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On This Page: Toxic Release Maps - Federal & Indian Lands Maps
Learn2Map Tutorial - Partner With Us

Knowledge is Power: Explore the
hazardscape of potential toxic risks
where you work, live and play

Jump to pollution maps of your state:
Alabama, Alaska, American Samoa, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Guam, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Northern Mariana, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virgin Islands, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming,

2000 Toxic Release Inventory Data Release (important note about data)

EPA released the Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) data files on May 23, 2002. The data includes some exciting new additions. Read more about Dioxin, Persistent Bioaccumulative Toxic (PBT) chemicals and other additions to TRI data for 2000.


NO MAPPING OR GIS EXPERIENCE REQUIRED!
Each map comes bundled with easy to follow instructions, state boundaries, highways, lakes, rivers, cities and and access to Arcexplorer, a free and easy to use map viewer.

One Good Reason for Knowing More About Chemical Facilities in Your Neighborhood

In Reflections on Homeland Security and American Federalism (Click here for entire report) Pietro S. Nivola, Senior Fellow of the Brookings Institute says:

Yet, the chances that a terrorist attack could turn any U.S. nuclear installation into a Chernobyl are practically nil. Concern would be better directed at hardening other sites, like commercial chemical plants. (About as many people died in 1984 when methyl isocyanate leaked from a plant in Bhopal, India, as perished in the World Trade Center.)

You can find out more about the risks chemical facilities in your neighborhood pose by clicking here and requesting a copy of the executive summary of the Risk Management Plan (RMP).

Accidental or intentional major releases of chemicals can cause instant death and injury. The threat of terrorism at a chemical facility, though very serious, is not the only threat these facilities pose. The TRI data tells us about slow regulated releases of the same chemicals over long periods of time. These chemicals often buildup in our environment and in our bodies causing chronic health problems and possibly death. The human and ecological consequences of these "monitored" releases may be just as catastrophic over time as a single release.

Consider this. The TRI accounts for only 667 of the tens of thousands of chemicals in our environment, does not account for accumulative effects, does not account for the combined effects. Yet, each year billions of pounds of just these chemicals are legally released to the environment adding upon the sum of the billions of pounds from previous years and all those chemicals that are not accounted for at all.

Other useful resources to check

Check our Worst Case Scenarios web page and our Toxic & Nuclear Risks In Your Backyard? for links for other resources that you can use to identify potential risks.

Also, the U.S. Pirg and RTK Net have each provided preliminary analysis of the 2000 TRI. Check 2000 Toxic Release Inventory data to hightlight persistent toxics, document the need for stronger environmental protections instead of Bush administration rollbacks and EPA releases national toxic pollution data: new report reveals dioxin and mercury pollution.

Ideas for using the TRI data and maps

Here are some ideas for using the TRI data and maps with your GIS program or with Arcexplorer, the free GIS, and our Learn2Map tutorial:

  • Find the largest polluters in your neighborhood and ask them what steps they are taking to reduce their pollution.
  • Do environmental justice research.
  • Publish a toxic atlas of your neighborhood, county or state.
  • Do relocation investigations.
  • Do local facility audits.
  • As a catalyst for forming a local toxic watch group.
  • Distribute printed toxic maps at local events.
  • Use as an aid in landuse planning.
  • Identify potential security-related vulnerabilities.
  • Do habitat and ecological assessment and planning.
  • Assess potential health risks.
  • Study the relationship between health effects and releases.
  • Track offsite transfers of toxics.
  • Do industrial ecology research -- waste from one facility may be "raw" material for another.
  • Discover inaccuracies in reporting and/or location.

I am sure that you can think of other ways of using the TRI maps and data to empower yourself and your community. If you do, please let me know and I will add them here.

If you put your maps online, we will add them to the growing number of web-based toxic and pollution maps linked from our Global Environmental Risk Map Network.

