Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 3, September 23, 2024
The siting of all new sanitary, CDD and industrial
landfills shall be governed by the standards set forth in this section.
A. Floodplains. No new landfill shall be
sited in a 100-year floodplain.
B.
Stable areas. New landfills shall be sited in geologically stable areas where
adequate foundation support for the structural components of the landfill
exists. At a minimum, factors to be considered when determining stable areas
shall include:
1. Onsite or local soil
conditions that may result in differential settling and subsequent failure of
structural components or containment structures; and
2. Onsite or local geological or manmade
features or events that may result in sudden or nonsudden events and subsequent
failure of structural components or containment structures.
C. Restrictions (distances are to
be measured in the horizontal plane).
1. No
disposal unit or leachate storage unit shall be closer than:
a. 200 feet from any residence, school,
daycare center, hospital, nursing home, or recreational park area in existence
at the time of application;
b. 100
feet from any perennial stream or river;
c. 50 feet from the facility
boundary;
d. 500 feet from any
well, spring, or other groundwater source of drinking water in existence at the
time of application; and
e. 1,000
feet from the nearest edge of the right-of-way of any interstate or primary
highway or 500 feet from the nearest edge of the right-of-way of any other
highway or city street, except the following:
(1) Units that are screened by natural
objects, plantings, fences, or other means so as to minimize the visibility
from the main-traveled way of the highway or city street, or otherwise removed
from sight;
(2) Units that are
located in areas that are zoned for industrial use under authority of state law
or in unzoned industrial areas as determined by the Commonwealth Transportation
Board; or
(3) Units that are not
visible from the main-traveled way of the highway or city street.
2. No new landfill
shall be constructed in any park or recreational area, wildlife management
area, or area designated by the federal or state agency as the critical habitat
of any endangered species.
3.
Sanitary landfills.
a. No new sanitary
landfill area shall be constructed:
(1) Within
a one mile upgradient of any existing surface or groundwater public water
supply intake or reservoir;
(2)
Within three miles upgradient of any existing surface or groundwater public
water supply intake or reservoir except as allowed under the provisions of
§ 10.1-1408.4B 3 of the Code of Virginia;
(3) In any area vulnerable to flooding
resulting from dam failures;
(4)
Over a sinkhole or less than 100 feet over a solution cavern associated with
karst topography; or
(5) Over a
fault that has had displacement in Holocene time.
b. No new sanitary landfill or expansion of
an existing sanitary landfill shall be constructed:
(1) Within 200 feet of a fault that has had
displacement in Holocene time unless the owner or operator demonstrates to the
director that an alternative setback distance of less than 200 feet will
prevent damage to the structural integrity of the facility and will be
protective of human health and the environment; or
(2) Within seismic impact zones, unless the
owner or operator demonstrates to the director that all containment structures,
including liners, leachate collection systems, and surface water control
systems, are designed to resist the maximum horizontal acceleration in
lithified earth material for the site.
D. Groundwater.
1. No new facility shall be located in areas
where groundwater monitoring cannot be conducted in accordance with
9VAC20-81-250 unless this
requirement is suspended by the director pursuant to subdivision A 1 c of that
section. Factors to be considered in determining whether or not a site can be
monitored shall include:
a. Ability to
characterize the direction of groundwater flow within the uppermost
aquifer;
b. Ability to characterize
and define any releases from the landfill so as to determine what corrective
actions are necessary; and
c.
Ability to perform corrective action as necessary;
E. Wetlands.
1. Sanitary landfills.
a. New sanitary landfills and expansions of
existing landfills, other than those impacting less than 2.0 acres of nontidal
wetlands, shall not be constructed in any tidal wetland or nontidal wetland
contiguous to any surface water body.
b. After July 1, 1999, construction at
existing permitted facilities (allowed under the provisions of §
10.1-1408.5) only will be allowed with approvals under the provisions of
9VAC25-210. In addition, the demonstration noted in subdivision 3 of this
subsection must be made by the owner or operator to the director.
2. New CDD or industrial landfills
and expansions of existing CDD or industrial landfills shall not be located in
wetlands, unless the owner or operator can make the demonstration noted in
subdivision 3 of this subsection.
