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Page 2 <br /> September 10,2012 <br /> DBrusca Project No. 114-001.01 1813 Moffat Boulevard Property,Manteca <br /> SITE DESCRIPTION AND BACKGROUND <br /> The approximate 1.1-acre subject site is located within a mixed agricultural and <br /> commercial/light-industrial area of Manteca, San Joaquin County, California. The subject <br /> property is identified by the San Joaquin County Assessor's Office as parcel number(APN) 228- <br /> 050-05 and is currently addressed as 1813 Moffat Boulevard. The site is currently unoccupied <br /> and supports an office/warehouse building, a shed-like structure, and associated pavements. <br /> Our Phase I research indicates that the site was developed in the mid-1960s; from that time until <br /> the late 1990s, the subject property was used as a facility for the fabrication, refurbishing, and <br /> repair of tanks and truck trailers for the commercial trucking industry. Superior Stainless <br /> reportedly occupied the site from the 1960s until the late 1970s and Beall Trucking occupied the <br /> site from the late 1970s until the late 1990s. Readily available information regarding on-site <br /> activities prior to the late 1990s is very limited. It is indicated that an on-site septic disposal <br /> system was installed beneath the property at the time of initial site development, and a <br /> subsurface waste water collection sump was installed near the septic system by Superior <br /> Stainless sometime in the late 1960s or early 1970s. It is our understanding that the sump was <br /> used by both Superior Stainless and Beall Trucking for the collection of waste water generated <br /> during industrial cleaning activities, including the steam cleaning of tank interiors. Our research <br /> did not reveal any specific information regarding the sump use/waste water discharged during <br /> Superior Stainless' occupancy of the subject site. Reportedly, the majority of the tanks cleaned <br /> by Beall Trucking were used for storage of food products such as wine, milk, and vegetable oil. <br /> However, it is indicated that some of the tanks cleaned by Beall Trucking had been used for <br /> transporting corrosive chemicals(and possibly petroleum products and/or fertilizers). <br /> From the late 1990s until earlier this year, the subject property was occupied by a fork lift sales, <br /> leasing, and repair business (Watts Equipment). On-site repair activities performed by Watts <br /> Equipment included the use and storage of hazardous materials including, oils/lubricants, <br /> coolants, and solvents. Reportedly, Watts Equipment removed the steam cleaning equipment <br /> from the vicinity of the sump and it is indicated that Watts' activities did not include the <br /> discharge of waste water to the subsurface sump. Reportedly, Watts Equipment recently vacated <br /> the subject property, and the site has been unoccupied and unused since May 2013. <br /> The subject property was used for commercial/light-industrial purposes (including the on-site <br /> use/storage of hazardous materials) for nearly 50 years. Past on-site operations included the use <br /> of the subsurface sump to collect waste water generated during industrial cleaning activities, as <br /> well as the use of an on-site septic disposal system. In our experience, subsurface features such <br /> as waste water collection sumps and septic systems used at commercial/industrial sites can <br /> facilitate the discharge of hazardous substances to the subsurface. As such, our referenced <br /> Phase I study indicated the potential that the long term light-industrial use of the subject property <br /> could have resulted in the discharge of hazardous materials to the subsurface, particularly in the <br /> vicinity of the sump and septic system. <br />