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r� <br /> Report:Groundwater-quality Monitoring—January 20,2003: 7500 West Eleventh Street, Tracy, CA. Page 2 <br /> tsr <br /> 'fi other vehicles from circa 1930 until 1998. Over that period, the station was owned and <br /> operated by a number of entities. The property is also the site of a restaurant and a <br /> } disused public truck scale. The locations of the fueling station infrastructure, the <br /> restaurant, and the truck scale are shown on Figure 2. <br /> Mr. Carl B. Navarra and Mrs. Annamae F. Navarra, et ux (the Navarras) purchased the <br /> property on October 31, 1979 from Ms. Meridall Sue Tiago, the widow of Joseph L. <br /> Tiago, Jr. In 1980, Jack Anastasio and Jim Meservy leased the property. For the <br /> following two years it was leased from the Navarras by Charles L. Profito (d.b.a. C & M <br /> Truck Service). Jeri Fisher (d.b.a. Tracy Auto/Truck Plaza) leased the property from <br /> January 1, 1983 until January 31, 1992. Starting on February 15, 1992, the property was <br /> 4:= leased by Mei Bokides Petroleum, Inc. (Bokides), and was subleased to Mr. Jodha Singh <br /> Gill and Mrs. Tirath Kaur Gill, et ux (the Gills) who operated the Olympian Service <br /> Station on the site. That lease and sublease were relinquished by Bokides and the Gills, <br /> ' respectively, in late 1998, and the Olympian station ceased operation. No fuel dispensing <br /> or service station operations have been conducted on the site since that time (The San <br /> Joaquin Company Inc. 2001 d). <br /> F-a <br /> The restaurant on the property remains in operation and is leased from the Navarras by <br /> Able Manzilla Mendoza and Guadeloupe Contrecias, et ux, (the Mendozas) who do <br /> business as the Casa Mendoza restaurant. In 2000, the Mendozas leased the rest of the <br /> site and plan to expand their business on the property. <br /> i On December 9, 1998, eight underground fuel storage tanks and 6,000 linear feet of <br /> associated piping were removed from the property under the permit and oversight of the <br /> SJCEHD (Dietz Irrigation 1999a). The former locations of the fuel tanks are shown on <br /> Figure 2. <br /> When the tanks were removed, it was found that fuel hydrocarbons had leaked from <br /> underground piping beneath the fuel pump islands of the former fueling station. The <br /> former locations of the fuel pump islands are also shown on Figure 2. At the same time <br /> that the tanks were removed from the site, soil heavily affected by fuel hydrocarbons was <br /> excavated from beneath the pump island area and 521.25 tons of that material were <br /> ` disposed off-site at a permitted facility. In addition, some 2,000 gallons of floating <br /> product and affected groundwater were removed from the subsurface by pumping from a <br /> tank pit into a vacuum truck, which was used to transport it to a permitted recycling <br /> 1 facility(Dietz Irrigation 1999a). <br /> An initial phase of site characterization work was completed in May 2000. It included the <br /> installation of seven groundwater-quality monitoring wells (Nos. MW-1 through MW-7) <br /> at the locations shown on figure 2. An extended phase of site characterization was <br /> r <br /> initiated on March 25, 2002; it included the installation of an additional eight <br /> groundwater-quality monitoring wells, numbered MW-3A, MW-313, MW-8 through <br /> MW-12, and MW-12A. It was completed on April 11, 2002, with a round of groundwater <br /> sampling and analysis that encompassed all 15 groundwater-quality monitoring wells by <br /> then extant on the site (The San Joaquin Company, 2002c). <br /> sic <br />