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SU0008831_SSCRPT
EnvironmentalHealth
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PA-1100127
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SU0008831_SSCRPT
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Last modified
11/19/2024 3:59:59 PM
Creation date
9/8/2019 12:32:57 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
2600 - Land Use Program
FileName_PostFix
SSCRPT
RECORD_ID
SU0008831
PE
2622
FACILITY_NAME
PA-1100127
STREET_NUMBER
14280
Direction
E
STREET_NAME
STATE ROUTE 120
City
RIPON
APN
24502023 39
ENTERED_DATE
7/21/2011 12:00:00 AM
SITE_LOCATION
14280 E HWY 120
RECEIVED_DATE
7/21/2011 12:00:00 AM
P_LOCATION
99
P_DISTRICT
004
QC Status
Approved
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SJGOV\rtan
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\MIGRATIONS\O\HWY 120\14280\PA-1100127\SU0008831\SSC RPT.PDF
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EHD - Public
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database includes Federal Superfund sites, State response sites, voluntary cleanup <br /> sites, school cleanup sites, corrective action sites, and permitted hazardous waste <br /> facilities. <br /> Live Oak searched both databases on February 3, 2011 for any (isted sites within one- <br /> quarter mile of the Site. The subject Site was not listed on either database. <br /> One listed facility was identified within one-quarter mile. Bianchi Brothers, located at <br /> 14141 Highway 120, is listed by GeoTracker as a permitted underground storage tank <br /> (UST) facility. Based on inspection of aerial photography and parcel locations from the <br /> San Joaquin County Map Viewer, this facility appears to be located across Highway 120 <br /> approximately 400 feet northwest of the Site. <br /> 7.2 -Environmental Health Department-Databases <br /> Live Oak reviewed two databases maintained by the EHD, the Underground Storage <br /> Tank Site Mitigation List, dated May 7, 2010, and the Unit IV Sites (LOP) list, dated May <br /> 2010, for surrounding facilities of concern. One listed facility was found within one- <br /> quarter mile of the subject Site. <br /> The Former Mohawk Gas Station, 14961 East Highway 120, is located adjacent to the <br /> northeast of the Site, across Highway 120. Live Oak reviewed the records on file at <br /> EHD for this facility on March 3, 2011. According to the 2002 Site Investigation Report <br /> 1 prepared by IT Corporation, the gas station was put out of business after a vehicle <br /> crashed into a pump island. IT performed a geophysical investigation at the request of <br /> CalTrans and could not determine the location of any underground storage tanks. Five <br /> soil samples were collected by IT; no reportable concentrations of total petroleum <br /> hydrocarbons (TPH) as gasoline, diesel, or oil, benzene, toluene, ethyl benzene, or <br /> xylenes (BTEX), methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE), or lead were detected. Two <br /> groundwater samples were collected by IT; TPH as diesel was detected at 110 and 130 <br /> .µg/L, and TPH as oil was detected at 86 and 100 µg/L. According to the EHD file, two <br /> underground gasoline storage tanks were removed from the facility in 2003. The tanks <br /> were 560 and 1,000 gallons in size; the 560-gallon tank had obvious holes in the <br /> bottom. The five samples collected at this time did not have reportable concentrations <br /> of TPH as gasoline or diesel, BTEX, or MTBE. Lead was detected in three samples at a <br /> maximum concentration of 29 mg/kg. <br /> Live Oak reviewed the 'EHD's Water Well Data Table dated March 10, 2009 for nearby <br /> addresses that have been tested for nitrate and dibromochloropropane (DBCP). Three <br /> nearby wells were identified at addresses located within approximately one and one- <br /> -quarter miles of the Site. Two of the wells had been tested for DBCP; it was detected in <br /> at levels of 0.15 and 0.82 parts per billion (ppb). Nitrate as NO3 was detected in all <br /> three wells at concentrations of 24 to 117 parts per million (ppm). The Maximum <br /> LOGE 1108 Page 5 <br />
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