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Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Report Page III-31 <br /> Forward Inc.Landfill 2018 Expansion Project <br /> The LCRS design for slopes greater than 15 percent consists of a geocomposite drainage net <br /> (GDN). GDN is used due to construction and stability concerns associated with placement of <br /> granular materials on steep slopes. No collection pipes are required on the side slopes because any <br /> leachate occurring on the slope would naturally flow down slope. <br /> Leachate collected in the LCRS would flow through the drainage layer to the pipes and <br /> subsequently into leachate collection sumps. Submersible pumps located in each sump would <br /> pump leachate from the LCRS to lined surface ponds,from which the leachate evaporates. <br /> Three leachate evaporation impoundments are permitted at the site,of which two are constructed <br /> and are currently in use. WMU F North is located in the southwest region of the existing Forward <br /> Landfill,just north of the South Fork. It was constructed in 1999 and provides containment for <br /> leachate from the active portions of the southern WMUs. The leachate impoundment was sized <br /> based on actual leachate generation records from 1991 to 1997 and has a design capacity of <br /> approximately 3.5 million gallons. WMU F West is located in the northern portion of the site, <br /> directly west of WMU FU-03. It was constructed in 2003 with a design capacity of 3.4 million <br /> gallons and receives leachate from the northern waste management units. A third impoundment, <br /> WMU F South,has not yet been constructed as no waste has yet been landfilled south of the South <br /> Fork. WMU F South would replace the existing WMU F North leachate impoundment. <br /> If,during the service life of the landfill,the demand on the leachate impoundment exceeds <br /> capacity,Forward would implement an alternative leachate management plan. Leachate in excess <br /> of the impoundment's capacity would either be pumped to temporary onsite tanks,trucked for off- <br /> site disposal at the City of Stockton Municipal Utility Department wastewater treatment plant <br /> located at 2500 North Navy Drive in Stockton,or trucked to another off-site licensed Treatment <br /> and Disposal Facility. Leachate stored in the temporary on-site tanks may be released back into the <br /> impoundment at a later date. <br /> At the time this FSEIR was prepared, the only liquids disposed in the leachate ponds at the <br /> Forward Landfill were leachate from the landfill itself, and landfill gas (LFG) condensate from <br /> the LFG extraction system at the Foothill Sanitary Landfill. In the past,well abandonment <br /> ' water and stormwater from Republic Service's Rancho Cordova facility have been approved <br /> and accepted for disposal in the Forward Landfill leachate ponds. Cannery waste liquids are <br /> also allowed to be disposed in the Forward Landfill leachate ponds per the site's Waste <br /> Discharge Requirements (WDRs). <br /> Leachate Monitoring <br /> ' To monitor the LCRSs,Forward,Inc.conducts a leachate monitoring and sampling program in <br /> compliance with WDR Order No.R5-2014-0006. Quarterly and annual reports of the monitoring <br /> results are submitted to the DTSC,RWQCB,and the San Joaquin County Environmental Health <br /> Department,which is the Local Enforcement Agency(LEA). <br /> A leak detection system is also located under the sumps in the WMUs and the leachate <br /> impoundments. The leak detection system currently consists of suction cup lysimeters and pan <br /> lysimeters installed in all the Subtitle D lined WMUs with permanent sumps(i.e.WMU D-93,D-01, <br />