Transcript Slide 1

BY KYRA BRENNAN
1. Introduction
2. Legislation Involved of Site Selection
3. Regulatory Requirements for Certificate of Approval:
• Design Specifications
• Buffer Area
• Environmental Assessments
4. Operations
5. Limitations & Concerns
• Video
6. Questions
•Purpose of landfills existing for health and economic
reasons recently began to include environmental awareness
•Legislative Acts passed in 1990’s to regulate waste
management
•Environmental Protection Act (EPA), Regulation 347,
232/98
• Distributes
Certificate of
Approval for
alterations,
establishment or
expansion of landfill.
Ministry of the
Environment
(MOE)
Environmental
Protection Act
(EPA)
• Landfill sites and waste
management activities are
subject to Part V, must
comply with mandatory
precautions and assessments.
Situating and approving
landfill sites regulated by EPA
and EAA (347, 232/98)
• Defines size of site, type
of waste, conditions for
design and operation .
Process refines landfill
standards if necessary.
Certificate of
Approval
• Vary depending on the size of
proposed site,
Design
municipal/privately owned
Specifications
• Applies only to landfills with
non-hazardous waste
• Allows for contaminant attenuation
Buffer Zone • Landfill owner must own it, may
contain roads, site services, building,
etc.
• Hydrogeological, surface water and
groundwater assessments
Environmental
Assessments
• Necessary to properly design site, map
water flows and leachate
The proposal must explain in detail a design that will
account for the landfill from start to finish. Specific
elements of the design include:
•The proposed site boundaries, buffer area, waste fill area and
contours, surface water control works, on-site roads and
structures, and final cover design
•The design of any liner and leachate collection system or
landfill gas control works needed for the site
•Monitoring facilities for groundwater, leachate and surface
water
•A contingency plan for leachate control
•Site closure and post-closure care requirements (MOE, 1998)
•Buffer Zone: area surrounding the landfill
•Provides pace for monitoring, maintenance and
environmental control
•Atleast 100 meters wide at all areas (Certificate of Approval
process can reduce space to 30 meters)
•Area for potential effects of landfill to be caught before
outside of buffer zone. Potential effects are:
oSurface runoff
oLitter
oVectors
oLeachate
oSubsurface migration of landfill gas
oAesthetic effects
HYDROGEOLOGICAL
Soil/Bedrock samples, measurement of
groundwater level and quality,
interpretation of groundwater flow and
contour plans identifying unstable areas.
SURFACE WATER
Includes any water within the vicinity and
any water which may receive discharge.
Assessment if site is suitable based on
extensive list of monitoring parameters and
water conditions.
GROUNDWATER
Fundamental element to plan because
costly & difficult if gone wrong and often
primary source of water supply.
Site specific designs or generic designs.
Other criteria that must be met in the design
proposal:
•Leachate disposal and contingency plans
•Surface water control
•Subsurface migration of landfill gases
•Emissions
•Designs for engineered facilities
•Noise
•Operation and maintenance procedures
•Financial assurance
•Site Preparation
•Record Keeping
•Operations Report
•Public Liaison Committee
•Burning/Scavenging
•Leachate Monitoring
•Daily/Final Cover
•Final Slopes
•Closure Report
•Annual Post-Closure Report
VIDEO
Efforts must be made to accommodate the waste,
divert more waste from landfills,
and begin the process of reducing the overall
quantity of waste generated.
Thank You
Canada. Government of Ontario. Environmental Assessment process requirements for certain waste management sites. By
Environmental Registry. Ministry of Environment, 2007.
Chesed, Mindorff. The Process for Citing and Approving a New Landfill in Ontario. Rep. Brock University, 2006.
Environmental Assessment Act. Guide to Environmental Assessment Requirements for Waste Management Projects. By
Legislative Authority. Government of Ontario, 2007.
Environmental Commissioner of Ontario. 2007/08 Annual Report - Getting to K(No)w. Rep. Speaker of Legislative Assembly,
2008.
International LTD, RIS. The Private Sector IC&I Waste Management System in Ontario. Rep. Ontario Waste Management
Association, 2005.
Lawson, Oates. Status of Disposal Capacity in Ontario and Exports to the US. Rep. Toronto: SWMS, 2006.
Ministry of the Environment. Landfill Standards: A Guideline on the Regulatory and Approval Requirements for New or
Expanding Landfilling Sites. Government of Ontario, 1998.
Unknown Author. "Landfill Sites in Northwestern Ontario: Issues and Opportunities." Review. Workshop Summary 2 Mar. 2005.
Unknown Author. "The Environmental Impacts of Ontario’s Small and Aging Landfills – Who Is Keeping Track?" ECO
Issues. Feb. 2009.
<http://www.ecoissues.ca/wiki//index.php?title=The_Environmental_Impacts_of_Ontario%E2%80%99s_Small_and_Aging_Lan
dfills>.
Willms, John. "How Planning Act Strategies Can Compensate for MOE Laissez Faire." Municipal World (1998).