (1) and Group Picnic Area (2)
     Garfield Bay Recreation Residences (3)
     Priest Lake Ranger Station (4)
PERSONNEL:
     Study Team: Charles S. Spooner and F. Owen Irvine, BSWM, ECA; and Walter S. Weaver, SDEDC, FS.
     Local Staff: David Rudd, Assistant Forest Engineer, Kaniksu NF; and Maxwell Cochrane and Gary
        Stensatter, Region 1, FS.
                                 KANIKSU NATIONAL FOREST

                      GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE
                                                         Day of waste generation
       Area
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
(1)   Samowen Campground

Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percentf)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles

(2)   Samowen Group Picnic Area

Pounds of waste generated
Picnickers contributing
Pounds/picnicker
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles
  155.2
  239
    0.65
  151
    1.03

   36.2
    9.3
   54.5
 108.1
 244.8
   0.44
 142
   0.76

  27.1
  21.6
  51.3
                 67.1
                 57
                   1.18

                 23.2
                 35.3
                 41.5
  178.8*
  303.9
    0.59
  192
    0.93

   50.6
   11.4
   38.0
                91.4
               120
                 0.76

                23.2
                31.4
                45.4
 238.3
 337.2
   0.71
 213
   1.12

  49.8
  11.9
  38.3
                                                                                            51

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                          KANIKSU NATIONAL FOREST
                CONTINUED
                                                            Day of waste generation
        Area
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
(3)  Garfield Bay Recreation Residences

Pounds of waste generated
Cabins occupied
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles

(4)  Priest Lake Ranger Station

Kitchen wastes:
Pounds of waste generated
Number of meals served
Pounds of waste/meal
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles
   39
   43
    0.91

   89.7
    2.6
    7.7
                   13.6
                    3
                    9
                    1.51

                   38.0
                   23.2
                   38.8
  25.3
  25
   1.01

  61.4
  32.7
   5.9
                 26.0
                  5
                 29
                  0.90

                 61.3
                 10.5
                 28.2
   51.8
   51
    1.02

   79.3
   12.0
    8.7
                   12.9
                   4
                   20
                   0.65

                   44.3
                   18.3
                   37.4
Administrative and warehouse wastes:
Pounds of waste generated
Composition (percent)
     Combustibles
     Noncombustibles
      80
     .O
  100
    0
   5.1

  88
  12
   12.3

   S3
   47
Bunk house wastes:
Pounds of waste generated
Occupants contributing
Composition (percent)
     Combustibles
     Noncombustibles
    6.0
   36

   71
   29
   1.0
  36

 100
   0
    5.3
   29

   43
   57
     *   Campground signs encouraged burning combustibles in camp fireplaces.  The large fraction of com-
bustible wastes collected on Saturday indicated heavy rains on Friday discouraged many people from doing so.
     f   All percents by weight.
  52

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                           SOLID WASTE STUDY, SEPTEMBER 5-9, 1968

                           LINCOLN NATIONAL FOREST, NEW MEXICO
SITES STUDIED:

     Pine Campground (1)
     Sleepy Grass Campground (2) and Picnic Area (5)
     Deerhead Campground (3)
     Silver Campground (4)
     Slide Group Picnic Area (6)

PERSONNEL:

     Study Team:  Harry R, Little and Howard R. Ludwig, BSWM, EGA; and Walter S. Weaver, SDEDC, FS.
     Local Staff: T.C. Hogsett, Region 3, FS; and Roy McKeag, State of New Mexico Health and Social
       Services Department.
                                LINCOLN NATIONAL FOREST

                      GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE
                                                        Day of waste generation
       Area                               Thursday        Friday         Saturday        Sunday

(1)   Pine Campground

Pounds of waste generated                                       2.0           25.4           60.6
Visitor days contributing                                         6            21             42
Pounds/visitor day                                              0.33           1.21           1.44
Camper days contributing                                        6            21             42
Pounds/camper day                                             0.33           1.21           1.44
Composition (see below)

(2)   Sleepy Grass Campground

Pounds of waste generated                        2.0            19.1           46.5           27.3
Visitor days contributing                          3             14            27              8
Pounds/visitor day                               0.67           1.36           1.72           3.4
Camper days contributing                         3             14            27              8
Pounds/camper day                              0.67           1.36           1.72           3.4
Composition (see below)
                                                                                         53

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                        LINCOLN NATIONAL FOREST  -  CONTINUED
Area
(3) Deerhead Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (see below)
(4) Silver Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (see immediately below)
Composition (percent*)f
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(5) Sleepy Grass Picnic Area
Pounds of waste generated
Picnickers contributing
Pounds/picnicker
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Combustibles
Noncombustibles
(6) Slide Group Picnic Area
Pounds of waste generated
Picnickers contributing
Pounds/picnicker
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Combustibles
Nonco mbustibles

Thursday

3.0
2
1.50
2
1.50


_
—
—
—
—


26.6
36.7
36.7

24.3
29
0.83

21.2
34.6
44.2

0






Day of waste
Friday

14.5
8
1.82
8
1.82


20.0
15
1.33
15
1.33


38.3
32.8
28.9

12.5
14
0.89

60
14
26

0






generation
Saturday

49.7
26
1.91
26
1.91


87.4
47
1.86
47
1.86


37.2
35.3
27.5

17.6
—
—

30
34
36

91.8
55
1.67

27.2
36.3
36.5

Sunday

38.8
12
3.23
12
3.23


99.8
35
2.85
35
2.85


31.3
45.1
23.6

231.3
214
1.08

44
33
23

0






    * All percents by weight.
    | Because there was so little camping, composition was measured for all campgrounds together.
54

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                           SOLID WASTE STUDY, JUNE 14-17, 1968

                             NATIONAL FOREST OF MISSISSIPPI
SITES STUDIED:

     Raworth Campground (1) and Picnic Area (3)
     Shongelo Campground (2), Picnic Area (4), and Swimming Area (5)

PERSONNEL:

     Study Team:  Harry R. Little and Morris G. Tucker, BSWM, ECA; and Richard H. Spray, SDEDC, FS.
     Local Staff: James Armfield, Region 8, FS; and Henry W. Gilreath, Bienville RD, NF of Mississippi.
                            NATIONAL FOREST OF MISSISSIPPI

                      GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE
Area
(1) Raworth Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent*)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles

Thursday

17
—
—
6
2.83

23.5
53.0
23.5
Day of waste generation
Friday Saturday

0 9
-
-
5
1.80

11.0
44.5
44.5

Sunday

9
-
-
5
1.80

0.0
77.8
22.2
(2)   Shongelo Campground

Pounds of waste generated                         0              1             16              9
Visitor days contributing                                       —             —             —
Pounds/visitor day                                            —             -             —
Camper days contributing                                       444
Pounds/camper day                                            0.25           4.00           2.25
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes                                            -             18.7           11.1
     Other combustibles                                       -             25.0           22.2
     Noncombustibles                                        -             56.3           66.7
                                                                                         55

-------
                   NATIONAL FOREST OF MISSISSIPPI - CONTINUED
Area
(3) Raworth Picnic Area
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(4) Shongelo Picnic Area
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(5) Shongelo Swimming Area
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles

Thursday

43
25
1.72

34.9
39.5
25.6

43
10
4.30

48.9
9.3
41.8

—
—
-

0.0
46.1
53.9
Day of waste
Friday

37
21
1.76

13.6
43.2
43.2

5
2
2.50

0
80
20

—
—
-

0
70
30
generation
Saturday

75
43
1.74

46.6
26.7
26.7

42
10
4.20

83.4
11.9
4.7

—
-
-

0
50
50

Sunday

112
64
1.75

30.4
26.8
42.8

38
10
3.80

60.5
29.0
10.5

27 1
155 t
O.l7t

0
50
50
       * All percents by weight.
       t Total for entire 4 days.
56

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                           SOLID WASTE STUDY, JUNE 21-24,  1968

                           OZARK NATIONAL FOREST, ARKANSAS
SITES STUDIED:

     Spring Lake Campground (1), Picnic Area (3), Swimming Area (6), and Concession Stand (8)
     Cove Lake Campground (2), Picnic Area (4), Swimming Area (7), and Concession Stand (9)
     Mt. Magazine Picnic Area (5), Cabins (10), and Lodge (11)

PERSONNEL:

     Study Team: Harry R. Little and Morris G. Tucker, BSWM, EC A; and Richard H. Spray, SDEDC, FS.
     Local Staff: James Armfield, Region 8, FS; William E. Gates,  Forest Engineers Office, FS; and
        Leonard A. Minton, Mt. Magazine RD, Ozark NF.
                                 OZARK NATIONAL FOREST

                      GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE


                                                         Day of waste generation
        Area                                Thursday        Friday         Saturday        Sunday

(1)   Spring Lake Campground

Pounds of waste generated                        33             22             59             81
Visitor days contributing                         34.5            27.0            78.0           84.0
Pounds/visitor day                                0.96           0.81           0.76           0.96
Camper days contributing                        23             18             52             56
Pounds/camper day                               1.43           1.22           1.14           1.45
Composition (percent*)
     Food wastes                               39.9            23             30.7           37.2
     Other combustibles                         30.1            32             34.2           29.7
     Noncombustibles                           30.0            45             35.1           33.1

