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About This Sample Report
This report has been compiled by Environmental Data Resources, Inc. (EDR). EDR is the leading
national provider of environmental risk information to environmental and home inspection professionals.
This report compares the property address against selected government databases of known and potential
contamination sites. This report provides no information on the status of the interior structures on the
property such as, but not limited to, the existence of mold, asbestos, lead, radon, vapor intrusion or
other issues.
For your convenience, this report is organized into the following sections:
Section A provides information about records of known and potential environmental records within
a 300 foot radius of the street address provided.
Section B provides information about records of known and potential environmental issues beyond
300 feet of the street address provided. The selected databases are searched to distances most commonly
used
by environmental professionals.
Section C provides information about records that lack sufficient address information for sites to be
accurately located. Records where EDR can identify the site status as "closed" or "no further action" are
not included in this section.
Section D provides descriptions and explanations of the databases used, and contact information
for government agencies. If you have concerns about the findings in this report, we recommend that you
contact
the relevant government agency that can provide additional information about specific environmental issues.
Report #: 3228409.1s Page 1
A
ENVIRONMENTAL RECORDS WITHIN 300 FEET
Sites with Known Contamination Within 300 Feet: No Records Found
Sites are tracked by the government in a variety of databases. Database descriptions can be
found in Section D of this report.
No Leaking Petroleum Storage Tanks were identified.
No Landfills were identified.
No EPA Final Superfund Sites were identified.
No EPA Proposed Superfund Sites (CERCLIS) were identified.
No Hazardous Waste Treatment Storage and Disposal Sites were identified.
No State Hazardous Waste Sites were identified.
No Emergency Response Notification Sites were identified.
Sites with Potential Contamination Within 300 Feet: No Records Found
Sites are tracked by the government in a variety of databases. Database descriptions can be
found in Section D of this report.
No Clandestine Drug Lab Sites from Federal Sources were identified.
No CDC Environmental Health Assessments were identified.
No Active Department of Defense Sites were identified.
No Former Department of Defense Sites were identified.
No Manufactured Gas Plants were identified.
No Radioactive Material Activity Sites were identified.
Report #:
Sites with Known Contamination Beyond 300 Feet: 6 Records Found
Sites are tracked by the government in a variety of databases. Database descriptions can be
found in Section D of this report.

6 Leaking Petroleum Storage Tanks were identified beyond 300 feet and within 1/2 mile.
No Landfills were identified beyond 300 feet and within 1/2 mile.
No EPA Final Superfund Sites were identified beyond 300 feet and within 1 mile.
No EPA Proposed Superfund Sites (CERCLIS) were identified beyond 300 feet
and within 1/2 mile.
No Hazardous Waste Treatment Storage and Disposal Sites were identified beyond 300 feet
and within 1/2 mile.
No State Hazardous Waste Sites were identified beyond 300 feet and within 1 mile.
Sites with Potential Contamination Beyond 300 Feet: No Records Found
Sites are tracked by the government in a variety of databases. Database descriptions can be
found in Section D of this report.
No Clandestine Drug Lab Sites from Federal Sources were identified beyond 300 feet
and within 1/8 mile.
No CDC Environmental Health Assessments were identified beyond 300 feet
and within 1/4 mile.
No Active Department of Defense Sites were identified beyond 300 feet and within 1/4 mile.
No Former Department of Defense Sites were identified beyond 300 feet and within 1/4 mile.
No Manufactured Gas Plants were identified beyond 300 feet and within 1/4 mile.
No Radioactive Material Activity Sites were identified beyond 300 feet
and within 1/4 mile.
Report #: 3228409.1s Page 3
B
DETAIL: SITES WITH KNOWN CONTAMINATION BEYOND 300 FEET
Sites with Known Contamination are tracked by the government in a variety of databases.
Database descriptions can be found in Section D of this report.
6 Leaking Petroleum Storage Tanks were identified beyond 300 feet and within 1/2 mile.
Leaking Tanks can leak petroleum into the ground. These chemicals can migrate underground
to groundwater or other pathways to human contact.