3. Demonstration.
a. Where applicable under § 404 of the
Clean Water Act or § 62.1-44.15:5 of the Code of Virginia, the presumption
is clearly rebutted that a practicable alternative to the proposed landfill
exists that does not involve wetlands;
b. The construction and operation of the
landfill will not:
(1) Cause or contribute to
violations of any applicable water quality standard;
(2) Violate any applicable toxic effluent
standard or prohibition under § 307 of the Clean Water Act;
(3) Jeopardize the continued existence of
endangered or threatened species or result in the destruction or adverse
modification of a critical habitat, protected under the Endangered Species Act
of 1973; and
(4) Violate any
requirement under the Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act of 1972
for the protection of a marine sanctuary;
c. The landfill will not cause or contribute
to significant degradation of wetlands. The owner or operator shall demonstrate
the integrity of the landfill and its ability to protect ecological resources
by addressing the following factors:
(1)
Erosion, stability, and migration potential of native wetland soils, muds, and
deposits used to support the landfill;
(2) Erosion, stability, and migration
potential of dredged and fill materials used to support the landfill;
(3) The volume and chemical nature of the
waste managed in the landfill;
(4)
Impacts on fish, wildlife, and other aquatic resources and their habitat from
release of the solid waste;
(5) The
potential effects of catastrophic release of waste to the wetland and the
resulting impacts on the environment; and
(6) Any additional factors, as necessary, to
demonstrate that ecological resources in the wetland are protected;
d. To the extent required under
§ 404 of the Clean Water Act or applicable Virginia wetlands laws, steps
have been taken to attempt to achieve no net loss of wetlands (as defined by
acreage and function) by first avoiding impacts to wetlands to the maximum
extent practicable as required by subdivision 3 of this subsection, then
minimizing unavoidable impacts to the maximum extent practicable, and finally
offsetting remaining unavoidable wetland impacts through all appropriate and
practicable compensatory mitigation actions (e.g., restoration of existing
degraded wetlands or creation of manmade wetlands); and
e. Information is available to enable the
department to make a reasonable determination with respect to these
demonstrations.
F. Limiting site characteristics.
1. Certain site characteristics may prevent
approval or require substantial limitations on the site use or require
incorporation of sound engineering controls. Such site characteristics shall be
identified and an explanation of precautions necessary to assure compliance
with the provisions of this chapter shall be provided. Examples include, but
are not limited to:
a. Excessive slopes
(greater than 33%);
b. Lack of
readily available cover materials on site, or lack of a firm commitment for
adequate cover material from a borrow site;
c. Springs, seeps, or other groundwater
intrusion into the site;
d. The
presence of gas, water, sewage, or electrical or other transmission lines under
the site; or
e. The prior existence
on the site of an open dump, unpermitted landfill, lagoon, or similar unit,
even if such a unit is closed, will be considered a defect in the site unless
the proposed unit can be isolated from the defect by the nature of the unit
design and the groundwater for the proposed unit can be effectively
monitored.
G.
Specific site conditions may be considered in approving an exemption of a site
from the following:
1. The limiting site
characteristics in subsection F of this section for all landfills;
and
2. The groundwater monitoring
in subsection D of this section for CDD and industrial landfills.
H. Acceptable landfill sites shall
allow for adequate area and terrain for management of leachate.
I. Airport safety.
1. Owners or operators of all sanitary
landfills that are located within 10,000 feet of any airport runway end used by
turbojet aircraft or within 5,000 feet of any airport runway end used by only
piston-type aircraft shall demonstrate that the units are designed and operated
so that the landfill does not pose a bird hazard to aircraft.
2. Owners or operators proposing to site new
sanitary landfill and expansions of an existing landfill within a five-mile
radius of any airport runway end used by turbojet or piston-type aircraft shall
notify the affected airport and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).
Owners and operators should also be aware that 49 USC § 44718(d),
restricts the establishment of landfills within six miles of public airports
under certain conditions. Provisions for exemptions from this law also
exist.
J. For CDD
landfills located in strip mine pits, all coal seams and coal outcrops shall be
isolated from solid waste materials by a minimum of five feet of natural or
compacted soils with a hydraulic conductivity equal to or less than
1x10-7 cm/sec.
Statutory Authority
§ 10.1-1402 of the Code of Virginia; 42 USC §
6941 et seq.; 40 CFR Part 258.