(2)   Cove Lake Campground

Pounds of waste generated                        96            150            142            140
Visitor days contributing                        117.0            97.5           123.0           97.5
Pounds/visitor day                                0.82           1.54           1.15           1.44
Camper days contributing                        78             65             82             65
Pounds/camper day                               1.23           2.31           1.73           2.16
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes                               37.5            45.9            53.2           60.2
     Other combustibles                         36,5            33.3            26.0           21.3
     Noncombustibles                           26.0            20.8            20.8           18.5
                                                                                            57

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                  OZARK NATIONAL FOREST -  CONTINUED
Area
(3) Spring Lake Picnic Area
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(4) Cove Lake Picnic Area
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(5) Mt. Magazine Picnic Area
Pounds of waste generated
Picnickers contributing
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(6) Spring Lake Swimming Area
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(7) Cove Lake Swimming Area
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles

Thursday

44
—
—

59.2
22.7
18.1

143
—
—

44.0
30.8
25.2

30
-

35
45
20

4
-
-

0
50
50

11
—
-

0
82
18
Day of waste
Friday

36
—
—

72.2
13.9
13.9

47
-
-

43.7
34.0
22.3

5
-

40
40
20

11
-
-

45.5
54.5
0.0

10
—
-

0
90
10
generation
Saturday

28
—
—

39.3
35.7
25.0

16
—
—

25.0
31.2
43.8

9
-

60
20
20

3
-
-

0
100
0

2
—
-

0
100
0

Sunday

106
221 1
0.97 f

66.0
17.0
17.0

58
272 1
0.97t

34.5
37.9
27.6

27
—

73.9
17.4
8.7

3
221 1
O.lOt

33.3
33.3
33.4

8
272 f
0.1 It

0
50
50
58

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                          OZARK NATIONAL FOREST  -  CONTINUED
        Area
Thursday
                                                          Day of waste generation
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
(8)   Spring Lake Concession Stand

Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes
     Other combustibles
     Noncombustibles

(9)   Cove Lake Concession Stand

Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Composition (percent)
    0
   60
   40
   14
   0
  75
  25
  20
                                 11
    9
   73
   18
   19
           *  All per cents by weight.
           t  Total for 4 days; double sample techniques employed to estimate visitor days.
                                15
   7
  60
  33
  17
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(10) Mt. Magazine Cabins (without kitchens)
Pounds of waste generated
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(11) Mt . Magazine Lodge
Pounds of waste generated
Overnight guests contributing
Pounds/overnight guest
Meals served
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
7
60
33

12
—
—

58.7
21.5
19.8

16
-
—
—

93.8
6.2
0.0
0
60
40

12
-
—

41.7
33.3
25.0

12
-
-
—

50.0
41.6
8.4
0
75
25

19
-
-

26.3
31.6
42.1

105
-
-
—

92.4
3.8
3.8
9.1
72.7
18.2

40
84 1
0.99 1

20
30
50

60
54 t
3.57t
326 t

88.3
10.0
1.7
                                                                                              59

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60

-------
                       SOLID WASTE STUDY, AUGUST 23-26, 1968

                      RIO GRANDE NATIONAL FOREST, COLORADO
SITES STUDIED:
    Palisade Campground (1)
    Big Meadows Campground (2)
    South Fork Campground (3)
    Beaver Creek Campground (4) and Organization Camp (5)
PERSONNEL:
    Study Team: Walter S. Weaver and Richard Spray, SDEDC, FS.
    Local Staff:  William Kolzow, Region 2, FS.
                           RIO GRANDE NATIONAL FOREST

                    GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE
Day of waste generation
Area
(1) Palisade Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent*)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(2) Big Meadows Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
Thursday

41
27.2
1.50
30
1.37

39.0
29.3
31.7

99
110.0
0.90
66
1.50

35.7
39.8
24.5
Friday

110
88.0
1.25
28
3.93

15.9
36.4
47.7

180
103.4
1.74
62
2.90

38.3
32.8
28.9
Saturday

56
62.0
0.90
46
1.22

28.5
42.9
28.6

68
130.0
0.52
78
0.87

23.5
42.1
34.4
Sunday

33
73.0
0.45
32
1.03

23.5
32.3
44.2

117
86.7
1.35
52
2.25

30.5
38.9
30.6
                                                                                  61

-------
                  RIO GRANDE NATIONAL FOREST  -  CONTINUED
Area
(3) South Fork Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(4) Beaver Creek Campground
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
(5) Beaver Creek Organization Camp
Pounds of waste generated
Occupant days contributing
Pounds/occupant day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles

Thursday

61
68.9
0.89
42
1.45

46.6
36.6
16.8

70
117.8
0.59
41
1.71

31.3
28.7
40.0

57
60.0
0.95

65
18
17
Day of waste
Friday

48
49.1
0.98
15
3.20

26
36
38

76
229.5
0.33
37
2.05

33.3
38.1
28.6

94
60.0
1.57

54
31
15
generation
Saturday

31
84.6
0.37
27
1.15

35.3
35.3
29.4

40
141.3
0.28
44
0.91

28.5
43.0
28.5

219
64.0
3.42

51
34
15

Sunday

45
53.2
0.85
37
1.22

22.3
40.0
37.7

73
110.3
0.66
45
1.62

30.1
36.8
33.1

0
0.0


	
	
-
        * All percents by weight.
62

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                    SOLID WASTE STUDY, AUGUST 13 - SEPTEMBER 2, 1968

                          WAYNE-HOOSIER NATIONAL FOREST, OHIO
SITES STUDIED:
     Iron Ridge Campground (1)
     Oak Hill Campground (2)
     Vesuvius Family (3) and Group (4) Picnic Area and Job Corps Civilian Conservation Center (7)
     Big Bend Beach Area (5)
     Big Bend Beach Concession Stand (6)

PERSONNEL:

     Study Team:  Charles S. Spooner, Harry R. Little, Howard R. Ludwig, and F. Owen Irvine, BSWM, EGA.
                            WAYNE-HOOSIER NATIONAL FOREST

                      GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE

                             	Day of waste generation	
        Area                 Monday    Tuesday Wednesday Thursday   Friday    Saturday    Sunday

(1)  Iron Ridge Campground

(first week)
Pounds of waste generated          -        72.1       78.8      92.6      100.9      131.1      149.9
Visitor days contributing           -        62.0       78.3     116.5      127.0      175.0      106.8
Pounds/visitor day                 -         1.16      1.00      0.79      0.79       0.75       1.40
Camper days contributing          -        52        55        87       106        98       96
Pounds/camper day                -         1.39      1.43      1.06      0.95       1.34       1.56

(second week)
Pounds of waste generated        101.3      62.1       64.9      67.8       89.4      67.0      115.2
Visitor days contributing          61.3      62.8       69.9      63.6       71.9      76.3      84.2
Pounds/visitor day                 1.65       0.99      0.93      1.07      1.24       0.88       1.37
Camper days contributing         55        42        52        46        55        66       70
Pounds/camper day                1.84       1.48      1.25      1.47      1.62       1.02       1.64

(third week)
Pounds of waste generated         47.9      80.6       59.4     112.3      108.5      247.1      200.2
Visitor days contributing          64.4      93.9       95.0      93.3      142.7      193.0      206.5
Pounds/visitor day                 0.74       0.86      0.63      1.20      0.76       1.28       0.97
Camper days contributing         54        76        67        67       120        123       122
Pounds/camper day                0.89       1.06      0.89      1.68      0.90       2.01       1.64
                                                                                             63

-------
                      WAYNE-HOOSIER NATIONAL FOREST  -  CONTINUED
                                               Day of waste generation
        Area
Monday   Tuesday  Wednesday Thursday    Friday   Saturday   Sunday
(2)   Oak Hill Campground

(first week)
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day

(second week)
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day

(third week)
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Camper days contributing
Pounds/camper day
  86.1
 106.6
   0.81
  68
   1.27
(3)  Vesuvius Family Picnic Area

Pounds of waste generated
Picnickers contributing
Pounds of waste generated
Picnickers contributing
Pounds of waste generated
Picnickers contributing
Pounds of waste generated
Picnickers contributing
122.5
98.4
1.24
63
1.94
56.3
98.8
0.56
76
0.74
112.6
83.3
1.35
65
1.73
68.8
86.2
0.80
53
1.30
121.8
140.5
0.87
95
1.28
109.0
88.8
1.23
71
1.54
86.1
104
0.83
83
1.04
80.2
120.1
0.67
97
0.83
205.2
133.8
1.53
98
2.09
139.6
104.8
1.33
96
1.45
148.1
110.8
1.34
96
1.54
120.3
128.8
0.93
89
1.35
111.8
112.3
1.00
96
1.16
61.0
67.3
0.91
53
1.15
Date
8/13
14.8
15
60.0
85.5
0.70
54
1.11
of waste
8/15
3.9
7
75.7
90.8
0.83
79
0.96
generation
8/16
28.1
17
66.9
126.5
0.53
100
0.67