Location
Distance
from Property EDR ID

BROZ AUTOMOTIVE CHEVRON 6840 BURNET RD 0.2 mile East U001280933
Status Code: FINAL CONCURRENCE ISSUED, CASE CLOSED
ROGER BEASLEY MAZDA 6918 BURNET RD 0.2 mile ENE 1004784230
Status Code: FINAL CONCURRENCE ISSUED, CASE CLOSED
GENIE CAR WASH 1 7320 BURNET RD 0.4 mile NE U001273900
Status Code: FINAL CONCURRENCE ISSUED, CASE CLOSED
SUNRISE MINI MART 5 7401 BURNET RD 0.5 mile NE S107993257
Status Code: MONITORING
SUNRISE MINI MART 5 7401 BURNET RD 0.5 mile NE U001243589
Status Code: FINAL CONCURRENCE ISSUED, CASE CLOSED
Status Code: FINAL CONCURRENCE ISSUED, CASE CLOSED
BROZ BROS INSPECT CTR 100155 7430 BURNET RD 0.5 mile NE U001249771
Status Code: FINAL CONCURRENCE ISSUED, CASE CLOSED
Report #: 3228409.1s Page 4
C

UNLOCATED SITES
Government records occasionally lack sufficient address information for some sites to be accurately
plotted to an exact location. The following site(s) may or may not be in a close proximity to the
target property. Records where EDR can identify the site status as "closed" or "no further action" are not
included in the following list.
Location Database(s) EDR ID #
LONGHORN COMMUNITY
DISPOSAL LANDFILL
E 5TH MILES & STHY 71
INT
AUSTIN SWF/LF S106821370
IRI GROUP LLC 30 SQUARE FT AUSTIN SWF/LF S107151763
CITY OF AUSTIN
RESOURCE RECOVERY
WASTE INCINERATIO
BND HORNSBY AREA COLORADO
RIV NE
AUSTIN SWF/LF S106821241
TRAVIS COUNTY TRANSFER
STATION
4001 RANCH RD AUSTIN SWF/LF S106170767
BROWNING-FERRIS SOLID
WASTE INCINERATION
FACILITY
APPROXIMATELY 300 FEET SE
LEY ROAD 0.8 MILE E INTE
TRAVIS
COUNTY
SWF/LF S109515046
AQUATOX TRENCH BURNER
FACILITY
25TH MILES NORTH OF FM &
1 MILE EAST OF STATE
AUSTIN SWF/LF S108527253
AQUATOX TRENCH BURNER
FACILITY
2400 OF INTERSECTION AUSTIN SWF/LF S108424880
CITY OF AUSTIN
COMPOSTING FACILITY
AUSTIN TX AUSTIN SWF/LF S110302296
AQUATOX TRENCH BURNER
FACILITY
1825 ONPFLUGERVILLE LOOP AUSTIN SWF/LF S108424879
Report #: 3228409.1s Page 5

D
EXPLANATION AND FOLLOW-UP DISCUSSION
Information in the EDR Neighborhood Environmental Report ™ is gathered from certain Government
agencies and proprietary sources. For each of the databases searched, the following section provides a:
- description of the database
- contact number and web site for more information (where available)
- version date of the database searched (where available)
EXPLANATION: SITES WITH KNOWN CONTAMINATION
Leaking Petroleum Storage Tanks Database (LPST)
The Leaking Storage Tank Trust Fund was created by the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
(RCRA) in 1986 and can be used
by the state where releases of petroleum products from underground storage tanks have occurred and
financially responsible parties
cannot be identified or are not satisfactorily responsive. The PST State-Lead Remediation Program
administers the Texas LUST Trust Fund
money used directly for the TCEQ’s PST program corrective action activities. All costs of corrective action
expenses financed through
the LUST Trust Fund can be recovered, including legal and administrative. In many cases, federal funds are
used at sites where the
responsible parties are later determined to be financially unable to pay. No cost recovery occurs under those
circumstances.
Status Field definitions:
- Preassessment/Release Determination
- Site Assessment
- Monitoring
- Plan B/Risk Assessment
- Corrective Action Plan
- Final Concurrence Issues Case Closed
- Final Concurrence Appropriate unable to locate,
- In-Active; Cannot close Cannot Locate Repsonsible Party
- Final Concurrence Pending Documentation
- Cross Reference to another LPST number
For more information about Leaking Storage Tanks in this report, contact the: Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality, 512-239-2200,
http://www.tceq.state.tx.us/remediation/pst_rp/mission.html
Source: Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
Date of Government Version: 10/03/2011
Search Distance in this report: 1/2 mile from Target Property
Landfills Database (SWF/LF)
Across the country, many communities, businesses, and individuals have found creative ways to reduce and
better manage Municipal Solid
Waste (MSW) - more commonly known as trash or garbage - through a coordinated mix of practices that
includes source reduction, recycling
(including composting), and disposal.
