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Battista, Janet R.; Connelly, Johnston P. / VOC contamination at selected Wisconsin landfills: sampling results and policy implications
(1989)
Conclusions, p. 18
Page 18
V. CONCLUSIONS
There has been increasing interest across the country in recent
years in sampling for VOCs at solid waste landfills. The Bureau of
Solid and Hazardous Waste Management (BSHWM) began a study in 1985
to determine whether the state should start sampling for VOCs on a
routine basis at solid waste landfills. From the study reported
here, and from the previous study by Friedman (1988) we obtained
VOC sampling results for a total of 51 Wisconsin solid waste
landfills, and contacted 48 states and two Canadian provinces for
information on what type of sampling they were requiring.
Results from these studies indicate the following:
A. Landfills with natural attenuation designs
are more likely to have VOC contaminated groundwater
than those designed with containment and leachate
collection.
B. Landfills taking municipal solid waste are more
likely to have VOC contamination than
those taking industrial solid waste.
NOTE: The industrial sites we reviewed were primarily
papermill sludge landfills, these being the most
common industrial solid waste sites in Wisconsin.
Industrial solid waste in other states may have
substantially different chemical composition.
C. Landfills with waste volumes of less than 50,000
cubic yards are less likely to have VOC
contamination than those with larger volumes.
D. VOC monitoring in other states and
provinces ranges from no sampling requirements to
quarterly sampling required at regulated
landfill sites.
E. Inorganic parameters are useful in predicting VOC
contamination.
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