8/17
17.3
43
110.3
170.2
0.63
109
1.01

8/18
117.3
149
211.3
163.6
1.29
112
1.89

8/19
34.5
52
            8/20

             15.0
             38

            8/26

              2.5
              9

            9/1

             93.4
            131
8/21

 22.5
 37

8/27

  7.0
 11

9/2

122.8
121
8/22

 28.4
 53

8/28

 14.3
 14
8/23

 26.2
 31

8/29

  9.7
  5
8/24

 36.5
 33

8/30

 14.7
 22
8/25

155.4
128

8/31

 24.1
 35
 64

-------
                       WAYNE-HOOSIER NATIONAL FOREST  -  CONTINUED
         Area                                   Date of waste generation
 (4)  Vesuvius Group Picnic Area  8/18       8/20      8/24       8/25       8/29      8/31       9/2

 Pounds of waste generated        188.5       25.3       14.7      130.0      132.8       45.6      41.8
 Picnickers contributing           130         35        15        120        68        75        38
 Average composition (percent*)
      Food wastes                41f
      Other combustibles          21f
      Noncombustibles            38f

 (5)  Big Bend Beach Area

      The Big Bend Beach Area is a swimming area with a snack bar.  During the  study, 7,382 swimmers
 were counted.  The study team gathered 262.0 Ib of solid waste, at an average rate of 0.04 Ib per swimmer.

 (6)   Big  Bend Beach Concession Stand

      During the study, 961 concession—stand patrons, not swimming, generated 135.6 Ib of solid waste.
They averaged 0.14 Ib per patron, with a standard deviation of 0.16 Ib  per patron.

                                                  Wednesday             Friday

(7)   Vesuvius Job Corps Civilian Conservation Center

Kitchen wastes:
Pounds of waste generated                             409.3                310.5
Corpsman days contributing                            176                  166
Pounds/corpsman day                                   2.32                 1,87
Composition (percent)
      Food wastes                                     73.5                 77.4
      Other combustibles                               10.0                 22.6
      Noncombustibles                                 16.5                  0.0

Administrative and dormitory wastes:
Pounds of waste generated                              98.8                 27.3
Corpsman days contributing                            176                  166
Pounds/corpsman day                                   0.56                 0.16
Composition (percent)
      Combustibles                                    78                  100
      Noncombustibles                                 22                    0

Maintenance shops wastes:
Pounds of waste collected                              212.8                 78.0
Days of activity contributing                             2                    2
Pounds/day                                          106.4                 39.0
Composition (percent)
     Combustibles                                    94                  100
     Noncombustibles    	                 6                   0

     *  All percents by weight.
     t  Total of 7 days.
                                                                                                 65

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66

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                    SOLID WASTE STUDY, FEBRUARY 28 - MARCH 7, 1969

                                   WINTER SPORTS AREA
                               CACHE NATIONAL FOREST, UTAH
 SITES STUDIED:
     Gelande Lodge (1)
     Ski Lift Area (2)
     Hill Air Force Base Lodge (3)
 PERSONNEL:
     Study Team:  Walter S. Weaver and Richard H. Spray, SDEDC, USFS.
     Local Staff:  Floyd Ingram, Region 4, FS; and Bruce Hronek, Ogden RD, and Preston Jackson, Snow
        Ranger, Snow Basin Ski Area, Cache NF.

                                  CACHE NATIONAL FOREST

                      GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE
Area
(1) Gelande Lodge*
Date of waste generation
2/28 3/1 3/2 3/5

3/6
Pounds of waste generated                  62       130       119        85        50
Visitor days contributing                    25.0      44.0      56.0      23.0       5.7
Pounds/visitor day                          2.48      2.95      2.13      3.70      8.77
Composition (percentf)
     Food wastes                         14.6      11.6      21        23.5      34
     Other combustibles                    54.8      67.6      63        56.5      56
     Noncombustibles                     30.6      20.8      16        20.0      10

(2)   Ski Lift Area                                  3/1       3/2        3/5       3/6

Pounds of waste generated                            19       25        17        19
Visitor days contributing                              —        —        —        —
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes                                    0.0       0         5.9       0.0
     Other combustibles                              78.9      41        41.2      68.4
     Noncombustibles                               21.1      59        52.9      31.6

(3)   Hill Air Force Base Lodge             2/28      3/1       3/2
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
41
45.0
0.91

0.0
73.2
26.8
60
53.0
1.13

13.3
65.0
21.7
46
17.0
2.71

4.4
73.9
21.7
             Day use.
             All percents by weight.
                                                                                        67

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68

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                   SOLID WASTE STUDY, FEBRUARY 28 - MARCH 7, 1969

                                   WINTER SPORTS AREA
                           WASATCH NATIONAL FOREST, UTAH
SITES STUDIES:
    Rustler Lodge (1)
    Alta Lodge (2)
    Snow Pine Lodge (day use) (3)
    Shallow Shaft Tavern (4)

PERSONNEL:
    Study Team:  Walter S. Weaver and Richard H. Spray, SDEDC, FS
    Local Staff:  Floyd Ingram, Region 4, FS; and Ames Harrison, Salt Lake RD, Wasatch NF.


                                WASATCH NATIONAL FOREST

                       GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE


                              	Day of waste generation	
        Area                   Fri       Sat       Mon      Tues      Wed      Thurs      Fri

(1)   Rustler Lodge

Pounds of waste generated        134       178        209      195       365       205       167
Visitor days contributing         113       111        126      108       113       115       100
Pounds/visitor day                 1.19       1.60       1.66      1.81       3.23      1.78      1.67
Composition (percent*)
     Food wastes               35.0       54.5       64.1      57.5      51.2      40.0      42.5
     Other combustibles         36.6       12.4       20.6      24.6      39.2      35.1      35.3
     Noncombustibles           28.4       33.1       15.3      17.9       9.6      24.9      22.2

(2)   Alta Lodge

Pounds of waste generated                                              1818f      242       276
Visitor days contributing                                                858       180       165
Pounds/visitor day                                                        2.12      1.34      1.67
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes                                                       27.4      23.6      12.7
     Other combustibles                                                 29.1      42.2      50.0
     Noncombustibles                                                   43.5      34.2      37.3

(3)   Snow Pine Lodge ^

Pounds of waste generated        80        14         13.5      21
Visitor days contributing         24.0       4.7        5.8       8.4
Pounds/visitor day                3.33      2.98       2.33      2.50
Composition (percent)
     Food wastes                8.7      35.7        0         0.0
     Other combustibles         60.0      35.7       37        52.3
     Noncombustibles           31.3      28.6       63        47.7
                                                                                           69

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                      WASATCH NATIONAL FOREST -  CONTINUED
                     GENERATION AND COMPOSITION OF SOLID WASTE

                            	Day of waste generation	
       Area                 Fri       Sat      Mon      Tue      Wed      Thurs      Fri

(4)   Shallow Shaft Tavern
Pounds of waste generated
Visitor days contributing
Pounds/visitor day
Composition (percent)
Food wastes
Other combustibles
Noncombustibles
32
8.4
3.81

0.0
40.6
59.4
12
8.3
1.46

0.0
33.3
66.7
16
12.5
1.28

0.0
31.3
68.7
9
2.9
3.10

0.0
44.4
55.6
    *  All percents by weight.
    f  Wastes collected on Wednesday had accumulated since Friday.
    f  Day use.
 70

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                                     APPENDIX  3

                            VARIATIONS IN THE WASTE GENERATION
                                RATE AND IN WASTE COMPOSITION
      Data from 23  campgrounds were analyzed in
an effort to explain the variation encountered in
waste composition and in the total weight generated
per person.

      Data from  19 of the campgrounds included
information on waste composition as well as  total
waste generation  rates encountered  on each  of 4
study days.  In  the  other four campgrounds, the
total waste  generation rate was measured for  each
of the 4 days,  and data from two of these  four
campgrounds consisted  of total waste generation
rates for three  separate Thursday—through-Sunday
intervals.

      Each  campground  was  developed  to  level
three  or four  (Appendix  1)  and  received either
predominantly overnight  use  or use as a recreation
destination  for campers planning extended stays.
(The data for all analyses are shown in Table A3-1.)

      Seven analyses of variance were conducted on
the data arranged  in different  ways. A confidence
level of 90  percent was  used  in each  analysis.  To
satisfy the basic assumption made in the analysis of
variance  (ANOVA)   that   the  variances   are
homogeneous (i.e., that the sources  of variance in
waste generation rates are essentially the same and
that   the  variances  in  the   population  of  all
campgrounds are equal),  a square root transform
was used on  the data before analysis. All work was
done on an IBM 1130.
             Waste Generation Rates
      To   detect   regional  variations  in   waste
generation   rates,   the  first  analysis  sought  to
determine  statistically  significant  variation  in the
daily  mean of the  total waste generated per person
in 24 campgrounds.