The most environmentally sound management of MSW is achieved when these approaches are implemented
according to EPA’s preferred
order: source reduction first, recycling and composting second, and disposal in landfills or waste combustors
last. Although source
reduction, reuse, recycling, and composting can divert large portions of municipal solid waste (MSW) from
disposal, some waste still
must be placed in landfills. Modern landfills are well-engineered facilities that are located, designed,
operated, monitored, closed,
EXPLANATION AND FOLLOWUP DISCUSSION Report #: 3228409.1s Page 6
cared for after closure, cleaned up when necessary, and financed to insure compliance with federal
regulations. The federal regulations
were established to protect human health and the environment.
For more information about Landfill(s) in this report, contact the: Permitted Solid Waste Facilities in this
report, contact the: Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality, 512-239-1000,
http://www.tceq.state.tx.us/permitting/waste_permits/waste_planning/wp_swasteplan.html
Source: Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
Date of Government Version: 08/03/2011
Search Distance in this report: 1/2 mile from Target Property
EPA Final Superfund Sites Database (NPL)
EPA Final Superfund Sites Database (NPL) is the list of national priorities among the known releases or
threatened releases of hazardous
substances, pollutants, or contaminants throughout the United States and its territories. The NPL is intended
primarily to guide the EPA
in determining which sites warrant further investigation.
Superfund is the Federal government’s program to clean up the nation’s uncontrolled hazardous waste sites.
Under the Superfund program,
abandoned, accidentally spilled, or illegally dumped hazardous waste that pose a current or future threat to
human health or the
environment are cleaned up. To accomplish its mission, EPA works closely with communities, Potentially
Responsible Parties (PRPs),
scientists, researchers, contractors, and state, local, tribal, and Federal authorities. Together with these
groups, EPA identifies
hazardous waste sites, tests the conditions of the sites, formulates cleanup plans, and cleans up the sites.
For more information about EPA Final Superfund Sites in this report, contact the: Environmental Protection
Agency, Superfund Hotline,
800-424-9346 or 703-412-9810, http://www.epa.gov/superfund/sites/npl/index.htm.
Source: Environmental Protection Agency
Date of Government Version: 06/30/2011
Search Distance in this report: 1 mile from Target Property
EPA Proposed Superfund Sites Database (CERCLIS)
The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), commonly known
as Superfund, was enacted by
Congress on December 11, 1980. CERCLA contains information on hazardous waste sites, potential
hazardous waste sites, and remedial
activities across the nation, including sites that are on the National Priorities List (NPL) or being considered
for the NPL.
Superfund is the Federal government’s program to clean up the nation’s uncontrolled hazardous waste sites.
Under the Superfund program,
abandoned, accidentally spilled, or illegally dumped hazardous waste that pose a current or future threat to
human health or the
environment are cleaned up. To accomplish its mission, EPA works closely with communities, Potentially
Responsible Parties (PRPs),
scientists, researchers, contractors, and state, local, tribal, and Federal authorities. Together with these
groups, EPA identifies
hazardous waste sites, tests the conditions of the sites, formulates cleanup plans, and cleans up the sites.
For more information about EPA Proposed Superfund Sites in this report, contact the: Environmental
Protection Agency, 703-413-0223 or
http://www.epa.gov/superfund/action/law/cercla.htm
Source: Environmental Protection Agency
Date of Government Version: 02/25/2011
Search Distance in this report: 1/2 mile from Target Property
Hazardous Waste Treatment Storage and Disposal Sites Database (RCRAInfo)
RCRAInfo is EPA’s comprehensive information system, providing access to data supporting the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act
(RCRA) of 1976 and the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments (HSWA) of 1984. The database includes
selective information on sites which
generate, transport, store, treat and/or dispose of hazardous waste as defined by the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA).
Transporters are individuals or entities that move hazardous waste from the generator offsite to a facility that
can recycle, treat,
store, or dispose of the waste. TSDFs treat, store, or dispose of the waste.
