United States
 Environmental Protection
 Agency	
Environmental Monitoring
Systems Laboratory
Las Vegas. NV 89193-3478
 Research and Development
EPA/600/S4-89/044 Mar. 1990
 Project  Summary

 Proximity  of  Connecticut
 Sanitary Landfills  to  Wetlands
 and Deepwater  Habitats

 R.C. Herndon, J.E. Moerlins, V.W. Lambou, and R.L Qebhard
     Sanitary  landfills can  cause
considerable harm to sensitive  eco-
systems if they are not  properly
located, designed, and managed. The
purpose of these  reports is to
summarize the proximity of sanitary
landfills in the state of Connecticut to
wetlands and deepwater habitats (i.e.,
rivers, lakes, streams, bays,  etc.); and
to present data on Individual landfills.
The source of data used to determine
the locations of the sanitary landfills
was the computer data file developed
by Development  Planning  and
Research Associates, Inc. (DPRA) for
use  by the  U.S.  Environmental
Protection Agency's  Office  of Solid
Waste  in  its  RCRA Subtitle  D
program. The  sanitary landfills were
identified on U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service's National Wetlands  Inventory
maps. The nearness or proximity of
the sanitary landfills to wetlands and
deepwater habitats was determined
by drawing three concentric regions
around the point representing the
location of each landfill. The radii of
the concentric regions were: 1/4 mile,
1/2 mile, and 1 mile.  Data on  135
individual sanitary  landfills in  the
state of Connecticut  were contained
In  the DPRA  data file.  Data were
obtained for 83  of  these  landfills
relative to their proximity to  wetlands
and deepwater habitats. All sanitary
landfills in the state of Connecticut
are located  in or are close  to either
wetlands or deepwater habitats. All
are located  close to wetlands while
more than three-quarters are close to
deepwater habitats. These  facilities
have the potential to adversely affect
sensitive ecosystems,  such as wet-
lands and deepwater habitats,  either
through habitat alterations or through
the migration of contaminants from
sanitary landfills.
     This Project Summary  was
developed by  EPA's Environmental
Monitoring Systems Laboratory, Las
Vegas, NV, to announce key findings
of the research project that is fully
documented in two separate volumes
of the same title (see Project Report
ordering information at back).

Introduction
  Sanitary landfills, as typically defined,
are waste management facilities  regu-
lated under Subtitle D of the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA).
These facilities are commonly referred to
as municipal waste landfills, and they are
primarily  used  to receive  household
refuse and nonhazardous commercial
waste. However,  sanitary  landfills also
receive other types of Subtitle  D waste,
such as sewage sludge  and industrial
waste. Sanitary landfills typically receive
some  hazardous  waste  in the form  of
household hazardous  waste,  and
hazardous waste  from  small  quantity
generators as  defined in 40 CFR Part
261.10 (Definitions). Depending upon the
definition of a sanitary landfill used by the
individual states, there are between 6,500
and 9,300 of these facilities permitted in
the United States.
  Sanitary landfills  can cause  con-
siderable harm to sensitive ecosystems if
they are not properly located, designed,
and managed. These facilities have the
potential to adversely affect sensitive
ecosystems,  such as  wetlands and

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deepwater habitats, either through habitat
alterations or through the  migration  of
contaminants from sanitary landfills.  In
order to evaluate the seriousness of this
problem, information is  needed  on the
nearness of  sanitary landfills to wetlands
and  surface  water  bodies.  The purpose
of this study is to document the proximity
of sanitary  landfills in  the state  of
Connecticut  to  wetlands  and deepwater
habitats (i.e., rivers, lakes, streams,  bays,
etc.).