      The ANOVA showed that at least one mean
was  significantly  different  from the  other  means.
The   least  significant  differences  (LSD's)   were
computed to locate the statistical  differences the
ANOVA selected. (The  LSD is  used to compare
daily  means of the total solid waste  generated per
person.  The  LSD value  is split and  half its value
added to and half subtracted from the data means.
If the length  of two  or more bands of the  LSD
overlap,  the  means  at  their  center  are   not
considered statistically  different. Bands that  do not
overlap  others are considered significantly different.
LSD's are usually applied only after an F test in an
ANOVA  has   shown  that   differences  existed
somewhere between  the  means.) The  LSD revealed
the  data  from   Hot  Springs  to  be  significantly
different from  the other campground data. When
the   data  were   rechecked,  Hot   Springs   was
disqualified as a valid data  point because of poorly
controlled recreation use measured during the study.
A second ANOVA, which excluded Hot  Springs
data and used data from 23 campgrounds, revealed
no significant difference among the waste  generation
rates  in those campgrounds. Both analyses revealed
no  significant  difference  among  the daily mean
waste generation rate on the 4 study days.

      Fifteen campgrounds judged to  receive use as
a camper's destination were  considered  separately.
An ANOVA  was conducted to detect whether the
daily  mean of the total waste  generation  rate varied
significantly among the campgrounds and  among the
days  of the  studies. The conclusions  differed from
those  reached  when   all   campgrounds  were
considered. In this analysis, the day  on  which the
wastes were  generated proved significant, and the
campground  generating  the  waste proved nearly
significant. The LSD's revealed that waste quantities
generated  on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday  were
significantly  different  from those waste quantities
generated   on   Sunday   (Figure   A3-1).   The
developmental   level  (three   or four)  of   the
destination campground also proved significant.

      "Destination"  campgrounds  were  considered
again  with further subdivision to detect  the extent
of the differences among their development levels.
The  eight destination  campgrounds   developed  to
level  three   were  considered separately   for
                                                                                                 71

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 differences in total  waste  generation.  Neither the
 campground nor the  day of waste generation proved
 significant.

      When the  seven  "destination"  campgrounds
 developed  to  level  four  were  considered, the
 campground generating the waste was not significant
 but the day on  which the wastes were generated
 proved  to  be. The LSD's for this ANOVA showed
 that wastes generated on  Friday  were  significantly
 different from wastes  generated on both  Saturday
 and Sunday (Figure A3-2).

      Analysis  of total waste generation rate  data
 from campgrounds judged to receive overnight use
 developed  to  level  three revealed no  statistically
 significant  differences  among the  campgrounds or
 the day on which the wastes were generated. Hence,
 all  significant  variation   among   destination
 campgrounds was  caused by the fraction developed
 to  level four.
                                        Waste Composition

                               Three  factors  of waste  composition  were
                          analyzed from  19 campgrounds: the day on which
                          the wastes were generated, the type of waste (food
                          waste, other combustibles,  noncombustibles),  and
                          the campground from which  they came.

                               When the  LSD's  considered the three waste
                          components  for  the  4 study  days, the wastes
                          generated  on  Sundays  were  found   to  differ
                          significantly  from  those  generated  on  Saturdays
                          (Figure A3-3).

                               The  distribution of means for three individual
                          waste  types reveals  no regional  trends (Figures
                          A3-4   through  A3—6).  One  campground,
                          (Samowen)  where  campsite   burning   of  some
                          combustibles was encouraged, showed significantly
                          fewer  combustibles (other than  food wastes) than
                          did most other  campgrounds.
                                         TABLE A3-1

                             DATA USED TO DETECT VARIATION
                             IN THE WASTE GENERATION RATE
   Forest     Campground
             Overnight (0)
  Scale of          or
development  destination (D)
(Appendix 1)  campground
Waste categories:
FW=Food waste
OC=Other combustibles
NC=Noncombustibles
T=Total
   Days of waste generation
Thur.    Fri.    Sat.    Sun.

    Waste (Ib/camper day)
Allegheny Kiasutha 4 D



FW
OC
NC
T
0.46
0.23
0.27
0.96
0.27
0.26
0.19
0.73
0.59
0.51
0.35
1.45
0.54
0.35
0.39
1.28
             Buckaloons
Deschutes    Prairie
             Paulina Lake       4
                  D
                  0
                  D
        FW
        OC
        NC
        T

        FW
        OC
        NC
        T

        FW
        OC
        NC
        T
 0.22
 0.26
 0.48
 0.96

 0.18
 0.23
 0.29
 0.70

 0.75
 0.54
 0.41
 1.70
0.28
0.19
0.32
0.79

0.30
0.27
0.40
0.97

0.31
0.16
0.31
0.80
0.55
0.32
0.47
1.33

0.08
0.14
0.25
0.47

0.39
0.33
0.41
1.13
0.41
0.25
0.46
1.13

2.00
1.07
1.79
4.86

0.52
0.51
0.61
1.64
  72

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                              TABLE A3-1  - CONTINUED
Forest     Campground
             Overnight (0)
  Scale of        or
development destination (D)
(Appendix 1)  campground
Waste categories:
FW=Food waste
OC=Other Combustibles
NC=Noncombustibles
T=Total
  Days of waste generation
Thur.   Fri.     Sat.    Sun.

  Waste (Ib/camper day)
Deschutes (continued)
East Lake 4 D



Cinder Hill 4 D



Princess Creek 3 D



Trapper Creek 3 D



Eldorado Fallen Leaf 3 0



Gallatin Bakers Hole 3 0



Beaver Creek 3 O



Huron- Sand Lake 4 D
Manistee


Kaniksu Samowen 4 D




FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T

0.63
0.38
0.44
1.45
0.34
0.42
0.37
1.13
0.50
0.60
0.39
1.49
0.71
0.57
0.64
1.92
0.18
0.31
0.32
0.81
0.28
0.25
0.28
0.81
0.71
0.67
1.08
2.46
0.18
0.14
0.21
0.53
0.36
0.09
0.55
1.03

0.30
0.28
0.22
0.80
0.24
0.34
0.31
0.89
0.41
0.32
0.20
0.93
0.46
0.31
0.23
1.01
0.29
0.36
0.36
1.01
0.22
0.16
0.18
0.56
1.29
0.76
1.01
3.06
0.31
0.16
0.26
0.73
0.21
0.17
0.40
0.76

0.37
0.33
0.38
1.09
0.49
0.42
0.55
1.46
0.38
0.30
0.22
0.90
0.39
0.31
0.26
0.96
0.31
0.34
0.43
1.08
0.23
0.21
0.22
0.66
0.68
0.58
0.98
2.24
0.74
0.26
0.39
1.39
0.47
0.11
0.35
0.93

0.81
0.38
0.79
1.98
0.68
0.72
0.72
2.24
0.60
0.43
0.32
1.35
0.57
0.46
0.47
1.50
0.38
0.44
0.29
1.11
0.25
0.12
0.21
0.58
1.78
0.98
1.81
4.57
0.34
0.17
0.23
0.74
0.56
0.13
0.43
1.12
                                                                                               73

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                             TABLE AS-
CONTINUED
Forest
Lincoln

Ozark







Rio Grande















Wayne—
Hoosier




Overnight (0)
Scale of or
Campground development destination (D)
(Appendix 1) campground
Deerhead 3 O
Sleepy Grass 3 0
Cove Lake 3 D



Spring Lake 3 D



Palisade 3 0



Beaver Creek 3 D



South Fork 3 O



Big Meadows 3 D



Oak Hill (A)* 4 D
Oak Hill (B)
Oak Hill (C)
Iron Ridge (A) 3 D
Iron Ridge (B)
Iron Ridge (C)
Waste categories:
FW=Food waste
Days of waste generation
OC=Other Combustibles Thur. Fri. Sat. Sun.
NC=Noncombustibles
T=Total Waste (Ib/camper day)
T
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
FW
OC
NC
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
1.50
0.67
0.46
0.45
0.32
1.23
0.57
0.43
0.43
1.43
0.52
0.39
0.42
1.37
0.53
0.49
0.68
1.71
0.68
0.53
0.24
1.45
0.54
0.60
0.37
1.50
1.73
1.45
0.96
1.06
1.47
1.68
1.82
1.36
1.06
0.77
0.48
2.31
0.28
0.39
0.55
1.22
0.72
1.39
1.82
3.93
0.69
0.78
0.59
2.05
0.83
1.15
1.22
3.20
1.11
0.95
0.84
2.90
1.30
1.54
0.67
0.95
1.62
0.90
1.91
1.72
0.92
0.45
0.36
1.73
0.35
0.39
0.40
1.14
0.35
0.52
0.35
1.22
0.26
0.39
0.26
0.91
0.41
0.41
0.34
1.15
0.21
0.37
0.30
0.87
1.28
1.35
1.01
1.34
1.02
2.01
3.23
3.40
1.30
0.46
0.40
2.16
0.54
0.43
0.48
1.45
0.24
0.33
0.46
1.03
0.49
0.59
0.55
1.62
0.27
0.49
0.46
1.22
0.69
0.88
0.69
2.25
1.54
1.16
1.89
1.56
1.64
1.64
          *  A, B, and C denotes three Thursday—through—Sunday periods on which data were collected.
74

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                            DAY OF WASTE  GENERATION
   Figure A3—2. Comparison of means of day of waste generation at seven level-four campgrounds.
76

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                                                                             77

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                                      APPENDIX  4
                               COSTS OF SOLID WASTE COLLECTION
      Interviews  conducted  in  22  Districts  in  15
Forests  provided  descriptions   of  28   separate
collection systems. Collection systems were privately
operated, on contract,  for seven of these Districts.

