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Administrative Draft Environmental Impact Report <br /> Gill Medical Center Project <br /> Assembly Bill (AB) 7668 and Senate Bill (SB) 606 <br /> AB 1668 and SB 606 establish guidelines for efficient water use and a framework for the implementation <br /> and oversight of the new standards, which must be in place by 2022.The two bills strengthen the state's <br /> water resiliency in the face of future droughts. <br /> California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery(CalRecycle;formerly the California Integrated <br /> Waste Management Board) <br /> CalRecycle oversees, manages, and monitors waste generated in California. It provides limited grants and <br /> loans to help California cities, counties, businesses, and organizations meet the State waste reduction, <br /> reuse, and recycling goals. CalRecycle develops, manages, and enforces waste disposal and recycling <br /> regulations, including Assembly Bill (AB) 939 and Senate Bill (SB) 1016. <br /> Assembly Bill (AB) 939 <br /> AB 939 (Public Resources Code [PRC] 41780) requires cities and counties to prepare Integrated Waste <br /> Management Plans (IWMPs) and to divert 50 percent of solid waste from landfills beginning in calendar <br /> year 2000 and each year thereafter. AB 939 also requires cities and counties to prepare Source Reduction <br /> and Recycling Elements (SRRE) as part of their IWMPs. These Elements are designed to develop recycling <br /> services to achieve diversion goals, stimulate local recycling in manufacturing, and stimulate the purchase <br /> of recycled products. <br /> Senate Bill (SB) 7016 <br /> SB 1016 requires that the 50-percent solid waste diversion requirement established by AB 939 be <br /> expressed in pounds per person per day. SB 1016 also changed the CalRecycle review process for each <br /> municipality's IWMP. The CalRecycle Board reviews a jurisdiction's compliance with diversion rate targets <br /> in accordance with a specified schedule. <br /> 4.21.2.3 Local <br /> Stockton and San Joaquin County NPDES Municipal Permit <br /> The County of San Joaquin includes the City of Stockton, as well as surrounding incorporated and <br /> unincorporated urbanized areas (which contain densely settled territory containing 100,000 or more <br /> people). Due to the proximity of the county's urbanized areas to the City of Stockton, the urbanized area's <br /> physical interconnection to the City's storm drain system, and the locations of their discharges relative to <br /> the City's system, the County is designated as a part of the medium Small Municipal Separate Storm <br /> Sewer System (MS4).This MS4 designation must comply with the CWA under the NPDES Phase I program. <br /> The City of Stockton, the urbanized areas of the county that are enclosed within the city, and the <br /> urbanized areas of the county which surround the City are subject to the NPDES Phase I municipal permit, <br /> Order No. RS-2009-0105 adopted on October 8, 2009. <br /> Utilities and Service Systems 4.21-6 October 2021 <br />