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by PG&E, and a gas line runs beneath Pock Lane adjacent to the project site. <br />Telecommunication service is available through existing lines in the area. <br />The project site is currently within the boundaries of Republic Services, one of five solid <br />waste collectors providing service under franchise to San Joaquin County. The San <br />Joaquin County Code requires that solid waste be collected from residential generators a <br />minimum of once a week, and at least twice a week for commercial and industrial <br />generators (San Joaquin County 2016a). Solid waste is transported and disposed of <br />primarily at three active sanitary landfills in San Joaquin County. The North County <br />Landfill on East Harney Lane has available capacity to 2048, and the Foothill Sanitary <br />Landfill on North Waverly Road has available capacity to 2082 (CalRecycle 2021). The <br />Forward Landfill on Austin Road near Stockton was to have reached its capacity in 2020; <br />however, the County Board of Supervisors recently approved an expansion of Forward <br />Landfill that would extend its life to 2036 (Crunden 2020). <br />Environmental Impacts and Mitigation Measures <br />a) Construction or Relocation of Infrastructure. <br />Existing water, wastewater, and storm drainage lines are in the vicinity of the project site. <br />Extensions from the project site to these existing facilities would occur within the <br />existing County rights-of-way; no undeveloped lands would be affected by the <br />installation of these extensions. The project would connect to existing electricity, natural <br />gas, and telecommunication lines in the vicinity with no need for extensions. <br />Infrastructure serving the proposed lots would be installed on the project site as part of <br />site development, and therefore would not have impacts distinct from site development. <br />Project impacts related to the construction or relocation of infrastructure would be less <br />than significant. <br />b) Water Supply. <br />The project would connect to the water supply system of Cal Water. Existing water lines <br />are in the project vicinity. According to Cal Water's 2020 Urban Water Management <br />Plan for the Stockton district, Cal Water supplied approximately 24,106 acre-feet of <br />water to its Stockton District in 2020. The amount of water used per capita per day in <br />2020 was approximately 124 gallons (Cal Water 2021). Based on the projected <br />population of 641 (see Section 3.14, Population and Housing), project water demand at <br />buildout would be 79,484 gallons per day, or approximately 130 acre-feet per year. <br />The Cal Water Stockton District obtains approximately 84 percent of its water through <br />purchases from the Stockton East Water District, with the remainder from 41 <br />groundwater wells operated by Cal Water, of which 25 are currently active. As discussed <br />in Section 3.10, Hydrology and Water Quality, the Cal Water 2020 Urban Water <br />Management Plan for the Stockton District indicates that adequate water supply would be <br />available to accommodate future demands in its service area, including the project site, <br />during normal, single dry -year, and multiple dry -year scenarios. This conclusion <br />considers projected water demands within the Stockton District, based on anticipated <br />development and population growth (Cal Water 2021). As the project is consistent with <br />Pock Lane Public Review Draft IS/MND 3-71 May 2022 <br />