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i w <br /> INFORMATION SHEET <br /> CITY OF STOCKTON <br /> FRENCH CAMP LANDFILL <br /> CLASS III LANDFILL <br /> SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY <br /> The City of Stockton owns and operates the French Camp Landfill. The landfill is at <br /> Manthey Road, 2 miles south of Stockton along Interstate 5 in San Joaquin County. The <br /> landfill is currently regulated by WDR Order No. 92-225, which are no longer in <br /> conformance with Chapter 15 regulations. The monitoring program for ground water and <br /> surface water does not satisfy the requirements outlined in Article 5 of Chapter 15. This new <br /> Order satisfies the requirements in Article 5 of Chapter 15. <br /> Operations commenced at the French Camp Landfill in 1938. The site was used as a burn <br /> dump and accepted non-hazardous municipal wastes from the City. Since 1957. however, the <br /> French Camp site has only been used for the City's demolition and garden wastes. The 72- <br /> acre site currently receives an average of 80 cubic yards per day of these wastes. The City <br /> projects that the waste stream could potentially increase up to 413 tons per day, given <br /> expected community growth and assuming no recycling. The site could accommodate an <br /> additional 1.45 million cubic yards of waste and provide a service life approaching 20 years. <br /> The landfill is within the eastern reaches of the Sacramento/San Joaquin Delta. It is bordered <br /> on the north by Walker Slough and on the south by French Camp Slough. The sloughs join <br /> immediately west of the site and flow approximately one mile west to the San Joaquin River. <br /> The native materials below the refuse consist of inter-bedded sequences of silty, sandy clays, <br /> clayey sands and silty sands. Ground water was first encountered within native materials at a <br /> depth of 34 feet. Refuse was encountered at 4 feet below ground water level in MW-1. It is <br /> suspected that this portion of the southern part of the landfill may have been the original <br /> course of the French Camp Slough. which was filled with refuse during the early <br /> development of the landfill. The ground water gradient is to the northeast, away from the <br /> slough, and towards a regional ground water depression created by historic and long-term <br /> pumping of ground water by the City of Stockton. <br /> A verification monitoring program confirmed the presence of VOC contamination in water <br /> from MW-1. It is alleged that the VOC impact is due to historical waste disposal, since the <br /> current waste stream is restricted to garden wastes. VOCs were not detected in downgradient <br /> wells. <br />