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iii)Create or contribute runoff water which would exceed <br /> the capacity of existing or planned stormwater drainage <br /> systems or provide substantial additional sources of <br /> polluted runoff? <br /> iv)Impede or redirect flood flows? <br /> d)In flood hazard,tsunami,or seiche zones,risk release of <br /> pollutants due to project inundation? <br /> e)Conflict with or obstruct implementation of a water <br /> quality control plan or sustainable groundwater management <br /> plan? <br /> NARRATIVE DISCUSSION <br /> Environmental Setting <br /> Surface and Groundwater Hydrology <br /> Duck Creek crosses the 3009 Pock Lane site at its approximate midpoint. Duck Creek is <br /> an intermittent stream that originates east of Stockton and flows westward into Walker <br /> Slough. At the project site, Duck Creek is channelized. Duck Creek is a terminal drainage <br /> for existing developed areas located to the east and west of the site. <br /> Bieghle Drain, along the northern boundary of the 2706 Pock Lane site, is a constructed <br /> channel that conveys storm drainage in the southeast Stockton area to a detention basin <br /> adjacent to Duck Creek downstream from the project site. Bieghle Drain has water flow <br /> only during and immediately after storm events. No other surface water bodies are in the <br /> project vicinity. <br /> The project site is within the Eastern San Joaquin County Groundwater Subbasin of the <br /> San Joaquin Valley Groundwater Basin. A geotechnical report indicates that groundwater <br /> levels at the project site range from 31 feet to 57 feet in depth below the ground surface, <br /> depending on the season (CTE Cal 2021). Recharge to the groundwater system in the <br /> Stockton area primarily is from percolation of irrigation return water, precipitation, <br /> seepage from reservoirs and rivers, and urban runoff. <br /> In 2014, the California Legislature passed the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act <br /> (SGMA), which gives local agencies greater authority to manage groundwater supplies. <br /> The legislation requires the formation of local Groundwater Sustainability Agencies that <br /> must assess conditions in their local water basins and adopt locally based Groundwater <br /> Sustainability Plans to manage groundwater. SGMA requires that Groundwater <br /> Sustainability Plans for critically overdrafted basins be adopted by January 31, 2020. <br /> Overdraft occurs when the amount of groundwater extracted in a basin exceeds the long- <br /> term average groundwater recharged. The Eastern San Joaquin Subbasin has been <br /> designated a critically overdrafted basin. The Eastern San Joaquin Groundwater <br /> Authority, which oversees the Subbasin, adopted and submitted a Groundwater <br /> Pock Lane Public Review Draft IS/MND 3-44 May 2022 <br />