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The water sample is collected, labeled, and handled according to the Quality Assurance <br /> Plan Water generated during the monitoring event is disposed of accruing to regulatory <br /> accepted method pertaining to the site <br /> QUALITY ASSURANCE PLAN <br /> Procedures to provide data quality should be established and documented so that <br /> conditions adverse to quality, such as deficiencies, deviations, nonconforments, defective <br /> material, services, and/or equipment, can be promptly identified and corrected <br /> General Sample Collection and Handling Procedures <br /> Proper collection and handling are essential to ensure the quality of a sample Each <br /> sample is collected in a suitable container, preserved correctly for the intended analysis, <br /> and stored prior to analysis for no longer than the maximum allowable holding time <br /> Details on the procedures for collection and handling of samples used on this project can <br /> be found in this section <br /> Soil and Water Sample Labeling and Preservation <br /> Label information includes a unique sample identification number, fob identification <br /> number, date, and time After labeling all soil and water samples are placed in a Ziploce <br /> itype bag and placed in an ice chest cooled to approximately 4° Celsius Upon amving at <br /> Stratus' office the samples are transferred to a locked refrigerator cooled to approximately <br /> 4° Celsius Chemical preservation is controlled by the required analysis and is noted on <br /> the chain-of-custody form Trip blanks supplied by the laboratory accompany the <br /> groundwater sample containers and groundwater samples <br /> Upon recovery, the sample container is sealed to minimize the potential of volatilization <br /> and cross-contamination prior to chemical analysis Soil sampling tubes are typically <br /> closed at each end with Teflon® sheeting and plastic caps The sample is then placed in a <br /> Ziploc® type bag and sealed The sample is labeled and refrigerated at approximately 4° <br /> Celsius for delivery, under strict chain-of-custody, to the analytical laboratory <br /> Sample Identification and Cham-of-Custody Procedures <br /> Sample identification and chain-of-custody procedures document sample possession from <br /> the time of collection to ultimate disposal Each sample container submitted for analysis <br /> has a label affixed to identify the fob number, sampler, date and time of sample <br /> collection, and a sample number unique to that sample This information, in addition to a <br /> description of the sample, field measurements made, sampling methodology, names of <br /> on-site personnel, and any other pertinent field observations, is recorded on the borehole <br /> log or in the field records The samples are analyzed by a California-certified laboratory <br /> A chain-of-custody form is used to record possession of the sample from time of <br /> collection to its arrival at the laboratory When the samples are shipped, the person in <br /> custody of them relinquishes the samples by signing the chain-of-custody form and <br /> Page 2 <br />