Using the TRI maps with a GIS program

Our TRI (read more about TRI) shapefiles work with the free ArcExplorer GIS viewer, ArcView GIS, and many other GIS and mapping programs. Includes easy to follow instructions that show you how to add streets, highways, census tracts and much more to your maps plus how to use the free ArcExplorer GIS. If you are new to GIS, see our free MapCruzin MapTutorial. Check our free GIS and free GIS data pages for more information. You may also use the data in an Excel spreadsheet.

For those new to GIS, we have created ArcExplorer projects for each of the TRI Pollution map sets. Each set includes a your-map.AEP file (for example: the Kentucky-Tennessee map includes a file named KY_TN.AEP). With a click on the AEP project file all of your layers (TRI pollution facilities, roads, cities, rivers, lakes and states) are loaded into ArcExplorer ready for you to explore. Here is a sample showing the Kentucky-Tennessee TRI pollution map when first opened in ArcExplorer.

Once your map is opened like this you can zoom-in, move around, click on features for more information, change colors, add labels and add more detailed layers such as streets, railroads, etc. for free. Full instructions for doing this and more are available to you in our free MapCruzin MapTutorial.

New additions to the TRI for 2000 include:

Each location's data includes:

More About TRI

Each year thousands of mining operations, power plants, chemical manufacturers, petroleum terminals and many other (over 23,000) facilities in the U.S. must report their toxic releases to EPA. There is about a 15 month delay between the end of the reporting year and the time that EPA releases the data to the public. Click here to go to EPA's TRI 2000 website.

Accuracy?

Once you view and explore the map you will see that there are some facilities that appear to be located incorrectly. These are the result of the facilities in question providing inaccurate locational data (longitude and latitude) to EPA and EPA not double-checking the data.

Locational data, like all other self-reported TRI data, is supposed to be accurate -- it is required by law. EPA provides a "how-to" so that facilities can locate themselves using USGS maps. GPS is another relatively easy way that facilities could employ to provide accurate data, yet many facilities do not report their locational data accurately. A small number of facilities had no locational data whatsoever. These were extracted from the map file and are included in Excel spreadsheet format with each map layer download.

But why (you should ask) are there facilities on the map that are mislocated? The bottom-line is that TRI is self-reported data and there is little enforcement done by EPA to assure that the locational information and the rest of the data reported is accurate. The larger question to ask is if something as simple as getting the locational data right is not accomplished by the facility and is not checked by EPA, what does this say about the accuracy of the balance of the information reported in the TRI data?

What can be done to improve the accuracy?

The database can be geocoded using address, city, county, state and zip to generate a correct longitude and latitude. This process usually misses many locations. At the local level citizens can "reality check" the data to determine if facilities are missing from their communities or if there are facilities on the map that don't belong. Citizens can determine locational data by using a handheld GPS or noting the location on a paper map (if you have better locational data for any facility please contact me). Really, though, it is the legal responsibility of each facility to provide data that is accurate, including locational data. Contact EPA (tri.us@epa.gov) and ask them what steps are being taken to insure that ALL the information in the TRI data is reported accurately. More information about the Toxic Release Inventory is available at http://www.epa.gov/tri/.

Lifetime Guarantee

Your purchase is guaranteed for life. If for any reason you are unhappy with your purchase or if it does not fill your needs, let me know. I'll do whatever it takes to make it right including refunding your purchase price.

Updates

Occasional updates may become available. I will send you an email in this case, advising you about the details of the update and telling you how to obtain it.

Download Now

We have prepared a free sample for you to download and try out if you haven't quite made up your mind. Click here for instructions and a link for downloading the sample TRI 2000 map of South Dakota (1.2MB).

The TRI 2000 maps are available in the groups listed below. Each group is $17 and may be downloaded immediately. Scroll down and click on the group of map layers you wish to order to download immediately.

How to Download All of the Maps

You can purchase access to all the TRI map layers on this page for $47. Click Here to pay using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics and you can download all the maps now.

If you have any trouble paying, click here.

