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6.0 SITE DOCUMENTS <br /> 6.1 Environmental Health Department Records <br /> The EHD was contacted regarding the Site address of 24226 East Highway 4. <br /> According to Cheryl Field, the only records related to environmental issues on file for <br /> the Site address refer to the leaking diesel pump discussed above (Persona( <br /> Communication, April 26, 2013). Live Oak reviewed the EHD file related to the diesel <br /> cleanup, which took place in September through November of 2010. According to notes <br /> in the file, the pump was located near the southeast corner of the Site. The impacted <br /> area was estimated be approximately twenty square feet in area and to extend eight <br /> feet below the surface. The impacted soil was excavated, and five trucks worth of soil <br /> were hauled away to Forward Landfill. Confirmation samples were collected from the <br /> pit bottom and sidewalls. Diesel was detected at 38 mg/kg in the west sidewall, it was <br /> not detected in the other samples. The EHD performed a leaching potential analysis <br /> and determined that "no further action will be taken at this site." <br /> Live Oak reviewed the EHD well and septic permit files for the Site address of 24226 <br /> East Highway 4; two permits were identified. The first permit, dated April 1975, is for <br /> pump repair at an irrigation well. A note on the second page of the permit indicates that <br /> "the abandoned well, if not put back into use within 5 years, will have to be properly <br /> _ sealed under a well permit from the San Joaquin Local Health District." The location of <br /> the "abandoned well" is unclear. The second permit, dated January 2012, is for pump <br /> replacement at the domestic well. <br /> Copies of the EHD records have been included in Appendix 4 of this report. <br /> 7.0 GOVERNMENT AGENCY RESEARCH <br /> 7.1 EPA Databases <br /> The California Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) manages contaminated sites <br /> through two sub-agencies: the State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) and the <br /> Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC). The SWRCB's GeoTracker database <br /> includes underground storage tank (UST) sites, leaking underground storage tank <br /> (LUST) sites, cleanup program sites, and land disposal sites. The database can be <br /> searched by reviewing two lists, the Permitted Underground Storage Tank (UST) Sites <br /> list and the Cleanup Sites list. DTSC's EnviroStor database includes Federal Superfund <br /> sites, State response sites, voluntary cleanup sites, school cleanup sites, corrective <br /> action sites, and permitted hazardous waste facilities. <br /> LOGE 1306 Page 4 <br />