      For  this  analysis,  a collection  system  was
defined as  one where collection costs and recreation
use  could  be  defined  for the  same time period.
Private  service to a  single recreation  area for an
entire  season  and well—described  Forest Service
collection to several recreation areas for portions of
a season provided necessary data.

      Data used  in the analysis  are  reproduced in
Table A4—1. Total handling costs,  as  described in
the  text,  were the  sum  of costs  of manpower,
container  liners,  vehicle  use  and  mileage,  and
disposal.

      The  use figures  (columns  4  through  9  on
Table   A4—1)  were   taken  from  district   RIM
printouts. District estimates were used  to assign the
fraction  of the  total  use that  occurred during the
period  for  which   collection—cost  figures   were
available.

      A stepwise regression analysis  was computed
on an IBM 1130.  The variables (columns 3 through
9)   were   considered   in  the  order  of   their
contribution  to the total costs. The most significant
variable was first entered; then the first and second
variables together; then the first three together, and
so on.  The one  variable  that contributed most to
the total cost (total collection route  niiles traveled)
explained 68 percent of the variation  in the data;
the  best  three  variables  together  explained  81
percent  of the  variation.  Since  other variables did
not increase this percentage appreciably, only three
variables were used in the final equation:

  C = 0.77 RM + 1.13  PAOT + 27.6 PVD - 403

where         C =  Total solid waste handling cost
                   for  the time  period considered,
                   in dollars,
            RM  = Collection route miles traveled
                   during  the  time  period
                   considered including distance to
                   dispoal site,

          PAOT  = Capacity of the campgrounds in
                   number of campers

           PVD  = Thousands of picnicker visitor-
                   days   incurred  over  the  time
                   period considered.
      This equation will  be of little use over  short
time  periods  or  in  Districts  with an  unbalanced
mixture  of recreation  use.  If a  preponderance of
recreation activities are those not considered by the
equation,  error  will  also  result.  Picnicking  and
camping were  considered because they  contribute
the most waste, but the equation covers the cost of
all  collection   service.   Pay  increases   to  Forest
workers will increase the coefficient in the equation;
reduced crew sizes will lower it.
      The Districts surveyed spent an average of less
than 4 percent of their total solid waste handling
costs on disposal. In the future when this fraction is
increased, the equation should be revised.

      The precision  of the equation is illustrated by
Figure A4-1  where  predicted and actual values of
"C" are  plotted together. Statistically, the equation
possesses  a standard error of 46.3  percent of  the
average "C" for  all districts. This equation should
not  be used  to  predict  costs when the merits of
private collection contracts are evaluated.
      Another, perhaps more important,  use of the
equation has been noted in the report text (p. 25).
It  shows  that  the total  number  of route  miles
(because  of the manpower required)  is  the  most
significant cause of cost, and that reducing the  miles
traveled will reduce costs.
                                                                                                   81

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                                TABLE A4-1
                       DATA USED TO COMPUTE FORMULA
                  PREDICTING SOLID WASTE COLLECTION COSTS
Total
handling
Data cost
number ($)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
$1,367
1,000
767
1,734
901
1,500
574
1,168
2,066
6,560
4,714
9,434
1,451
2,477
409
768
6,566
1,903
559
Total Camper
route visits
(miles) (thousands)
990
1,210
2,970
1,536
4,256
840
1,350
4,050
3,612
6,500
3,840
5,525
812
2,940
800
1,015
4,620
2,364
645
8.4
63.5
2.1
7.6
6.4
71.2
12.4
24.0
9.5
154.0
20.9
108.0
24.5
3.4
1.2
37.9
99.0
17.7
9.1
Campground
capacity
555
555
295
185
395
45
230
195
2.5
495
75
3,546
355
475
25
235
740
75
200
Camping
visitor days
(thousands)
7.4
58.8
12.2
13.9
16.2
71.8
9.3
25.6
4.2
47.4
15.5
95.6
14.9
10.9
1.8
26.0
58.3
8.3
5.0
Picnicker
visits
(thousands)
4.5
4.2
5.9
2.6
0.9
-
16.0
-
24.0
2.1
4.8
-
5.6
7.9
13.2
3.4
16.7
17.2
1.4
Picnic-
ground
capacity
178
105
195
40
150
-
100
-
65
700
265
-
95
600
315
128
135
465
60
Picnic
visitor days
(thousands)
1.1
1.4
2.1
4.9
0.4
-
4.0
-
3.1
32.1
7.2
-
2.2
2.0
3.4
1.0
4.6
39.1
0.7
82

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TABLE A4-1  - CONTINUED
Data
number
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
Total
handling
cost
($)
2,793
843
$5,220
6,952
1,101
976
130
595
4,761
Total
route
(miles)
2,580
975
4,000
7,000
1,050
2,057
273
1,953
5,000
Camper
visits
(thousands)
63.0
26.6
339.0
46.0
3.9
5.9
4.4
3.4
12.0
Campground
capacity
455
885
3,509
1,670
200
150
65
90
480
Camping
visitor days
(thousands)
25.3
15.6
137.0
97.8
6.6
6.9
3.4
0.5
25.4
Picnicker
visits
(thousands)
_
15.3
29.9
36.4
7.1
18.7
4.9
10.2
14.2
Picnic-
ground
capacity
—
155
460
159
220
120
95
120
500
Picnic
visitor days
(thousands)
_
0.5
7.7
5.9
7.6
4.9
1.9
2.6
15.7
                                              83

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                                   APPENDIX  5
                                  SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
                                     COST QUESTIONNAIRE
Data reference No.
Region	        Forest	      District

Person interviewed	        Position	

Interviewer             	                   	        Date	
1.    The major recreation-use season is from	to
                (months or dates), and	% of the year's total use occurs during this period.
2.   Solid waste containers:

     a.    Are bulk (larger than 35 gallons) containers used?	  Where?	

     b.    Are plastic or kraft paper liners used?	

3.   Is the on—site burning of combustible portions of camping and picnicking waste encouraged?
                                   Practiced?
4.   What are the days of scheduled solid waste collection for each of the following?

                                      Circle appropriate items.

               Area                     Collection Days                         Collector

     	          SMTWTFS                     FS     Contract

     	          SMTWTFS                     FS     Contract

     	          SMTWTFS                     FS     Contract

     	          SMTWTFS                     FS     Contract

     	          SMTWTFS                     FS     Contract

     	          SMTWTFS                     FS     Contract
                                                                                             85

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I.     Private Collection
     a.    Extent of private collection
      b.    Duties of contractor other than solid  waste collection
      c.    Annual cost of Forest-Service-furnished supplies for private solid waste collection:

                             Item                                              Cost
      d.    If contract for solid waste collection  are let to bidder, what have been the trends in contract costs?
II.    Forest Service Collection
     a.    Extent of Forest Service collection
     b.    Manpower assigned to the task
                                                                                    Man days spent
               No. of men                     Classification                         on collection
      c.    Equipment assigned to the task (identify in W.C.F. Catalog)
  86

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    d.    Supplies expended on Forest Service solid waste collection

                          Item                                  $/
III.  Disposal

     a.    Disposal sites

           Site          Type
User
Operator
 Cost
$/	
Frequency of
 use or cover
     b.    Costs incurred by Forest Service in disposal

           Equipment:

                Item                      W.C.F. designation
           Personnel:

                No.
  Classification
   on disposal
                                            Notes and comments:
                                   Time equipment is
                                    comitted to solid
                                     waste disposal
                      Man days spent
                                                                                                    87

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                                APPENDIX 6
                      Control of Air Pollution Originating
                      From Federal Installations
                       Announcement of Signing of Executive Order
                       11282.
                       May 26, 1966
  President   Johnson   today   signed   an
Executive order requiring all Federal agencies
to  take  steps  to prevent  and control  air
pollution from Federal installations.
  The order directs the heads of all Federal
agencies to lead in the administration's efforts
to improve  the  quality of the Nation's air.
Today's order is similar to one the  President
issued  last November  directing the Federal
Government to provide effective leadership in
the battle against water pollution.
  The air pollution  Executive order is the
result of extensive consultation with Federal
agencies and  with industries affected  by the
order. The Department of Health, Education,
and Welfare is issuing standards to supplement
the order,  by setting precise  limitations  on
emissions which will  be allowed From Federal
buildings and facilities.
  Today's order requires that plans for new
Federal  facilities and buildings in the  United
States  include  provisions  for  air  pollution
control  measures necessary  to  comply  with
the standards issued by  the  Department of
Health,  Education, and Welfare. In  addition,
the order directs  the head of each agency to
examine  existing installations and to present
to the Bureau of the Budget, by July 1, 1967,
an  orderly  schedule  for bringing  all  such
installations up to the required standards.
  In signing the order,  the  President stated
that the  most difficult problem encountered
in writing the  order  was  the lack  of  an
economically   feasible   technology   for
controlling emissions  of sulfur.  The Federal
Government  has  proposed  spending more
than  $3  million  in  1967  on  research  to
control  sulfur  emissions. This  includes  $1
million for designing four sulfur-removal pilot
plants,  the  construction  of which  plants
would  cost  a  total  of  $8  million. The
President  has directed the Secretaries of the
Interior and  Health, Education, and Welfare
to explore with the Bureau of the Budget the
feasibility of increasing the Federal effort to
find  a  solution  to  the  sulfur  emission
problem.
  The President said that a major part of the
responsibility  for  sulfur research  rests with
the utilities, the coal  and oil  industries, and
other groups  which will  feel the economic
efforts  of more  stringent  air   pollution
regulations.  He   pointed  out   that  these
industries had increased their expenditures for
air pollution research in the past  few years,
but  stated that  much  greater  efforts  are
needed.
  The  President  emphasized  that, although
there were great  technological and economic
problems  in  the  abatement of air pollution,
the battle for cleaner air remained a major
objective   of his  administration,  and  an
essential element in a better environment for
America.
NOTE: For  the text  of Executive Order 11282, see  the
following item.