Included With Each Layer

Along with each map layer we include EPA's documentation which provides detailed information about the various fields in the database, EPA state fact sheet(s), a spreadsheet including the records of the handful of facilities that we were unable to map because they did not provide locational data, instructions for using the map layer with ArcExplorer, a free GIS and how to obtain more map layers for free and add them to your map. We also include basic layers (highways, state boundaries, cities, rivers and lakes) with each map group. Click here for a sample README.TXT that is included with each download:

Group 1 - Click Here to purchase securely using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics.

  • Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi --
    6,323 records mapped, 9 not mapped, file size=2.2MB

  • Arkansas and Oklahoma --
    2,888 records mapped, 5 not mapped, file size=1.7MB

  • Texas --
    7,918 records mapped, 54 not mapped, file size=2.2MB


Group 2 - Click Here to purchase securely using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics.

  • Alaska, American Samoa, Guam, Hawaii, Northern Mariana, Puerto Rico and Virgin Islands --
    944 records mapped, 0 not mapped, file size=1.9MB


Group 3 - Click Here to purchase securely using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics.

  • Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah --
    2,604 records mapped, 11 not mapped, file size=1.8MB

  • California --
    4,673 records mapped, 5 not mapped, file size=1.8MB

  • Idaho, Nevada, Oregon and Washington state --
    2,964 records mapped, 2 not mapped, file size=1.8MB


Group 4 - Click Here to purchase securely using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics.

  • New England (Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont) --
    4,163 records mapped, 4 not mapped, file size=2.2MB

  • Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia --
    4,095 records mapped, 9 not mapped, file size=2.0MB

  • New Jersey and New York --
    5,149 records mapped, 9 not mapped, file size=2.0MB


Group 5 - Click Here to purchase securely using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics.

  • Florida and Georgia --
    4,651 records mapped, 15 not mapped, file size=2.0MB

  • Kentucky and Tennessee --
    4,799 records mapped, 2 not mapped, file size=1.9MB

  • North Carolina and South Carolina --
    5,052 records mapped, 3 not mapped, file size=2.0MB


Group 6 - Click Here to purchase securely using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics.

  • Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska --
    5,497 records mapped, 20 not mapped, file size=2.2MB

  • Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming --
    948 records mapped, 0 not mapped, file size=1.5MB

  • Minnesota and Wisconsin --
    4,304 records mapped, 16 not mapped, file size=1.9MB


Group 7 - Click Here to purchase securely using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics.

  • Illinois --
    4,979 records mapped, 33 not mapped, file size=1.9MB

  • Indiana --
    4,005 records mapped, 17 not mapped, file size=1.7MB

  • Michigan --
    3,654 records mapped, 1 not mapped, file size=1.7MB


Group 8 - Click Here to purchase securely using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics.

  • Ohio --
    6,524 records mapped, 12 not mapped, file size=2.1MB

  • Pennsylvania --
    5,160 records mapped, 3 not mapped, file size=1.9MB

If you have any trouble paying, click here.

Save Money - Dowload All the Maps

You can purchase access to all the TRI map layers on this page for $47. Click Here to pay using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics and you can download all the maps now.

If you prefer, you can also send us a check or money order. Please click here and let us know that you will be sending payment and we will send you mailing instructions.

Data Source and Geographical Locations

We derived the geographical locations of these facilities using the longitude and latitude that are included in this public data release of the TRI data. The EPA public release also includes such information as amount and name of chemical released, amount of chemical stored on site and other useful information. We have provided the complete data along with the maps. To download the public data yourself (without our maps of course), go to http://www.epa.gov/tri/tridata/tri00/data/index.htm.


Federal & Indian Lands Arcview GIS Shapefiles

Coverage: All U.S. including Hawaii and Alaska.

Recently updated Winter 2004 maps

These GIS shapefiles work with the free ArcExplorer GIS viewer, ArcView GIS, and many other GIS and mapping programs. Each layer includes easy to follow instructions that show you how to add streets, highways, census information and much more to your maps for free. We have included national level base maps with each map archive listed below. Also, check our free GIS and free GIS data pages for more information.