Methodology
  The source of data used to determine
the locations of the sanitary landfills was
the  computer  data  file  developed  by
Development  Planning  and  Research
Associates,  Inc., (DPRA)  for use by the
U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency's
Office of Solid Waste in its RCRA Subtitle
D program.  The DPRA data file includes
information  on  7,683  sanitary  landfills,
and 6,849 of these facilities have latitude
and  longitude  coordinates in degrees,
minutes, and seconds  specified in the
data file. Each set of coordinates defines
a point  which represents  the geographic
location of a sanitary landfill. In addition,
the data file contains the names of the
landfills and  data on the cities or counties
in which the landfills reside. Individual
states  are  responsible  for permitting
sanitary landfills under  Subtitle  D  of
RCRA,  and, since DPRA obtained the
information  for  the  data  file  from  state
sources, the  site  location information
varies in terms of accuracy  and the point
chosen  to represent the  location  of each
facility.
  Wetlands  typically form  part  of  a
continuous  transition zone  between
uplands and open  water. Therefore, the
delineation  of the  upper and lower
boundaries  in  any wetland definition  is
somewhat arbitrary. There are a  number
of definitions of wetlands  that have been
developed for use in classifying natural
environments or for regulatory purposes.
While these definitions are not identical,
they are very similar. The selection of a
specific definition for use  in this  study
was determined by the availability  of
national wetlands and deepwater  habitats
geographic data.
  The  most  extensive, consistent source
of  wetlands and  deepwater  habitats
geographic  data is the  U.S.  Fish and
Wildlife  Service's  National Wetlands
Inventory (NWI). The NWI has developed
detailed,  large-scale  maps for  a
significant portion  of the United States.
To  date, wetland  maps have  been
developed for approximately  40 percent
of the contiguous 48 states, 10 percent of
Alaska,  and all  of  Hawaii.  Large-scale
NWI maps typically are  either 1:24,000
scale or 1:63,360 scale U.S. Geological
Survey quadrangle maps; however, most
are  1:24,000  scale. Wetlands  and
deepwater habitats are delineated on the
NWI maps.  The delineation of wetlands
and  deepwater habitats was developed
using remote  sensing techniques and
field investigations.  The NWI  maps  are
developed  in  accordance  with the
National  Map  Accuracy  Standard
(NMAS). The NWI 1:24,000 scale  maps
used in  this  study are  accurate,
according to the NMAS, to within 40 feet
of ground measurements.  These  maps
were  particularly  useful for plotting  the
location  of  sanitary  landfills  and  for
determining the  proximity  of  these
facilities to wetlands and deepwater
habitats.
  The NWI maps use the definitions and
the classification system for wetlands and
deepwater  habitats  developed  by  the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Wetlands
are defined as lands transitional between
terrestrial and aquatic systems where the
water table  is  usually at  or near  the
surface, or the land is covered by shallow
water. Deepwater habitats are defined as
permanently flooded lands lying below
the deepwater boundary of wetlands.
  The  U.S.  Fish  and Wildlife Service's
classification of wetlands  and deepwater
habitats is  hierarchial in  nature  pro-
ceeding from general to  specific. There
are 5 systems, 10  subsystems, and 55
classes. In this study only the "system,"
i.e.,  the  complex  of wetlands  and
deepwater  habitats  that share the
influence of similar hydrologic, geomor-
phologic, chemical,  or  biological factors,
was used for classification purposes.
  In order to link the location of sanitary
landfills in  the  DPRA data file  to  the
appropriate  NWI maps, we  used  the
information on  the  T-70  computer  tape
obtained  from  the  U.S.  Geological
Survey. The NWI large-scale  maps were
developed  using  U.S.  Geological
Survey's  quadrangle maps as  base
maps. The T-70 computer  tape contains
67 fields of  information including latitude
and  longitude  that can  be  used  for
identifying the 1:24,000 scale  maps, the
map  names,  and  the  state  codes
assigned to the  maps. Sanitary  landfill
location data on the DPRA  computer file
tape  were  matched  by  a  computer
program against location data on the U.S.
Geological Survey's T-70 computer tape
in order to identify the specific maps that
contain  sanitary landfills and/or that would
be needed to evaluate the  wetlands and
deepwater habitats that are within 1 mile
of each sanitary landfill. The map nan
obtained from  the  computer match
were sorted by state and compared v
inventories of available NWI maps.
  Each sanitary landfill included  in  1
study  was located  on  NWI  large-sc
maps  using  standard  cartograp
techniques. Nearness  or  proximity
sanitary landfills to wetlands and  de
water  habitats was  determined
drawing three concentric regions aroi
the point  representing  the location
each  landfill. The radii of  the concen
regions were:  1/4 mile, 1/2 mile, anc
mile.  The occurrence or nonoccurrer
of the wetlands and  deepwater hab
systems in  each concentric region v
then recorded.
  Many sanitary landfills are typically
the order  of  100  acres  in size.  I
example, in the state of Florida about
percent of the active sanitary landfills ,
between 50 and 150 acres in size, v\
the average size  being 110 acres.
landfill that is  100 acres  in  size a
uniformly  distributed about its latitui
longitude  point designation will  have
radius of  approximately 1/4 mile  ai
therefore,  will approximate  the bound.
of the first concentric  1/4-mile rad
region. Undoubtedly, most of the landl
located  in  a  1/4-mile radius regi
containing  either wetlands  or deepwa
habitats should be considered to
located in  wetlands  or deepwa
habitats. Since landfills vary consideral
in size and shape,  some of the landf
located in the 1/2-mile radius and 1-rr
radius regions  containing  wetlands
deepwater  habitats  will probably also
located in  wetlands  or deepwal
habitats. The exact  geographic bound*
of  the landfill  is  not  the  critic
consideration  for  determining adver
impacts associated with these facilitii
since contaminants can migrate off-site
affect wetlands and deepwater habitats.