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                      Control of Air Pollution Originating
                      From Federal Installations

                       Executive Order 1 1282.  May 26, 1966
                        Prevention, Control, and Abatement of Air
                              Pollution by Federal Activities
  By virtue of the authority vested in me as
President  of  the  United   States  and  in
furtherance of the purpose and policy of the
Clean Air Act, as amended (42 U.S.C.  1857),
it is ordered as follows:
  Section   1.  Policy.  The  heads  of  the
departments, agencies, and establishments of
the Executive Branch of the Government shall
provide leadership in the nationwide effort to
improve  the quality of  our air through the
prevention,  control,  and  abatement  of  air
pollution from Federal Government activities
in the United States. In order to achieve these
objectives—
  (1)  Emissions   to   the atmosphere  from
Federal facilities and buildings shall not be
permitted if such emissions endanger health
or welfare, and  emissions which are likely to
be injurious or hazardous to people, animals,
vegetation, or property  shall  be  minimized.
The procedures established in section 3 of this
Order  shall   be  followed  in  minimizing
pollution   from   existing   facilities   and
buildings.
  (2)  New  Federal  facilities and  buildings
shall  be  constructed so  as  to  meet the
objectives prescribed  by this Order and the
standards established pursuant to section 5 of
this Order.
  (3)  The  Secretary  of Health,  Education,
and Welfare shall, in  administering the Clean
Air Act, as amended,  provide technical advice
and   assistance   to  the  heads  of  other
departments, agencies, and  establishments in
connection    with   their   duties   and
responsibilities under  this Order. The head of
each  department, agency,  and establishment
shall  establish  appropriate  procedures  for
securing advice from, and consulting with, the
Secretary  of Health, Education, and Welfare.
  (4)  The head of each department, agency,
and  establishment  shall  ensure  compliance
with section 107(a)  of the Clean Air Act,  as
amended (42 U.S.C. 1857f(a)), which declares
it to be the intent  of Congress that Fedejal
departments and agencies  shall, to the extent
practicable  and consistent with the  interests
of the  United States and  within  available
appropriations,    cooperate   with   the
Department   of  Health,   Education,   and
Welfare and with  any air pollution control
agency in preventing and controlling pollution
of the air.
  Sec. 2. Procedures for new Federal facilities
and buildings.   A request  for funds to defray
the  cost of designing and constructing new
facilities  and  buildings  in the  United States
shall  be  included  in  the  annual budget
estimates   of  a   department,   agency,   or
establishment  only if such  request includes
funds to defray the costs  of such measures as
may  be  necessary  to assure  that  the new
facility  or building  will meet  the objectives
prescribed by  this  Order and  the  standards
established  pursuant to  section  5  of this
Order. Air  pollution control needs shall  be
considered in  the initial stages of planning for
each new installation.
  Sec.  3.  Procedures for  existing  Federal
facilities  and  buildings,  (a)  In  order   to
facilitate   budgeting  for   corrective   and
preventive  measures,  the   head   of  each
department, agency,  and establishment shall
provide  for an examination of all existing
facilities and  buildings under his jurisdiction
in the United States and shall  develop and
  90

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present to  the  Director of the Bureau of the
Budget, by July 1, 1967, a phased and orderly
plan for installing such improvements as may
be needed  to prevent air pollution, or abate
such air pollution as may exist, with respect
to such buildings and  facilities.  Subsequent
revisions needed to keep any such plan up to
date shall be submitted  to the Director of the
Bureau of  the Budget with the annual report
required by  paragraph' (b) of this section.
Future  construction  work   at  each   such
facility and the  expected  future  use  of the
facility shall be considered in developing such
a  plan. Each  such plan,  and  any revision
therein, shall  be  developed  in consultation
with the Secretary of Health,  Education, and
Welfare in  order to ensure that adoption of
the measures proposed  thereby will result in
the prevention  or abatement of air pollution
in conformity  with  the objectives prescribed
by  this Order  and  the standards prescribed
pursuant to section 5 of this Order.
  (b)  The  head of each department, agency,
and establishment who  has existing facilities
and  buildings  under his  jurisdiction  in the
United States shall present to  the Director of
the Bureau of  the Budget, by July 1,  1968,
and by the first of each fiscal year thereafter,
an  annual  report describing progress of his
department,  agency,  or  establishment  in
accomplishing   the   objectives  of  its  air
pollution abatement plan.
  Sec.  4. Objectives for Federal facilities and
buildings,   (a)   Except  for  discharges  of
radioactive emissions which are regulated by
the  Atomic  Energy  Commission,  Federal
facilities and buildings  shall  conform  to the
air pollution standards prescribed by the State
or community  in which they are located. If
State or local standards are not prescribed for
a particular location, or if the State or local
standards are less stringent than the standards
established  pursuant   to  this  Order,  the
standards prescribed pursuant  to section 5 of
this Order shall be followed.
  (b) The  emission   of  flyash  and  other
 particulate   matter  shall  be   kept  to  a
 minimum.
  (c) Emission  of  sulfur oxides  shall  be
 minimized to the extent practicable.
  (d) Wherever  appropriate,  tall  chimneys
 shall be  installed in  order  to  reduce the
 adverse    effects   of   pollution.   The
 determination  of  chimney  height  shall  be
 based  on air quality  criteria,  land use,  and
 meteorological, topographical, aesthetic, and
 operating factors.
  (e) Solid  fuels and  ash  shall be stored and
 handled so as not to release to the atmosphere
 dust in significant quantities. Gasoline or any
 volatile petroleum distillate or organic liquid
 shall be  stored  and  handled  so  as  not  to
 release  to the  atmosphere vapor emissions in
 significant quantities.
  (f) In  urban  areas  refuse  shall not  be
 burned in open fires and in rural areas it shall
 be   disposed  of  in  such  a  manner  as  to
 reasonably  minimize pollution.  Refuse shall
 not be  left in  dumps without being covered
 with inert  matter within  a reasonably short
 time.  Whenever incinerators are  used they
 shall be  of such design as  will  minimize
 emission  of pollutant dusts, fumes, or gases.

  (g) Pollutant dusts,  fumes,  or  gases (other
 than those for which provision is made above)
 shall not  be discharged to the atmosphere in
 quantities  which  will  endanger  health  or
 welfare.
  (h) The head of each department, agency,
 and establishment shall, with respect to each
 installation  in  the United States under his
jurisdiction, take, or  cause to be  taken, such
 action as may  be necessary  to  ensure that
 discharges of  radioactive  emissions  to  the
 atmosphere  are  in  accord  with  the  rules,
 regulations,  or requirements of  the Atomic
 Energy  Commission   and the  policies and
 guidance of the Federal Radiation Council as
 published in the Federal Register.
                                                                                       91

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  (i) In extraordinary  cases where it may be
required  in the public interest, the Secretary
of  Health,   Education,   and  Welfare may
exempt any Federal facility or building from
the objectives of paragraphs (a) through (g) of
this section.

  Sec.  5. Standards,  (a) The  Secretary  of
Health, Education, and Welfare shall prescribe
standards  to   implement   the   objectives
prescribed by paragraphs  (a) through (g) of
section 4 of this Order. Such standards may
modify   these   objectives   whenever   the
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare
shall determine  that such modifications  are
necessary in  the  public interest and will  not
significantly  conflict with the intent  of this
Order. Prior to  issuing any  changes in such
standards, the Secretary of Health, Educalion,
and  Welfare  shall  consult with appropriate
Federal   agencies  and   shall  publish  the
proposed changes  in the  Federal  Register
thirty  days prior to  their issuance. All such
standards prescribed by the Secretary shall be
published in the Federal Register.