For more information about RCRA Treatment, Storage and Disposal sites in this report, contact the:
Environmental Protection Agency at
http://www.epa.gov/osw/
Source: Environmental Protection Agency
Date of Government Version: 06/15/2011
EXPLANATION AND FOLLOWUP DISCUSSION Report #: 3228409.1s Page 7
Search Distance in this report: 1/2 mile from Target Property
State Hazardous Waste Sites Database (SHWS)
State hazardous waste site records are the states equivalent to CERCLIS. These sites may or may not
already be listed on the federal
CERCLIS list. Priority sites planned for cleanup using state funds (state equivalent of Superfund) are
identified along with sites
where cleanup will be paid for by potentially responsible parties.
For more information about State Hazardous Waste Sites in this report, contact the: Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality,
512-239-1000
Source: Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
Date of Government Version: 07/15/2011
Search Distance in this report: 1 mile from Target Property
Emergency Response Notification System (ERNS)
Emergency Response Notification System, also known as The National Response System (NRS), is the
government’s mechanism for
emergency response to discharges of oil and the release of chemicals into the navigable waters or
environment of the United States and
its territories. Initially, this system focused on oil spills and selected hazardous polluting substances
discharged into the
environment. It has since been expanded by other legislation to include hazardous substances and wastes
released to all types of media.
For more information about Emergency Response Notification System in this report, contact the: National
Response Center, United States
Coast Guard, 800-424-8802 or http://www.nrc.uscg.mil/nrsinfo.html
Source: National Response Center, United States Coast Guard
Date of Government Version: 10/03/2011
Search Distance in this report: 300 feet from Target Property
EXPLANATION: SITES WITH POTENTIAL CONTAMINATION
Clandestine Drug Labs Sites from Federal Sources (US CDL)
Clandestine Drug Labs Sites from Federal Sources is a listing of drug lab location from the U.S. Department
of Justice ("the
Department"). It contains addresses of some locations where law enforcement agencies reported they found
chemicals or other items that
indicated the presence of either clandestine drug laboratories or dumpsites. In most cases, the source of the
entries is not the
Department, and the Department has not verified the entry and does not guarantee its accuracy. Members
of the public must verify the
accuracy of all entries by, for example, contacting local law enforcement and local health departments.
For more information about Clandestine Drug Labs from Federal Sources in this report, contact the Drug
Enforcement Administration,
202-307-1000
Source: Drug Enforcement Administration
Date of Government Version: 06/08/2011
Search Distance in this report: 1/8 mile from Target Property
CDC Environmental Health Assessments Database
The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, ATSDR, is an agency of the U.S. Public Health
Service. It was established by
Congress in 1980 under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, also
known as the Superfund law. This
law set up a fund to identify and clean up our country’s hazardous waste sites. The Environmental Protection
Agency, EPA, and the
individual states regulate the investigation and clean up of the sites.
Since 1986, ATSDR has been required by law to conduct a public health assessment at each of the sites on
the EPA National Priorities
List. The aim of these evaluations is to find out if people are being exposed to hazardous substances and, if
so, whether that exposure
is harmful and should be stopped or reduced. If appropriate, ATSDR also conducts public health
assessments when petitioned by concerned
individuals. Public health assessments are carried out by environmental and health scientists from ATSDR
and from the states with which
ATSDR has cooperative agreements.
Exposure: As the first step in the evaluation, ATSDR scientists review environmental data to see how much
contamination is at a site,
EXPLANATION AND FOLLOWUP DISCUSSION Report #: 3228409.1s Page 8
where it is, and how people might come into contact with it. Generally, ATSDR does not collect its own
environmental sampling data but
reviews information provided by EPA, other government agencies, businesses, and the public. When there is
not enough environmental
information available, the report will indicate what further sampling data is needed.
Health Effects: If the review of the environmental data shows that people have or could come into contact
with hazardous substances,
ATSDR scientists then evaluate whether or not there will be any harmful effects from these exposures. The
report focuses on public
health, or the health impact on the community as a whole, rather than on individual risks. Again, ATSDR
generally makes use of existing
scientific information, which can include the results of medical, toxicologic and epidemiologic studies and the
data collected in
disease registries. The science of environmental health is still developing, and sometimes scientific
information on the health effects
of certain substances is not available. When this is so, the report will suggest what further research studies
are needed.
Conclusions: The report presents conclusions about the level of health threat, if any, posed by a site and
recommends ways to stop or
reduce exposure in its public health action plan. ATSDR is primarily an advisory agency, so usually these
reports identify what actions
are appropriate to be undertaken by EPA, other responsible parties, or the research or education divisions
of ATSDR. However, if there
is an urgent health threat, ATSDR can issue a public health advisory warning people of the danger. ATSDR
can also authorize health
education or pilot studies of health effects, full-scale epidemiology studies, disease registries, surveillance
studies or research on
specific hazardous substances.
