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1.0 INTRODUCTION <br /> This Well Completion Report has been prepared for the County of San Joaquin, Public <br /> Works Department, Solid Waste Division (County) by Geo-Logic Associates (GLA)to fulfill <br /> a reporting requirement contained in Item 2, Page 4 of the Section 13267 Order for <br /> Technical Reports issued by the California Regional Water Quality Control Board— <br /> Central Valley Region (RWQCB) on July 7, 2011. Work described herein has been <br /> conducted as part of an ongoing Evaluation Monitoring Program (EMP) at the Corral <br /> Hollow Sanitary Landfill (CHSL). Work conducted to date has been in accordance with <br /> the EMP workplan that was approved by the RWQCB on August 25, 2011. <br /> 2.0 BACKGROUND <br /> The CHSL is a closed, Class III municipal solid waste disposal facility located southeast of <br /> the intersection of Corral Hollow Road and State Route 580 at 31130 South Corral <br /> Hollow Road in San Joaquin County, California. The site ceased operations in 1991, and <br /> was formally closed in 1995 with construction of a prescriptive final cover system in <br /> accordance with Title 27, Section 21090 of the California Code of Regulations. <br /> Groundwater monitoring at the CHSL began in 1987 with the installation of wells MW-1 <br /> through MW-5 as part of the Solid Waste Assessment Test (SWAT) program. Through <br /> construction of these wells,two water-bearing zones were identified: a shallow zone <br /> and a deeper zone. The shallow zone is limited to the north-eastern third of the site at <br /> approximately 230 feet above mean sea level. This zone is apparently created by water <br /> perched on the Corcoran Clay member of the Tulare Formation, which is intermittent in <br /> this area. The deeper water bearing zone underlies the entire site at approximately 50 <br /> feet below mean sea level. <br /> In 1991,volatile organic compounds (VOCs), including trichlorofluoromethane and <br /> tetrachloroethene, were detected in samples from shallow groundwater monitoring <br /> well MW-5.The detections were verified during subsequent monitoring events, and the <br /> presence of VOCs has historically been attributed to minor landfill gas migration. In <br /> response to these detections,the County installed a landfill gas collection and <br /> destruction system at the site in 2001. <br /> The deep aquifer remains unimpacted by landfill gas. <br /> Groundwater levels in the deeper zone decreased until wells MW-1, MW-2, and MW-3 <br /> went dry. In 2003, wells MW-6 and MW-7 were drilled to replace the deeper zone <br /> monitoring wells that had gone dry, and well SB-1 was drilled to provide additional <br /> information regarding the shallow zone groundwater conditions. In 2007,well MW-8 <br /> was constructed to better assess the distribution of VOCs in the shallow zone. <br /> Well Completion ReportPage E 1 <br /> Corral Hollow Sanitary Landfill ASSOCIATES <br /> May 3,2012 <br />