
CCEJ Celebrates Closing of Hartford Landfill
CCEJ is declaring its newest victory with the closing of the CRRA landfill in
the North Meadows section of Hartford, CT. The landfill, which closed the last day of 2008,
had been accepting garbage and waste from 77 towns in 3 states. Gases and odors the landfill emits
have contributed to illness in nearby residents. The site was also the
dumping ground for highly toxic ash from Hartford's trash-to-energy plants, indirectly supporting
those facilities' dangerous use of incineration. The landfill's closure is the first step to remedy an
environmental injustice for city residents. CCEJ had battled to have the landfill close for over 10 years.
Below is the news story about the landfill closing which appeared in the Hartford Courant on
December 31, 2008.
Hartford Landfill Reaches Its Last Day
By DAVID FUNKHOUSER
| The Hartford Courant
December 31, 2008
The view from the top of the dump that towers over
Hartford's North Meadows was spectacular Tuesday, aside from the cold
northwest gale blowing up sand, plastic bags and paper trash, and the
occasional loud whump of a propane cannon used to scare off the birds.
A line of hills stretched to the northeast. The light towers at Rentschler
Field peeked over the trees across the
Connecticut River. Traffic snaked
south along I-91 into the gleaming Hartford skyline.
In a few years, it might be a more pleasant experience.
The landfill closes today, and the Connecticut Resources Recovery
Authority, which began leasing the dump from the city in 1982, will take
in its last truckloads of trash.
The 138-foot-high hill contains nearly 10 million cubic yards of
municipal waste from CRRA's 70 member towns, and ash from the agency's
trash-burning power plant in the South Meadows.
The CRRA already has covered some of the 96-acre site with an impermeable
cap of thick plastic layered with sand and soil, to be topped with grass.
The whole mound should be covered for good by 2011, an effort meant to
keep pollutants from escaping the site.
After that, what the city does with the land is up for discussion.
"It's like the ugly duckling turning into a swan," said Sarah Barr, the
city's communications director. Future uses will likely be passive
recreation, such as hiking trails and bird-watching, she said.
Some have suggested placing solar panels on the site to generate
electricity.
"I think anything that is green, anything that is cost-effective and
anything that is going to enhance it for the residents of Hartford and
visitors to the city" would be good, Barr said.
On Tuesday, CRRA senior engineer David Bodendorf stood atop the landfill,
amid stacks of galvanized pipe, and explained how the cap works.
A pair of bulldozers pushed blowing piles of trash as a flock of starlings
soared around hummocks of dirt. Large flocks of crows and other birds have
been a problem for the site's neighbors. A propane cannon randomly booms
to shoo them away.
Gas pipes poke up here and there. A facility at the base of the landfill
pumps enough methane to generate electricity for 1,500 to 2,000 homes.
The methane may increase as the hill is capped, but within a few years
it's likely to decline to the point where it's no longer feasible to use
it to generate electricity. Bodendorf said the gas would then have to be
burned off.
A system of culverts and swales directs water off the hill and into a
sewer system. Wells around the facility monitor groundwater quality.
The CRRA expects to spend about $27 million to finish the cap and another
$17 million to monitor and maintain the site over the next 30 years.
"We're very happy that the landfill is finally closing," said Mark
Mitchell, director of the Connecticut Coalition for Environmental Justice.
"Some of the old-timers remember when it used to be a depression in the
ground; now it's grown into a mountain."
Mitchell's group has been trying to get CRRA to close the landfill for
more than 13 years. For now, the closing will mean less dust and odors,
and fewer large trucks rumbling through the area. He said conditions at
the landfill "have significantly improved" in recent years.
But his group is concerned the site will need monitoring for a much longer
time, and he said nearby residents are worried about the lingering health
effects of landfill gases.
As of Thursday, municipal trash that can't be burned will be trucked to a
private landfill in Chicopee, Mass. Ash residue from the South Meadows
plant will be sent to a private landfill in Putnam.
CRRA is looking at a location in Franklin for a possible new ash landfill
and expects to complete a study of the site in 2009.
Connecticut Coalition for Environmental Justice
P.O. Box 2022, 10 Jefferson St, Hartford, CT 06145-2022
Ph: 860-548-1133 Fax:860-548-9197
email: ccej@environmental-justice.org www.environmental-justice.org