No Experience Required

The maps come with instructions for downloading ArcExplorer, a free GIS map viewer. We provide step-by-step instructions to that you can easily learn to use and view the maps. For more help, take advantage of our free MapCruzin MapTutorial.

Immediate Download

Each map layer costs $17. Click next to the map you wish and you will have immediate access to it using our secure merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics.

Note that you can save money and gain immediate access to all 7 of our Federal & Indian Lands maps for only $37. Click here for more information.

Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) (details)
Download: Click Here.

Burea of Land Management (BLM) (details)
Download: Click Here.

Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) (details)
Download: Click Here.

Department of Defense (DOD) (details)
Download: Click Here.

Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS) (details)
Download: Click Here.

Forest Service (FS) (details)
Download: Click Here.

National Park Service (NPS) (details)
Download: Click Here.

Other Federal Lands (details)
This map is included free with your purchase of any of the above maps.

Get all of the maps:

All of the above maps for $37
Download:
Click Here.

If you have any trouble paying, click here.

Additional Map Layers Included

Each of the above map archives also includes the following national base map layers:

  • Cities
  • Roads
  • Rivers
  • States
  • Water Bodies

And each map archive includes complete instructions for downloading and adding free highly detailed additional base map layers to your mapping project.

Lifetime Guarantee

Your purchase is guaranteed for life. If for any reason you are unhappy with your purchase or if it does not fill your needs, let me know. I'll do whatever it takes to make it right including refunding your purchase price.

If you prefer, you can also send us a check or money order. Please click here and let us know that you will be sending payment and we will send you mailing instructions.

Theme Descriptions:

Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) - 542 polygons - Download Now

  • Indian Reservations

Burea of Land Management (BLM) - 21,044 polygons - Download Now

  • Forest Reserves
  • National Conservation Areas
  • National Monuments
  • National Recreation areas
  • Public Domain Lands
  • Wilderness
  • Wilderness Study Areas
  • Other BLM

Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) - 545 polygons - Download Now

  • Bureau of Reclamation

Department of Defense (DOD) - 897 polygons - Download Now

  • Air force
  • Army
  • Army Corps of Engineers
  • Department of Defense
  • Marine Corps
  • Navy

Forest Service (FS) - 2,384 polygons - Download Now

  • National Forests
  • National Grasslands
  • National Monuments
  • National Recreation Areas
  • National Scenic Areas
  • Purchase Unit Blocks
  • Wilderness
  • Wilderness Study Areas

Fish & Wildlife Service (FS) - 1,726 polygons - Download Now

  • National Fish Hatchery
  • National Wildlife Refuge
  • Waterfowl Production Area
  • Wilderness
  • Wilderness Study Area
  • Wildlife Management Area

National Park Service (NPS) - 897 polygons - Download Now

  • National Battlefields
  • National Battlefield Park
  • National Capital Parks
  • National Historic Parks
  • National Historic Sites
  • National Lakeshores
  • National Mall
  • National Memorials
  • National Military Parks
  • National Monuments
  • National Parks
  • National Parkways
  • National Preserves
  • National Recreation Areas
  • National Reserves
  • National Rivers
  • National Seashores
  • National Wild and Scenic Rivers
  • Wilderness
  • Wilderness Study Areas

Other Federal Lands - 87 polygons - Included free with any of the above maps

  • Agricultural Research Service ARS
  • Bureau of Prisons DOJ
  • Central Intelligence Agency CIA
  • Department of Energy DOE
  • Department of Transportation DOT
  • General Services Administration GSA
  • Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority
  • National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA
  • Tennessee Valley Authority TVA
  • U.S. Coast Guard DOT
  • United States Department of Agriculture USDA

Map Creation

Each map layer was created by extracting federal land polygon features from the individual 1:2,000,000-scale State boundary Digital Line Graph (DLG) files produced by the U.S. Geological Survey. These files were then appended into a single coverage. Individual layers (above) were extracted from this coverage. (Source: USGS).