  (b) The  permits  authorized  by  section
107(b) of the  Clean Air Act, as amended (42
U.S.C.  1857f(b)), may be used to carry out
the purposes of this Order as the Secretary of
Health,  Education, and  Welfare  may  deem
appropriate.
  Sec.    6.    Prior   Executive    Order
superseded.  Executive  Order  No. 10779 of
August 20, 1958, is hereby superseded.
                       Lyndon B. Johnson
The White House
  May 26, 1966
[Filed with the Office of the Federal Register, 8:49 a.m.,
May 27, 1966]
92

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   Title 42—PUBLIC  HEALTH

Chapter I—Public Health Service, De-
  partment of Health, Education, and
  Welfare
 SUBCHAPTER F—QUARANTINE, INSPECTION,
             AND LICENSING
PART  76—PREVENTION,  CONTROL,
   AND ABATEMENT OF AIR POLLU-
   TION  FROM  FEDERAL  GOVERN-
   MENT ACTIVITIES: PERFORMANCE
   STANDARDS AND TECHNIQUES OF
   MEASUREMENT
  Pursuant  to  section  5 of Executive
Order No. 11282, the Secretary of Health,
Education,  and Welfare hereby  amends
Subchapter  F of Title 42, Code  of Fed-
eral Regulations,  by adding a new Part
76,  as follows:
Sec.
76.1  Definitions.
76.2  Intent.
76.3  Applicability.
76.4  Combustion of fuel.
76 5  Sulfur oxides.
76 6  Stacks.
76.7  Storage and handling of fuels  and ash.
76.8  Disposal of refuse.
76.9  Other pollution producing processes.
  AtrraoRrrY: The provisions of this  Part
76 Issued under  section 5 of Executive  Or-
der 11282.

§ 76.1   Definitions.

  As used in this part:
  (a) "Executive Order" means Execu-
tive Order No. 11282.
  (b) Nonurban areas" means all areas
other than  urban areas.
  (c) "Ringelmann  Scale" means  the
Ringelmann Scale  as published in  the
latest U.S. Bureau of Mines Information
Circular entitled "Ringelmann  Smoke
Chart".
  (d) "Secretary" means the Secretary
of Health, Education, and Welfare.
  (e) "Smoke Inspection Guide" means
the  U.S. Public Health  Service  Smoke
Inspection  Guide described in  Part  75
of this title.
  (f) "Urban areas" means those areas
classified as urban in the latest available
Federal census, or  as Standard Metro-
politan  Statistical Areas by the Bureau
of the Budget.
  (g) "Unit" means all indirect heat ex-
changers connected  to a single stack.
  (h) "Particulate  matter" means any
material, except uncombined water, that
exists as a  solid or liquid  at standard
conditions.
  (i) "Standard  conditions"  means a
temperature of 70° Fahrenheit and a
pressure of  14.7 pounds per square inch,
absolute.
  (j) "Waste" means  any solid, liquid,
or  gaseous  substance,  the  disposal  of
which  may   create  an  air  pollution
problem.
§ 76.2  Intent.
  It is the intent of these standards that
emissions to the atmosphere from Fed-
eral facilities and buildings shall not be
permitted if  such  emissions  endanger
health or welfare  and that  emissions
which are likely to  be injurious  or haz-
ardous to people, animals, vegetation,  or
property shall be minimized.

§ 76.3  Applicability.

  (a) Unless  otherwise indicated, the
standards in this part apply to both new
and existing Federal facilities and build-
ings.  These standards are effective upon
publication in the FEDERAL REGISTER, ex-
cept  for those facilities and buildings
which are likely to require installation of
improvements under the plan  to be sub-
mitted in accordance with section 3  of
the Executive  Order.
  (b) Except  for  discharges  of radio-
active effluents which  are  regulated by
the Atomic Energy  Commission, Federal
facilities and buildings shall conform to
the  air  pollution  standards  prescribed
by the State or community in which they
are located. If State or local  standards
are not prescribed for a particular loca-
tion,  or if the State or local  standards
are  less stringent  than the  standards
prescribed herein, the standards in this
part  shall be applicable  to  discharges
from such Federal  facilities and build-
Ings except as otherwise Indicated.
  (c) Temporary operations  that  may
result in potential air pollution  prob-
lems, such as  those associated with re-
search,  development,  test, evaluation,
space, and military activities, shall  be
conducted with such precautions and
safeguards as  are needed to achieve the
intent of these standards.
  (d) The Secretary may, upon applica-
tion of  the relevant department, agency
or  establishment,  exempt  any  Federal
facility or building from  the  objectives
contained in section 4 of the  Executive
order and from any or all of these stand-
ards  whenever he  determines that the
activities of such building or facility will
not significantly conflict with  the intent
of  the  Executive order and  that  such
an exemption  is in the public interest.

§ 76.4  Combustion of fuel.

  (a) The following standards apply to
the  combustion units  of facilities and
buildings having a heat input of less than
1,000 million B.t.u./hour, other than fire-
places, stoves, or grills burning wood  or
charcoal:
  (1) Manually fired  equipment  shall
not be installed as new or replacement
equipment, except  for  the burning  of
anthracite, coke, or smokeless fuel.
                                                                                           93

-------
          (2)  (i) For new units, except during
       startup,  cleaning of fires, or soot blow-
       ing, the  density of any emission to the
       atmosphere shall  not exceed No. 1 on
       the Ringelmann Scale or the Smoke In-
       spection Guide.
          (ii)  For existing units, except during
       startup,  cleaning of fires, or soot blow-
       ing, the  density of any emission to the
       atmosphere shall  not exceed No. 2 on
       the Ringelmann Scale or Smoke Inspec-
       tion Guide.
          (3)  A  photoelectric or  other  type
       smoke detector, recorder, or alarm shall
       be installed on units larger than  ten
       million  BTU per  hour  input,  except
       where gas or light oil  (No. 2 or lighter),
       is burned.
          (4)  During  routine  operation,  the
        emission of  particles larger  than 60
        microns shall not normally occur.
          (5)  Means shall be provided in all
       newly constructed units and  wherever
        practicable in existing units  to allow
the periodic measurement of flyash and
other particulate matter.
  (6) All new or replacement spreader
stoker  installations shall  be of a type
that automatically  discharges ashes to
the  ash  pit  either continuously or in
very frequent small increments, and fly-
ash shall be reinjected only from boiler
passes.
  (7) For units  of  less than 10 million
BTU/hour heat  input, the  emission of
flyash  and  other  particulate  matter
shall not exceed 0.6 pounds of particu-
late matter per million BTU heat input,
as measured by the  American  Society
of  Mechanical  Engineers Power Test
Code No. 27 for "Determining Dust Con-
centrations in a Gas Stream," or equiva-
lent test method.
  (8) For units  between 10 million and
1,000 million BTU/hour heat input, the
emission of flyash and other particulate
matter shall not  exceed that specified in
figure 1, as measured by the test method
                  2   '-°
                  5   0.9
                  H   0.8
                      0.7
               2-5
               to H   0.6
               J2 m
               S§   °-5
                      0.4
               fc0-   0.3
               U~ ^j


               ^^  0.25
               xfc  0.20
               II
                  o  0.15
                     0.10
                                  i  T i n i n
                                                         r  T i i iii
                               i   i  i  I I  111
                                                   l   i  i  i 1.1.1.1.1
                                                                       I   i   i  i 11 i i
                         I                   13                  IOO               IpOO

                                 TOTAL INPUT—MILLIONS OF  BTU PER HOUR
                 Figure 1.  Maximum emission of particulate matter from fuel burning installations.
94

