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SR0082620_SSNL
Environmental Health - Public
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2600 - Land Use Program
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SR0082620_SSNL
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Last modified
10/19/2020 9:53:53 AM
Creation date
10/19/2020 9:47:21 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
2600 - Land Use Program
FileName_PostFix
SSNL
RECORD_ID
SR0082620
PE
2602
STREET_NUMBER
474
Direction
W
STREET_NAME
JOSEPH
STREET_TYPE
RD
City
MANTECA
Zip
95336
APN
21631018
ENTERED_DATE
9/18/2020 12:00:00 AM
SITE_LOCATION
474 W JOSEPH RD
P_LOCATION
99
P_DISTRICT
003
QC Status
Approved
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EHD - Public
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10 September 2020 AdvancedGeo <br /> Project No. 20-6095 An Employee-OwnedCompony <br /> Page 5of15 <br /> SEPTIC SYSTEM: 1) Permit date June 1982; new installation of septic system: 1,200- <br /> gallon concrete tank and three 75-foot long leach lines. <br /> 3.6. PROPOSED MAXIMUM SEPTIC TANK USAGE ON SITE <br /> The current residence on the property has four (4) bedrooms and utilizes the existing <br /> septic system 365 days per year. The existing septic system will not be altered from the <br /> current configuration. The average and reasonable maximum usage of wastewater for a <br /> four-bedroom home by residents is 100 gallons per day (gpd) for the first bedroom and <br /> 50 gpd for each additional bedroom for a total of 250 gpd. <br /> The new proposed septic system is planned to be located in the southern portion of the <br /> property approximately 115 feet away from the existing domestic water well. The <br /> proposed septic system will service the planned two-bedroom residential home to be <br /> developed on the property. The proposed septic system will be used by the two-bedroom <br /> residence 365 days per year. The average and reasonable maximum usage of <br /> wastewater for a two-bedroom home by residents is 100 gpd for the first bedroom and <br /> 50 gpd for each additional bedroom for a total of 150 gpd. <br /> 4.0. GROUNDWATER INFORMATION - REGIONAL HYDROGEOLOGY <br /> The Geologic Map of California, published in 1966 by the California Department of <br /> Conservation Division of Mines and Geology, shows the site area within the Great Valley <br /> Syncline (GVS), a large, elongate, northwest trending structural trough. The GVS is <br /> subdivided into two major divisions designated the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys, <br /> which have been filled to the present elevation with thick sequences of sediment ranging <br /> in age from Jurassic to present day, creating a nearly flat-lying alluvial plain extending <br /> from the Tehachapi Mountains in the south to the Klamath Mountains in the north. The <br /> western and eastern boundaries of this province are comprised of the California Coast <br /> Range and the Sierra Nevada, respectively. Geologically, the area around the property <br /> generally consists of Holocene-aged flood-basin deposits of clay, silt, and sand. Miocene <br /> to Holocene age-units are located in the surrounding area. <br /> These deposits are heterogeneous mix of generally poorly sorted clay, silt, sand, and <br /> gravel with some beds of claystone, siltstone, sandstone, and conglomerate (1986). Most <br /> of the fresh groundwater in the Central Valley is contained in the post-Eocene-aged <br /> continental rocks and deposits and in the Holocene-aged river deposits consisting of <br /> gravel, sand, silt, and minor amounts of clay. In general, these geologic materials <br /> comprise a major widespread aquifer extending hundreds of feet deep and occasionally <br /> containing individual confining layers. The Modesto, Riverbank, Turlock Lake Formations <br /> and overlying recent alluvium are the principal source of domestic groundwater in the <br /> 13,500-square mile San Joaquin Valley Groundwater Basin (Basin 5-22). This basin is <br /> drained primarily by the San Joaquin River, which is approximately fourteen miles south <br />
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