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e <br /> INFORMATION SHEET <br /> CITY OF STOCKTON <br /> FRENCH CAMP LANDFILL <br /> LIMITED CLASS III LANDFILL <br /> SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY <br /> The City of Stockton owns and operates the French Camp Landfill. The landfill <br /> is at Manthey Road, 2 miles south of Stockton along Interstate 5 in San Joaquin <br /> County. The landfill has no waste discharge requirements at present but operates <br /> under a permit issued by the San Joaquin Local Health District and the California <br /> Integrated Waste Management Board. These requirements establish waste discharge <br /> requirements for the landfill in accordance with requirements of Chapter 15, <br /> Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, governing discharges of waste to <br /> land. <br /> Operations commenced at the French Camp Landfill in 1938. The site was used as <br /> a burn dump and accepted Groups 2 and 3 wastes from the City. Since 1957, <br /> however, the French Camp site has only been used for the City's demolition and <br /> garden wastes. The 72-acre site currently receives an average of 80 tons per day <br /> of these wastes but the City projects that the waste stream could potentially <br /> increase up to 413 tons per day given expected community growth and assuming no <br /> recycling. The site could accommodate an additional 1.45 million cubic yards of <br /> waste and provide a service life approaching 20 years. <br /> The landfill is within the eastern reaches of the Sacramento/San Joaquin Delta. <br /> It is bordered on the north by Walker Slough and on the south by French Camp <br /> Slough. The sloughs join immediately west of the site and flow approximately one <br /> mile west to the San Joaquin River. The native materials below the refuse <br /> consists of inter bedded sequences of silty, sandy clays, clayey sands and silty <br /> sands. Ground water was first encountered within native materials at a depth of <br /> 45 in Well MW-2 and 34.5 feet in Well MW-3. Refuse was encountered in Boring MW-1 <br /> to a depth of 37 feet, which is approximately 4 feet below first encountered <br /> ground water. It is suspected that this portion of the southern portion of the <br /> landfill may have been the original course of the French Camp Slough with was <br /> filled with refuse during the early development of the landfill. The ground <br /> water gradient is to the northeast, away from the sloughs, and towards a regional <br /> ground water depression created by historic and long-term pumping of ground water <br /> by the City of Stockton. <br /> A verification monitoring program confirmed the presence of VOC contamination in <br /> water from MW-1. It is alleged that the VOC impact is due to historical waste <br /> disposal since the current waste stream is restricted to landscape debris. VOCs <br /> were not detected in water from the three downgradient wells (MW-2, MW-3 and <br /> MW-4) and in a city well in proximity to the landfill; however, an evaluation <br /> monitoring program, pursuant to Article 5, Chapter 15 and as specified in this <br /> Order, will be required to investigate this matter and implement appropriate <br /> remedial action. <br />