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I <br /> Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Report Page IV.G-7 ' <br /> Forward Inc. Landfill 2018 Expansion Project <br /> additional, productive aquifers.Groundwater within 1 mile of the site is tapped by irrigation <br /> and domestic wells, and most such wells in the vicinity are generally drilled to a depth of f <br /> several hundred feet.Many of the sedimentary formations underlying the Victor formation <br /> have productive confined aquifers. In order to develop adequate flow, most of the agricultural <br /> irrigation wells in the area are at least 500 feet deep. ' <br /> Groundwater recharge to the unconfined aquifer,both regionally and locally,is from local <br /> rainfall and stream infiltration,while the deeper, confined aquifers are recharged by rivers, ' <br /> reservoirs, and surface runoff along the western base of the Sierra Nevada.The project area is <br /> not in a General Plan-designated substantial groundwater recharge area, although some <br /> infiltration and percolation to the groundwater system is expected along Littlejohns Creek.' ' <br /> Since before the early 1960s,the San Joaquin hydrologic basin has experienced overdraft as a <br /> result of heavy pumping. In the Central San Joaquin Irrigation District,which encompasses ' <br /> Forward Landfill,water levels have dropped approximately 70 feet in the past 40 years.Beyond <br /> the trend of historical over-drafting(removing more groundwater than is naturally recharged) <br /> from the aquifer, the San Joaquin Valley's groundwater basins have the tendency for water ' <br /> levels to show seasonally variations.Seasonal fluctuations reflect the rainy and dry seasons. <br /> Rainy season infiltration raises the water table, and dry season pumping lowers the water table. <br /> Seasonal fluctuations in the project area are on the order of 5 to 10 feet due to a distinct rainy ' <br /> season and dry season.During the rainy season infiltration raises the water table and during the <br /> dry season drawdown by water well users lowers the water table.The declining water levels <br /> throughout the Stockton area have induced the eastward movement of poor-quality water from ' <br /> the delta sediments. Migration of these saline waters had already impacted the utility of <br /> groundwater as far east as Stockton at the time of a 1981 study by the U.S. Geological Survey <br /> (USGS) (SJCFCWCD, 1990).The San Joaquin County Flood-Control and Water Conservation ' <br /> District has documented a decline in water quality for the Stockton area due to a general <br /> increase in chlorides.The regional water quality in the area around Forward Landfill meets the <br /> State's Drinking Water Standard.The water is a calcium-magnesium/bicarbonate water type, ' <br /> with TDS concentrations under 500 mg/1. <br /> Groundwater Uses and Supply ' <br /> The designated beneficial use of the groundwater in the landfill area, as specified in the Basin <br /> Plan, are domestic and municipal supply, agricultural supply, industrial service supply, and <br /> industrial process supply. Groundwater wells in the area are used primarily to supply water for ' <br /> agricultural and domestic purposes. <br /> Groundwater within 1 mile of the project site is pumped by several existing irrigation and <br /> domestic wells and the most recent sampling at the domestic wells show exceedance of the <br /> drinking water standards in some wells. <br /> I <br /> 'Hydrogeological investigations at the Forward Landfill show that recharge along the course of the ' <br /> south fork of Littlejohn Creek,which crosses that property,has a significant influence on water table <br /> depth,gradient,and flow direction in the localized creek area. <br />