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� <br /> Extended Plume Def nition:-7500 W 11th St., Tracy.CA. Page i <br /> 3.0 PHASED SITE CHARACTERIZATION AND GROUNDWATER MONITORING <br /> ~ <br /> Characterization of affected zones of the subsurface at the 7500 West Eleventh Street site has <br /> hat <br /> he underground <br /> t•• advancnc <br /> ed in stages,beginning with observations ma e at the drilme lingtof 24 small d ame er <br /> were removed in 1998. To date, that work has involved the <br /> -inch diameter boring and the installation of a total of 23 <br /> exploratory borings, one eight <br /> groundwater quality-monitoring wells and five light non-aqueous phase liquid (LNAPL, or <br /> "floating product") monitoring wells. The locations of the borings and wells are shown on <br /> Figure 2. The latitude, longitude,well casing elevations and the ground elevations at the well <br /> heads are listed in Table 1. <br /> 3.1 Initial Site Characterization <br /> Following discovery of the unauthorized release of fuel hydrocarbons at the Navarra Site in <br /> December 1998, the Navarras retained SJC in February 1999 to provide engineering services <br /> for site characterization, site remediation and compliance with California regulations. <br /> In early 1999, SJC contacted the SJCEHD and outlined, in informal summary form (The San <br /> Joaquin Company 1999b), a recommended technical approach for site characterization and <br /> prompt remediation of the 7500 West Eleventh Street site based on a risk-based corrective <br /> action (RBCA) analysis (American Society for Testing and Materials 1998). SJC's early <br /> communication with the SJCEHD regarding the proposed technical approach was made <br /> ` according to our long-standing standard practice for environmental management of such <br /> sites, which, shortly prior to SJC's first contact with SJCEHD, had also been adopted by the <br /> United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) in its guidance documents for <br /> expedited site assessments for underground storage tank sites (United States Environmental <br /> Protection Agency 1997). However, in April 1999, SJCEHD responded to SJC's strategic <br /> proposal by noting that the RWQCB recognizes all waters as potentially beneficial, that <br /> California UST regulations require cleanup goals that will protect such uses and that a <br /> RBCA-based approach could not be taken until additional site characterization work had <br /> been undertaken to define the extent of contamination at the site (San Joaquin County <br /> Environmental Health Division 1999b). In the same guidance document, SJCEHD directed <br /> that a formal work plan structured around a conventional procedure-driven, rather than a site- <br /> specific engineering, approach be prepared. <br /> In response to SJCEHD's request, SJC then developed a comprehensive work plan to <br /> characterize the Navarra Site and delineate the extent of the plume of affected groundwater <br /> (The San Joaquin Company Inc. 1999a). That work plan, submitted in early June I999, <br /> provided for drilling of some 20 small-diameter exploratory borings and the installation of 8 <br /> groundwater-quality monitoring wells that included wells and small-diameter exploratory <br /> borings to be located on the east side of Chrisman Road, south of West Eleventh Street, and <br /> on both sides of Chrisman Road where it runs north from West Eleventh Street. The locations <br /> of the proposed exploratory borings and monitoring wells were specifically selected by the <br /> California-registered Geotechnical Engineer in responsible charge of the work to be <br /> distributed such as to delineate adequately the lateral limits of the plume of affected <br /> groundwater, which, based on elementary principals of hydrogeology and consideration of <br /> sic <br />