Results
  We obtained  data on the proximity
83 sanitary landfills  in  the  state
Connecticut to  wetlands and deepwa
habitats. There are 91  sanitary landfills
the DPRA  data  file  for  the  state
Connecticut and 83 (91  percent) of the
facilities have NWI maps available for s
interpretation. As a result, 8 (9 percent)
the 91  sanitary landfills in the  state
Connecticut are not  included in  U
study.
  Approximately  96  percent  of  tl
sanitary landfills are located in or witl
1/4 mile of wetlands, while 99 and  1
percent are located in or within 1/2 anc
mile of wetlands, respectively (Figure 1

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None of the sanitary landfills are located
more than a  mile  from  any  type  of
wetland.   Most  sanitary  landfills are
located either in or are close to Palustrine
wetlands (approximately 95, 99,  and 100
percent are located in or within  1/4, 1/2,
and  1  mile, respectively, of a Palustrine
wetland).
  Approximately  30  percent  of the
sanitary landfills are located  in or within
1/4 mile of deepwater habitats, while 54
and  77 percent are  located  in or within
1/2 and 1 mile of deepwater habitats,
respectively (Figure 2).  Nineteen (23
percent) of the landfills are located more
than a mile from  any type of deepwater
habitat. Most of  the facilities that are
located in  or that are close to deepwater
habitats are in the vicinity of Riverine  or
Lacustrine deepwater habitats  (i.e., 57
percent are located in or within 1 mile of
a  Riverine deepwater  habitat  and 30
percent are located in or within 1 mile of
a Lacustrine deepwater habitat).
  Approximately  99  percent  of the
sanitary landfills are located  in or within
1/4 mile of either wetlands or deepwater
habitats, while 100 percent are located in
or within  1/2  mile of either  wetlands  or
deepwater habitats,  respectively (Figure
3).  None  of the  sanitary  landfills are
located more than a mile from either
wetlands or deepwater habitats. Most  of
the sanitary landfills are located either in
or are  close  to  Palustrine or  Riverine
habitats (approximately  95,  99, and 100
percent are located in or within  1/4, 1/2,
and  1  mile, respectively, of a Palustrine
deepwater habitat while  approximately
23, 39, and 57  percent are located in  or
within  1/4, 1/2,  and 1 mile, respectively,
of a Riverine habitat).
  Coding procedures used to compile the
data on the  proximity of  waste sites  to
wetlands   and  deepwater  habitats are
given in the "Data on Individual Landfills"
report. Appendix B of that report presents
the data on the individual landfills in the
state of Connecticut.
Conclusions
  Most sanitary landfills  included  in  the
state of Connecticut are located either in
or close  to wetlands. From  this,  we
conclude  that  these facilities  have  the
potential  to  adversely affect  sensitive
ecosystems, such  as  wetlands,  either
through habitat alterations or through  the
migration  of contaminants  from sanitary
landfills. In addition, more than half of the
sanitary  landfills  in  the  state   of
 Connecticut are located either in or close    the potential for adversely affecting these
 to deepwater habitats and they also have    sensitive ecosystems.
 Palustrine
Lacustrine
 Riverine
 Estuarine
  Marine
   All
 systems
                                          Percent

 Figure 1. Proximity of 83 Connecticut sanitary landfills to wetlands.
In or within 1 mile

In or within 1/2 mile

In or within 1/4 mile
                                 30
                        17
                                                57
Lacustrine
 Riverine
Estuarine
                                             Marine
   All
 systems
         0              20
                                           Percent

 Figure 2. Proximity of 83 Connecticut sanitary landfills to deepwater habitats.
                                     0   In or within 1 mile

                                     0   In or within 1/2 mile

                                     I   In or within 1/4 mile

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                                                                                In or within 1 mile

                                                                                In or within 1/2 mile

                                                                                In or within 1/4 mile
                    Palustrine
                   Lacustrine
                    Riverine
                    Estuarine
                     Marine
                      All
                    systems
                                                           Percent

                    Figure 3. Proximity of 83 Connecticut sanitary landfills to either closest wetland or deepwater habitat.
  The EPA author, Victor W. Lambou,  (also the EPA Project
        Officer,  see below) is  with the  Environmental
        Monitoring Systems Laboratory  in  Las Vegas,  NV
        89193-3478; J.E. Moerlins and R.C. Herndon are with
        Florida State University,  Tallahassee, FL 32306; and
        R.L. Gebhard  is  with the U.S.  Fish  and  Wildlife
        Service, St. Petersburg, FL 33702
  The complete  report,  two  volumes entitled  "Proximity of
        Connecticut  Sanitary Landfills  to  Wetlands  and
        Deepwater  Habitats: Statewide  Results,"  and
        "Proximity of Connecticut Sanitary Landfills to Wetlands
        and  Deepwater  Habitats:   Data  on Individual
                                                           Landfills," (Orders No. PB 90-155 623; Cost: $15.00,  and PB
                                                                 90-155 631; Cost: $15.00  subject  to  change)  will be
                                                                 available only from:

                                                           National Technical Information Service
                                                                     5285 Port Royal Road
                                                                     Springfield, VA22161
                                                                     Telephone: 703-487-4650
                                                           The EPA Project Officer can be contacted at:
                                                                     Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory
                                                                     U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
                                                                     Las Vegas, NV 89193-3478
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Center for Environmental Research
Information
Cincinnati OH 45268
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