For more information about CDC Environmental Health Assessments in this report, contact the: Center for
Disease Control, 800-232-4636 or
http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/hac/pha/index.asp
Source: Center for Disease Control
Date of Government Version: 11/29/2007
Search Distance in this report: 1/4 mile from Target Property
Active Department of Defense Site Database (DOD)
Over the last 20 years, the Defense Environmental Restoration Program (DERP) has evolved into a mature
program addressing environmental
restoration activities at its active installation, base realignment and closure (BRAC) installation, and formerly
used defense sites
(FUDS). Reducing and managing risk is a central element of the DERP. In its earlier years, the DERP
forcused heavily on the
identification, investigation, and cleanup of land impacted by decades of defense operations and training
activities. As the program
expanded to include historic use of military munitions at its active installations, the program progressed from
study to cleanup of
industrial remediation of past contamination.
The DERP has also included demolition and removing unsafe buildings and structures primarily at former
DoD properties that pose health
risks to personnel and the general public. In all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and 8 U.S. territories, DoD
is working to protect
citizens and our natural resources by restoring public lands. DoD has created two distinct programs within
the DERP to most effectively
address remediation of its sites. The Installation Restoration Program (IRP) primarily addresses sites
impacted by hazardous substances.
These sites are similar sites across the country contaminated from past practices at industrial and
commercial areas, such as municipal
landfills and factories. The IRP is a proven program with successes achieved over the past two decades.
Through the newly established
Military Munitions Response Program (MMRP), DoD can most effectively respond to unexploded ordnance
and military munitions waste at
areas other than operational ranges. In the coming years, DoD will develop the MMRP to mirror the
successes of the IRP.
For more information about Department of Defense Sites in this report, contact the: Department of Defense
Cleanup Office, 800-225-3842
or http://www.dtic.mil/envirodod/COffice/COWebL.htm.
Source: Department of Defense
Date of Government Version: 12/31/2005
Search Distance in this report: 1/4 mile from Target Property
Former Department of Defense Sites Database (FUDS)
Formerly Used Defense Sites (FUDS) as defined by the Defense Environmental Restoration Program
Management Guidance are real
properties that were under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of Defense and owned by, leased by, or
otherwise possessed by the United
States. Located throughout the United States, these properties are now owned by private individuals,
corporations, state and local
governments, federal agencies, and tribal governments. The OSD Cleanup Office is responsible for
programming and budgeting for FUDS
requirements.
The Army is the executive agent for management of FUDS properties, while the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers (USACE) is the day-to-day
executor for all aspects of the program. FUDS project categories include, but are not limited to:
-Hazardous, toxic and radioactive waste (HTRW);
-Management of FUDS properties, while the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) is the dayto-
day executor for all aspects of the program;
EXPLANATION AND FOLLOWUP DISCUSSION Report #: 3228409.1s Page 9
-Containerized HTRW;
-Building demolition and debris removal;
-Potentially responsible party sites;
USACE catalogs all FUDS properties on their site inventory, which details property locations, property
number, a nd status of
potentially hazardous findings. Three phases may be used to determine the restoration process at FUDS
properties: Inventory,
Investigation, and Cleanup. Once the property is confirmed as being formerly used by a defense agency, it is
entered into the FUDS
inventory. If contamination resulting from past Defense practices exists, an investigation must be conducted
to determine the extent of
the contamination and the appropriate response. Once these two phases are completed a cleanup process
will begin to reduce the risk of
human health and the environment, or to improve public safety. Cleanup activities are accomplished based
on priority sites posing the
greatest risks are addressed first.
For more information about Formerly Used Defense Sites in this report, contact the: US Army Corps of
Engineers, 202-528-4285 or
http://hq.environmental.usace.army.mil/programs/fuds/fuds.html.
