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In September 2000, a sensitive receptor survey was conducted for the site The drainage ditch and <br /> island drainage channel are the only potential receptors within a 1,000-foot radius of the site <br /> Ms Margaret Lagono of San Joaquin County EHD referred the site to the CVRWQCB for oversight <br /> by letter to Mr Marty Hartzell of CVRWQCB, dated 05 January 2001 According to Ms Lagono <br /> the action was taken because of their determination that the source of the MTBE contamination was <br /> the AST system and not the former UST system In an internal memo dated 29 March 2001, the <br /> CVRWQCB concurred with the EHD decision and transferred the site to the CVRWQCB Site <br /> Cleanup Section for further oversight <br /> On 02 April 2001, the CVRWQCB issued a letter stating that no further action is required for the <br /> former UST system at the site <br /> By letter dated 05 June 2001,Ms Wendy Cohen of CVRWQCB finalized Monitoring and Reporting <br /> Program (MRP)No 5-01-0535 and approved Additional Ground Water Investigation Work Plan, <br /> dated 07 May 2001, prepared by Condor The MRP describes the ground water monitoring and <br /> reporting requirements for the site The work plan was prepared to further investigate the lateral and <br /> vertical extent of Impacted ground water Ms Cohen also agreed with Condor's recommendation <br /> to abandon well MW-1, since it is no longer a necessary monitoring point for the MTBE plume <br /> associated with the AST system at the site <br /> On 27 and 28 December 2001 and on 18 and 21 January 2002,AGE advanced ten soil borings at the <br /> site to assess the lateral and vertical extent of MTBE-impacted ground water Soil probe borings B 1 <br /> through B 10 were advanced vertically to depths ranging from 20 feet bsg to 50 feet bsg Grab ground <br /> water samples were collected from every probe boring, with the exception of B5 <br /> A total of four soil samples were submitted for laboratory analysis,thel 5-and 20-foot samples from <br /> boring B5, also located near the former UST area,and the 15- and 25-foot samples from boring B7 <br /> TPH-g was detected in the soil samples collected from boring B7 at concentrations of 2,100 <br /> (milligrams per kilogram) mg/kg and 0 80 mg/kg BTEX compounds were detected in the 15-foot <br /> soil sample collected from borings 137 at concentrations of 22 mg/kg benzene, 130 mg/kg toluene, <br /> 40 mg/kg ethylbenzene and 190 mg/kg total xylenes Toluene was detected in the 25-foot soil sample <br /> collected from boring B7 at a concentration of 0 03 mg/kg TPH-g and BTEX compounds were not <br /> detected at or above laboratory reporting limits in the soil samples collected from boring 135 No <br /> other analytes were not detected at or above laboratory reporting limits in the soil samples <br /> TPH-g was detected in the ground water sample collected from borings B 1,B3,B4,B6,B7,138,B9 <br /> and B-10 at concentrations ranging from i 10 micrograms per liter{µg/1)to 23,000µg/1 One or more <br /> BTEX compounds were detected in the samples collected from borings B3, B4, 136 and B7 at <br /> concentrations as high as 84µg/1 benzene,200 µg11 toluene,34 µg/1 ethylbenzene and 160µg/1 total <br /> xylenes(B7-30)MTBE was detected by EPA Method 8260B in the samples collected from bonngs <br /> B 1,B4,B6,137,B8 and B9 at concentrations ranging from 7 0 µg/l(B7-30)to 20,000 µg/l(139-15) <br /> No other analytes were detected at or above laboratory reporting limits in the ground water samples <br /> Advanced GeoEnvironmental,Inc <br />