My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
SITE HISTORY_CASE 1
EnvironmentalHealth
>
EHD Program Facility Records by Street Name
>
W
>
WASHINGTON
>
2201
>
3500 - Local Oversight Program
>
PR0545660
>
SITE HISTORY_CASE 1
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
5/12/2020 3:16:07 PM
Creation date
5/12/2020 1:57:43 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
3500 - Local Oversight Program
File Section
SITE HISTORY
FileName_PostFix
CASE 1
RECORD_ID
PR0545660
PE
3528
FACILITY_ID
FA0003909
FACILITY_NAME
PORT OF STOCKTON
STREET_NUMBER
2201
Direction
W
STREET_NAME
WASHINGTON
STREET_TYPE
ST
City
STOCKTON
Zip
95203
APN
14503001
CURRENT_STATUS
02
SITE_LOCATION
2201 W WASHINGTON ST
P_LOCATION
01
P_DISTRICT
001
QC Status
Approved
Scanner
LSauers
Tags
EHD - Public
Jump to thumbnail
< previous set
next set >
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
295
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
San Joaquin County Environmental Health Department {EHD} <br /> � Attachment A. <br /> Site Conceptual Model (SCM) <br /> EHD has listed below the components generally used in an SCM. Simply stated, the <br /> purposes for an SCM are to demonstrate where the contaminants came from, where <br /> they are at the present time, how they move through the subsurface, how they will <br /> respond to changes in the ground water flow characteristics or to potential remediation <br /> efforts, what the contaminants' ultimate environmental fate will be, and to help evaluate <br /> the risk posed by the contaminants to ground water supplies and sensitive receptors. <br /> The components of.an effective SCM commonly include: <br /> • Local and regional plan view maps with sources, boring and monitoring well <br /> locations, lines of cross section, extent of contaminants in each media, direction <br /> and rate of ground water flow, and receptor locations, including water supply <br /> wells within 2,000 feet of the site. <br /> • Cross sections showing subsurface geological features, depth to ground water, <br /> man-made conduits, monitoring well construction and an interpretative drawing of <br /> the vertical extent of soil and ground water contamination. <br /> • Cross-plots of key chemical concentrations vs. time for representative wells that <br /> demonstrate significant contaminant concentration trends. <br /> • Summary tables of contaminant concentrations in the different media. <br /> • Well and boring logs. <br /> • A narrative description of the SCM that describes controls on contaminant <br /> distribution, (i.e., geological /hydrogeological framework, contaminant migration <br /> mechanisms, pathways and rates), plume disposition over time, and sorbed and <br /> dissolved contaminant masses. <br /> While not necessarily showing all data in diagrams and drawings, an adequate SCM <br /> can be utilized to account for most of the known data and to illustrate additional <br /> assessment needs. All analytical data should be included in tables. Methods and <br /> calculations of contaminant masses should be included in the SCM, and may be <br /> submitted as an appendix. The site conceptual model should be updated each time <br /> new data is acquired that causes a change of interpretation or expands the model until <br /> model modifications are not needed to explain subsequently acquired data. As the <br /> SCM becomes complete, it can be utilized to reasonably predict additional investigation <br /> results and plume response to various remedial technologies or to changes in ground <br /> water flow regime. The model should adequately demonstrate all interpretations and <br /> opinions. <br /> Nh-9/4/03 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.