About Quality, Accuracy and Suitability

This data may come from a variety of U.S. government and self-reporting private sources. While we try to assure the accuracy of this material, we cannot promise that it is absolutely accurate. We do promise that using the map layer will be fun, entertaining or educational. Beyond this, we make no guarantee as to its suitability for any purpose. We assume no liability or responsibility for errors or inaccuracies. Please understand that you use these map layers and data at your own risk.


Learn2Map GIS Tutorial & Atlas

Are you new to GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and mapping? Would you like to learn what it is all about and learn how to create your own maps? Would you like to begin a new professional career? Our online Learn2MapTM Tutorial and Atlas is designed to give you a quick-start introduction to the basics of GIS.

In just a few minutes you can begin to learn how to create sophisticated maps. The easy-to-follow step-by-step distance learning online tutorial is based on free resources. There is nothing else to purchase. All you need to begin mapping today is the Learn2MapTM Tutorial and Atlas.


What You Will Learn

Our easy-to-follow step-by-step Learn2MapTM Tutorial and Atlas will show you how to:

  • Download free map layers
  • Create a GIS project with ArcExplorer (free)
  • Open and view the layers of GIS project
  • Navigate and query your maps
  • Change colors and attributes
  • Add additional layers and create a map project (layers include streets, highways, cities, census tracts and data, school districts, rivers and streams and much more)
  • Distribute your maps to others
  • Gain access to free maps and resources.
  • Find free GIS and GPS tutorials.
  • And more

Please note that the Learn2MapTM Tutorial and Atlas is based on free resources. You will not pay anything additional to learn how to use the program or for any maps.


Why Learn GIS?

Most of us use maps frequently. We usually use them to figure out how to get from here to there. Without simple street maps this relatively easy task would be much more difficult. We would have to read instructions, line-by-line, and sort of imagine the geography described in the instructions and superimpose that with what we see as we progress to our destination. We have probably all done this. Maps make this task so much easier. But maps are more than a navigational aid. They can show us relationships that we could never see by pouring through pages of data. Maps can provide answers to questions not found elsewhere and make you ask questions you never would have thought to ask. Maps bring raw and often boring data to life.

There are applications for maps and a need for mapmakers in nearly all fields. Some common uses for maps and GIS are to target sales and marketing areas; redraw congressional districts; find the best route between point a and point b; determine the race, ethnicity and income of folks living certain distances from a facility that pollutes the air; locate clusters of families with certain diseases. Others include environmental planning, traffic analysis and much more.

In our work we use GIS to map toxic facilities, air pollution and the like. I got my start doing environmental justice research as an undergraduate at UCSC. I "picked up" my GIS and data skills as I went along as I had no professional training in cartography or GIS and it was not supported in my department. Since then I have done more research and more mapping for on- and offline projects. I have provided more background below if you are interested.

I am sure that you will have many more ideas for maps. Maybe some that have never been applied before. It really is a limitless field and there is yet so much to do. Once you get the tutorial and work through it, drop me a line and let me know how you are doing. If you have a specific project in mind, I would love to hear about it. Once it's done you may want to list it on our Global Environmental Risk Atlas website. You are more than welcome to do so. Please read on to find out what the tutorial includes and what you will learn.


What You Will Get

Our Learn2MapTM Tutorial and Atlas provides access to a comprehensive library of maps. The library includes an easy-to-use mapping program (ESRI's free ArcExplorer®) and a full suite of map layers. No previous GIS or mapping experience is required! Layers for the entire U.S. include:

  • States
  • Counties
  • Highways
  • Railroads
  • Airports
  • And many more

We also include sample layers for an individual county (full instructions are provided that show you how to obtain these layers for any county for free). These include:

  • Census tracts and blocks
  • School districts
  • Congressional districts
  • Streets
  • Streams and rivers
  • Water bodies
  • And more


High Demand

GIS and mapping professionals are in high demand and are very well paid. We'll get you started. Learn from our experience now! (Click here to see a few of the projects that we have done with GIS).


