The Official Website of the Office of Geographic and Environmental Information (MassGIS)
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Surface Water Supply Protection Areas (ZONE A, B, C) - December 2007
OVERVIEW
All
active and inactive surface water supplies have zones delineated, but
some may be covered by other legislation. Protection zones for surface
water supplies managed by the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority
(MWRA) are included for reference but are not covered by 310 CMR 22.00.
Watershed extents for all surface water supplies including active,
inactive, emergency, sources outside of Massachusetts, watersheds that
extend into other states and watersheds of sources from other states
that extend into Massachusetts are included in the datalayer SWP Watersheds. Surface water intakes on Class B Rivers are not included in either datalayer. The reservoir features were taken from the DEP Wetlands 1:12,000
datalayer and removed from the Zone A and B features and added as a
separate feature. For MassDEP's regulatory wording of these zones
please see Water Supply Protection Area Definitions. This layer, named SWP_ZONES_POLY, replaces the now discontinued MassDEP ZONEA_POLY, ZONEB_POLY and ZONEC_POLY layers. Those areas that contribute to public surface water supplies were originally taken from the USGS Drainage Sub Basins datalayer and overlaid with the 1:25,000 Hydrography datalayer to identify reservoirs and tributary streams. The reservoirs were extracted and buffered to produce Zone B’s, reservoirs and tributaries were extracted and buffered to produce Zone A’s, and sub basins were extracted to create Zone C’s. Starting in 2003, the DEP GIS Program began using the elevation control points and breaklines from the 1:5,000 Digital Orthophoto Project to create a digital elevation model of a surface water supply watershed, and using the ArcHydro Toolset developed by ESRI and the University of Texas GIS Water Resources Consortium delineated watersheds digitally.. These basins were then field checked by MassDEP Drinking Water Program staff and edits made when necessary. Additional streams were extracted from the DEP Wetlands 1:12,000 datalayer, added to the USGS 1:25,000 Hydrography datalayer and buffered to create extended Zone A’s. This work is ongoing and is about 35% complete, with watersheds prioritized by perceived accuracy or if threats to the watershed are identified, with work now progressing in Essex County. Please refer to the delineation type and date fields to see which watersheds have been processed. In addition to this in 2007 the reservoir polygons were extracted from the DEP Wetlands 1:12000 datalayer and used to modify the Zone A and B buffers, and were added to the USGS 1:25000 Hydrography datalayer to allow it to accurately align with the buffer zones. While many of the watersheds are based on USGS Drainage Sub Basins, no attempt has been made to align the existing sub basins with the terrain delineated watersheds and zones, including errors in major basin divides. The attributes relating to water supply zones in the existing USGS Drainage Sub Basins have been removed.ATTRIBUTES Protection zones are unique and complete for each source and can be selected by using the item SOURCE_ID. Sources that are contained within or overlap the watersheds of other sources will have part of their Zone C removed when it coincides with the Zone A or B of the upstream source, and some sources may have no Zone C because the watershed is entirely Zone A or B. Some sources may have no reservoir because there is no impoundment or the impoundment is too small to be mapped. Discontinuous Zone C features have been combined into a single multipart polygon feature. Summary attribute information for the Zones is contained in the SWP Watersheds datalayer, and detailed information about the source is contained in the Public Water Supplies datalayer. SPECIAL NOTES FOR ArcGIS
USERS Since all of the features are contained in a single datalayer and the features contain overlapping areas, the use of the Symbol Levels feature under the advanced options dialog in the symbol editor window will ensure that the zones draw in the correct order. The preferred order is: Zone C, Zone B, Zone A, Reservoir. To do this open the Layer Properties window, choose Symbology Tab, select Categories > Unique values and use the SWPZONES attribute, symbolize the features in the preferred order, the select the Advanced > Symbol Levels tool in the lower right, order the features in the preferred order and check the box next to Draw this layer using the symbol levels specified below. MAINTENANCE
Last Updated 3/3/2008 |
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