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 specified  In subparagraph  (7)  of this
 paragraph.  Existing units shall meet
 this standard within the time designated
 by the  plan submitted  In accordance
 with section 3  of the Executive  order
 except that  with  respect  to  existing
 spreader  stoker  units  the  plan  may
 specify certain units which may  emit
 particulate matter at an Interim rate not
 exceeding  0.6  Ibs/million  BTU   heat
 input.
   (b)  For units having a heat Input  of
 more than 1,000 million BTU/hour, the
 appropriate department,  agency, or es-
 tablishment  shall seek  special  advice
 from the Secretary with regard to smoke,
 flyash, and other particulate emissions.
 § 76.5  Sulfur oxides.
   (a)  Combustion units  of  facilities  or
 buildings not located In  areas  specified
 by the Secretary under paragraph (c)  of
 this section and whose heat input is less
 than 1,000 million BTU/hour shall burn
 the lowest sulfur content fuel that is rea-
 sonably available.  In determining rea-
 sonable availability,  the  factors to be
 considered Include, among others, price,
 firmness  of  supply, extent  of  existing
 pollution, and assurance  of supply un-
der adverse  weather  and natural  dis-
aster conditions.
   (b)  For combustion units or Federal
facilities or buildings not located in areas
specified by the Secretary under para-
graph  (c) of this section and whose heat
input is more than  1,000  million BTU/
hour, the appropriate department, agen-
cy, or  establishment shall seek special
advice  from  the Secretary with regard
to sulfur-oxide emissions.
   (c) (1)  Effective October 1, 1969, com-
bus.tion units of all  Federal facilities or
 buildings  located in the following  areas
 shall  comply  with  applicable  emission
 limitations and control measures set out
 below:
   (i)  In the New Jersey-New York-Con-
 necticut Interstate Air Quality Control
 Region as defined by 42 CFB Part 81, the
 emission rate of sulfur oxides (calculated
 as sulfur dioxide)  from  fuels used  in
 combustion units  shall not  exceed 0.35
 pounds per million  B.t.u.  (gross value)
 heat^ input.
   (ii)  In the Metropolitan Chicago In-
 terstate Air Quality Control Region (In-
 diana-Illinois) and  in the Metropolitan
 Philadelphia Interstate Air Quality Con-
 trol Region  (Pennsylvania-New Jersey-
 Delaware) as defined in 42 CFR Part 81,
 the emission rate of sulfur oxides (cal-
 culated as sulfur dioxide) from fuels used
 in combustion  units  shall  not exceed
 0.65 pounds  per  million  B.t.u.  (gross
 value) heat input.
   (2)  Such limits or  measures shall  be
 established only after consultation with
 appropriate Federal, State and local offi-
 cials and affected parties.  Not  less than
30 days prior to prescribing such limits
or measures, the Secretary will publish
in the FEDERAL REGISTER notice of his in-
tention to adopt such limits or measures,
and will thereafter publish in the FED-
ERAL REGISTER the limits or measures es-
tablished.  The Secretary may  at  any
time designate other  urban areas which
suffer from extremely high air pollution
levels, and after similar consultation, and
publication in the FEDERAL REGISTER, pre-
scribe such limits or measures as he de-
termines are necessary to carry out the
intent of this order.
  (d) The emission of the oxides of  sul-
fur the atmosphere shall be monitored at
regular intervals by determining the  sul-
fur content of the fuel used or by deter-
mining the sulfur content of flue gases.
§ 76.6  Stacks.
  For buildings or facilities in nonurban-
ized areas, the particle emission stand-
ards of § 76.4(a)  (7) and (8) may be re-
vised for an individual installation by an
amount to be determined by  the Secre-
tary, when:
  (a) The stack height  exceeds by 2V2
times the height of the highest  building
in that area, and
  (b) The pollution level in any area will
not be significantly increased thereby.
For large  plants the determination of
chimney height shall be  based on air
quality criteria,  land use, and meteor-
ological, topographical,  aesthetic,  and
operating factors.
§ 76.7  Storage and  handling of fuels
     and ash.
   (a)  Solid fuels and ash shall be stored
and handled so as  not to release to the
atmosphere dust in significant quantities.
   (b)  In quantities of 40,000 gallons or
more, gasoline or any volatile petroleum
distillate or organic liquid having a vapor
pressure of 1.5 p.s.i.a. or greater under
actual storage conditions shall be stored
in pressure tanks or reservoirs or shall be
stored  in  containers equipped  with  a
floating roof or vapor recovery system or
other vapor emission control device.
   (c)  Stationary gasoline storage tanks
with a capacity of 250 gallons or more
shall be equipped wjth either submerged
filling inlets or with vapor recovery or
emission control systems such that loss
of vapor to the atmosphere during filling
operations shall be minimized.
   (d)  Gasoline or petroleum distillate
tank car or tank truck loading  facilities
handling 20,000 gallons per day or more
shall be equipped with submersible fill-
ing arms or other vapor emission control
systems.
§ 76.8   Disposal of waste.

  
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       of waste at any number of sites within
       a 1-mile radius, except that these quan-
       tities may be exceeded in the case of on-
       site burning of waste produced in con-
       nection  with operations  performed at
       railroad rights-of-way intenirban high-
       ways, Irrigation canals, forests, agricul-
       tural sites, etc., and  provided that care
       is exercised to prevent creation of local-
       ized air pollution which endangers health
       or welfare. Deteriorated or  unused ex-
       plosives, munitions,  rocket propellants,
       burned in open fires,  in accordance with
       recognized procedures.
         (3) Wastes shall not be left  in open
       dumps.
         (4) Wastes that are  disposed of In
       sanitary landfills shall be disposed of in
       accordance with procedures described in
       "Sanitary Landfill Pacts"  (PHS publica-
       tion No. 1792, 1968)  and any  amend-
       ments  or revisions thereof.  Said docu-
       ment is available to any interested per-
       son, whether or not affected  by the pro-
       visions of this part, upon request to the
       National Air Pollution Control Adminis-
       tration,  Arlington,   Va.  22203,   which
       maintains  an official  historic file of the
       document,  or to the Public Health Serv-
       ice  Information Center as listed in 45
       CFR5.31 (32P.R. 9316).
         (b) (1) Waste shall be burned  only in
       facilities  especially  designed  for that
       purpose, except as provided in paragraph
       (a) of this section.
         (2) For  incinerators acquired  on or
       after June 3, 1966 the density  of  any
       emission to  the atmosphere shall not
       exceed  number 1  on the Ringelmann
       Scale or the Smoke Inspection Guide for
       a period or periods  aggregating  more
       than 3  minutes in  any 1 hour, or be of
       such opacity as to obscure an observer's
       view to an equivalent degree.
         (3) For  incinerators acquired prior to
       June 3, 1966  the density of any emission
       to the atmosphere shall not exceed num-
       ber 2 on the Ringelmann Scale or the
       Smoke Inspection Guide for  a period or
       periods aggregating more than 3 minutes
       in any  1 hour, or be of such opacity as to
       obscure an observer's view to an equiv-
       alent degree.
         (c) (1) In  addition, for installations
       burning more than 200 pounds of waste
       per hour, emissions shall not exceed 0.2
       grain of particulate matter per stahdard
       cubic foot of dry flue  gas corrected to 12
       percent carbon dioxide (without the con-
       tribution of  carbon dioxide from auxil-
       iary fuel), measured  in accordance with
       the test procedures described in "Specifi-
       cations for Incinerator Testing at Fed-
       eral Facilities" (PHS publication, Octo-
       ber, 1967)  and any amendments or re-
       visions  thereof. Said  document is avail-
       able to any  interested person,  whether
       or not affected by the provisions of this
       part, upon request to the National Air
       Pollution Control  Administration,  Arl-
       ington, Va. 22203,  which maintains an
       official  historic file of the document, or
       to the Public Health Service Information
Center  or  Regional Office Information
Center as listed in 45 CFR 5.31 (32 F.R.
9316).
  (2) For   installations   burning   200
pounds of waste per hour or less, emis-
sions shall not exceed 0.3 grain of  par-
ticulate matter per  standard cubic foot
of dry flue gas corrected to 12 percent
carbon dioxide (without the contribution
of carbon  dioxide from  auxiliary fuel),
measured  in  accordance  with the test
specifications described in ''Specifications
for Incinerator Testing at Federal Facil-
ities"  (PHS publication,  October  1967)
and  any   amendments  or   revisions
thereof.
   (3)  Test procedures  which  are ap-
proved by  the Commissioner, National
Air Pollution Control Administration, as
equivalent to those prescribed by para-
graphs (c) (1) and (c) (2) of this section
may  be used for the purpose of deter-
mining an installation's compliance with
the emission standards  for particulate
matter contained in such paragraphs.
§ 76.9  Other pollution  producing  proc-
     esses.
   For austs,  fumes, or gases from any
process not heretofore described, except
for discharges  of  radioactive  effluents
regulated  by the Atomic Energy  Com-
mission, whatever measures may be nec-
essary to comply with the intent of these
regulations shall be applied.   This will
generally  require  the   installation of
equipment or devices to  minimize such
emissions  to  the point  where they will
meet  the  standards contained  in  these
regulations.  For processes which emit
toxic  substances in  quantities which
might endanger health  or  welfare and
for fires which emit smoke or fumes at
official firefighting  schools, the appro-
priate department,  agency,  or establish-
ment shall seek special advice from the
Secretary.
   (None: The Department of Health, Educa-
tion,  and Welfare will,  from  time to time,
and after consultation with Industries con-
cerned. Issue "Guides of Good Practice" for
Specific operations to aid  Federal depart-
ments, agencies, and  establishments  In the
selection of  equipment and  methods  for
meeting  the  performance  standards. For
emissions not  covered herein, or for  which
there have been Issued no applicable "Guides
of Good Practice," the Department of Health,
Education, and Welfare will provide techni-
cal  material and consultation  to depart-
ments, agencies, and establishments request-
Ing such assistance.  Bequests for "Guides
of Good Practice," technical material, or con-
sultation should  be  directed  either  to the
Federal Facilities Section, Abatement Branch,
Division of Air Pollution, Public Health Serv-
ice, Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare, Washington, D.C.,  20201,  or to the
appropriate Regional Air Pollution Program
Director of the Public Health Service located
 In the Department of Health, Education, and
 Welfare Regional Offices.)
 Dated: March 28,1969.
                  JOHN W. GARDNER,
        Secretary of Health, Education,
                            and Welfare.
 [F.R.  Doc.  69-3918;  Filed, Apr.  3,  1969;
                8:46 a.m.]
96

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Environ.:••':     "       ~   i
Litrat"',
1 North l'_c  . ._• . _...v  :
Chicago,  Illinois  tiO.606

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