A Little Background

Offering this map tutorial may seem like a simple thing, but for me it is very gratifying. It is one of the main reasons I went online with mapcruzin.com in 1995 (I think I actually got around to registering the domain name in 1996).

MapCruzin began very simply with interactive toxic maps of my county - the Santa Cruz TRI. Folks could zoom in, pan around and click on facilities and get information about current and past Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) releases and transfers. These were the first interactive U.S.- based toxic maps on the net (I was inspired by FOE UK who was the first in the world!).

My need to do this grew out of my frustration as a researcher. I found that very few people had a clue about TRI or what it could tell them about the risks posed by industrial facilities in their communities. Outreach, at the time at least, really "sucked." I hoped that my project would encourage others. It has, but not as much as I had hoped.

One "spin-off" was my being hired by Environmental Defense to do the first 2 years of the mapping interface for their Chemical Scorecard. The scorecard mapping project was based on our Santa Cruz TRI and expanded to cover the entire nation. In fact, the demo used to raise the funding for scorecard was a slightly modified version of our Santa Cruz TRI. This was all great, but it still didn't "get it" for me. Showing folks maps of toxic facilities on the web was one thing, helping them learn how to do it themselves was something else.

I began by offering free map layers. Of course, if someone didn't already have a GIS program and the expertise, the map layers wouldn't do them much good.

A key piece fell into place awhile ago. ESRI started giving away their free GIS viewer, ArcExplorer®. It is a great tool to use to begin learning GIS and I have based my tutorial and atlas on it.

This does not mean that you then have to get their ArcView® program to do 'real' GIS. In most cases, you'll get quite a ways with ArcExplorer® and if you need to move up, there are alternatives. (In my work, I've always used Maptitude because it's faster, cheaper and has more free data than all the rest). But then again, ArcView®, though expensive is often provided to nonprofits free of charge. You will have to weigh the advantages and disadvantages to determine what is best for you.

This tutorial won't help you get maps on the web, but it will help you to map toxics, do environmental justice mapping and much more if you take the time to go through the tutorial and play with the program. (Be sure to download the ArcExplorer® documentation and read it thoroughly).


Instant Access

The cost for the Learn2Map Tutorial and Atlas is $37. click here for immediate access using our merchant account provider, ClickBank/Keynetics.

If you have any trouble paying, click here.


Availability

Our Learn2MapTM Tutorial and Atlas (ISBN 0-9713214-6-9, Copyright © 2003) is not available in stores. It is only available here. It is offered as an online e-tutorial because resources, including links to additional tutorials (GIS, GPS, etc.) and free maps and mapping programs, are updated frequently.


Free GIS Tutorial

We also have a free GIS tutorial available. Over the last year many thousands of folks have made use of it. I truly hope that this will be a catalyst of sorts for more activist oriented mapping in the future. I would really appreciate hearing how the tutorial went for you. You can use this convenient form to send me any comments, questions, projects you are doing or contemplating -- anything at all. I look forward to hearing from you. Click here to access the free tutorial.


About Quality, Accuracy and Suitability

This data may come from a variety of U.S. government and self-reporting private sources. While we try to assure the accuracy of this material, we cannot promise that it is absolutely accurate. We do promise that using the map layer will be fun, entertaining or educational. Beyond this, we make no guarantee as to its suitability for any purpose. We assume no liability or responsibility for errors or inaccuracies. Please understand that you use these map layers and data at your own risk.


Affiliates

Our partners earn a 50% commission on any sales they refer to us. It is quick and easy to setup. All you need is a website and/or an email account. Click here to learn more.

Best Regards,


Michael R. Meuser

Clary-Meuser Research Network is
an independent firm specializing in
the publication of educational and
research resources.

Email: mike@mapcruzin.com
FAX: (707) 442-6326

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