Source: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Date of Government Version: 12/31/2009
Search Distance in this report: 1/4 mile from Target Property
EDR Proprietary Manufactured Gas Plants
The EDR Proprietary Manufactured Gas Plant Database includes records of coal gas plants (manufactured
gas plants) compiled by EDR’s
researchers. Manufactured gas sites were used in the United States from the 1800’s to 1950’s to produce a
gas that could be distributed
and used as fuel. These plants used whale oil, rosin, coal, or a mixture of coal, oil, and water that also
produced a significant
amount of waste. Many of the byproducts of the gas production, such as coal tar (oily waste containing
volatile and non-volatile
chemicals), sludges, oils and other compounds are potentially hazardous to human health and the
environment. The byproduct from this
process was frequently disposed of directly at the plant site and can remain or spread slowly, serving as a
continuous source of soil
and groundwater contamination.
Source: EDR Inc.
Date of Government Version: 08/28/2009
Search Distance in this report: 1/4 mile from Target Property
Radioactive Material Activity Sites Database (MLTS)
Radioactive Material Activity Sites, also know as the Material Licensing Tracking System (MLTS), is
maintained by the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) and contains a list of sites which possess or use radioactive materials and which are
subject to NRC licensing
requirements. MLTS database lists the NRC’s licenses issued for the operation of nuclear power plants,
nuclear waste repositories or
medical, industrial, or research applications. The NRC is responsible for ensuring the public health and
safety through licensing,
inspection, and environmental reviews for all activities.
For more information about Radioactive Material Activity Site in this report, contact the: Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, 800-368-5642
Source: Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Date of Government Version: 06/21/2011
Search Distance in this report: 1/4 mile from Target Property
STREET AND ADDRESS INFORMATION
(c) 2010 Tele Atlas North America, Inc. All rights reserved. This material is proprietary and the subject of
copyright protection and other intellectual property rights owned by or licensed to Tele Atlas North America,
Inc. The use of this material is subject to the terms of a license agreement. You will be held liable for
any unauthorized copying or disclosure of this material.
EXPLANATION AND FOLLOWUP DISCUSSION Report #: 3228409.1s Page 10
DISCLAIMER, COPYRIGHT AND TRADEMARK NOTICE
Terms, Conditions and Limitations of Liability
This Report contains certain information described herein pertaining solely to the exterior of the target
property,
which information was obtained from a variety of public and other sources reasonably available to
Environmental
Data Resources, Inc. Environmental Data Resources, Inc. does not produce, maintain or verify the
information
contained in these sources; and assumes, without independent investigation, that the information in such
sources
is accurate and complete. The Beneficiary (defined below) may contact the EDR-Certified Partner who
provided
this Report to obtain a list of the sources used to provide this Report. It cannot be concluded from this
Report that
coverage information for the target and surrounding properties does not exist from other sources.
This Report is intended solely for the individual use of the EDR-Certified Partner as part of a service that they
provide to the residential property buyer, seller, listing agent and selling agent ("Beneficiary"), and is not
provided
for the benefit of any third parties (other than Beneficiary).
Any analyses, estimates, ratings or risk codes provided in this Report are provided for illustrative purposes
only,
and are not intended to provide, nor should they be interpreted as providing any facts regarding, or
prediction or
forecast of, any environmental risk for any property. Only a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment
performed by
an environmental professional can provide information regarding the environmental risk for any property.
This
Report is not a replacement for a home inspection. This Report does not provide information pertaining to the
interior of the target property such as, but not limited to: mold, asbestos, lead, radon or other issues.
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the information provided in this Report is not to be construed as legal advice.
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Report #: 3228409.1s Page 11
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Report #: 3228409.1s Page 12
ENVIRONMENTAL RECORDS WITHIN 300 FEET
Sites with Known Contamination Within 300 Feet: No Records Found
Sites are tracked by the government in a variety of databases. Database descriptions can be
found in Section D of this report.
No Leaking Petroleum Storage Tanks were identified.
No Landfills were identified.
No EPA Final Superfund Sites were identified.
No EPA Proposed Superfund Sites (CERCLIS) were identified.
No Hazardous Waste Treatment Storage and Disposal Sites were identified.
No State Hazardous Waste Sites were identified.
No Emergency Response Notification Sites were identified.
Sites with Potential Contamination Within 300 Feet: No Records Found
Sites are tracked by the government in a variety of databases. Database descriptions can be
found in Section D of this report.
No Clandestine Drug Lab Sites from Federal Sources were identified.
No CDC Environmental Health Assessments were identified.
No Active Department of Defense Sites were identified.
No Former Department of Defense Sites were identified.
No Manufactured Gas Plants were identified.
No Radioactive Material Activity Sites were identified.
Report