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any violations. A 2022 Underground Storage Tank Program Inspection <br /> Report identified only paperwork violations. Based on the status of the <br /> leaking UST investigation and the current regulatory status, this facility is <br /> not anticipated to have impacted the subject Site. <br /> • AutoZone, 3828 E. Main St., approximately 670 feet southwest of the Site, <br /> Hazardous Materials and Hazardous Waste Generators lists. This facility <br /> is described as a used oil collection center and a small quantity hazardous <br /> waste generator. Based on the types of listings and the distance from the <br /> Site, this facility is not anticipated to have impacted the Site. <br /> • City of Stockton Fire Station #12, 4010 E. Main St., approximately 450 feet <br /> south-southwest of the Site, Cleanup, Site Mitigation, Hazardous <br /> Materials, Underground Storage Tanks, and Aboveground Storage Tanks <br /> lists. Live Oak reviewed records on file for this facility at the San Joaquin <br /> County Environmental Health Department. According to the files, a 550- <br /> gallon diesel UST and a 550-gallon unleaded gasoline UST were removed <br /> from this property in 1994. Approximately 37 cubic yards of soil were <br /> removed and disposed. Soil samples collected indicated the presence of <br /> petroleum hydrocarbons and BTEX. A subsequent investigation by The <br /> Twining Laboratories delineated the impacted area of soil to no more than <br /> 15 feet in depth in the approximate footprint of the tank excavation. The <br /> case was closed by the San Joaquin County Environmental Health <br /> Division in 1995, with concurrence from the Regional Water Quality <br /> Control Board. Based on the status of the investigation and the distance <br /> from the Site, this facility is not anticipated to have impacted the subject <br /> Site. <br /> • Catuna Welding/Hershel Vance, 4125 E. Main St., approximately 140 feet <br /> south of the Site, Cleanup and Hazardous Materials lists. Live Oak <br /> reviewed records on file at the San Joaquin County Environmental Health <br /> Department for this facility. According to the records reviewed, a 300- <br /> gallon gasoline UST and a 500-gallon UST were removed from this facility <br /> in 1990. Petroleum hydrocarbons were detected in a soil sample collected <br /> beneath the 500-gallon tank. Subsequent sampling detected BTEX <br /> constituents and MTBE, including MTBE at a depth of 46 feet (believed to <br /> be the high-groundwater depth). The Environmental Health Division <br /> determined that the soil data indicated no vertical migration below 15 feet <br /> bgs, believing the MTBE was likely derived from a different source; this <br /> property does fall within the contaminant plume from the Jamar Service <br /> property, discussed above. A "no further action" letter was issued in 1998, <br /> with concurrence from the Regional Water Quality Control Board. Based <br /> on the status of the UST investigation, as well as the extensive ground- <br /> water investigation at Jamar Service which covered the nearby area, this <br /> facility is not anticipated to have impacted the subject Site. A 2021 <br /> Hazardous Materials Program Inspection Report identified numerous <br /> LOGE 2251 7 <br />