BK, I am in the land use business myself, and would love to know who you were talking to. Actually, I don't want to know! The BRAC proceedings for these bases are all public documents, including the remediation information. The historical uses at both MCAS El Toro and Tustin were dirty, dirty, dirty - all kinds of fuel, solvents, etc. spilled, leaked and dumped. Part of the process for closing these and reverting them to civilian use is cleaning them up. The devil is in the details. To what standard did they clean them up, and what did the last core samples and monitoring well results reveal? there were large plumes of contaminated groundwater, does anyone know the fate of those?
Anyone really interested should head on down to UCI, the repository for the MCAS Tustin environmental documents.
http://www.bracpmo.navy.mil/bracbases/california/tustin/info_repository.aspx
These documents, which have been archived, should provide some information:
December 2004, Former MCAS Tustin Fact Sheet, OU-1A and OU-1B Remedial Design/Remedial Action
July 2004, Proposed Plan/Draft Remedial Action Plan for Operable Unit 4A Former MCAS Tustin
February 2004, Former MCAS Tustin Fact Sheet Status of Installation Restoration Program Cleanup Activities at OU-1A/OU-1B and Arsenic AOC
August 2003, Proposed Plan/Draft Remedial Action Plan for Operable Unit 1A Former MCAS Tustin
The California Department of Toxic Substances Control, has a website for MCAS Tustin.
http://www.envirostor.dtsc.ca.gov/public/profile_report.asp?global_id=80001203
A report from 9/07 shows contaminated groundwater above acceptable cleanup levels, and clean-up was initiated.
http://www.envirostor.dtsc.ca.gov/regulators/deliverable_documents/7638828873/Prjt_Memo_9-4-07.pdf
A report from 11/07 shows that they are still finding stuff while excavating.
http://www.envirostor.dtsc.ca.gov/r...nts/4877454459/Tustin_Legacy_Memo_11-7-07.pdf
They are actively working the site, and no houses could have been built unless DTSC and the other responsible agencies signed off on the clean-up activities for the impacted area. Does that mean it is pristine? NO. But anyone buying at the site of a former military base who does not do their due diligence deserves what they get, IMHO. If I was going to spend $400k and up for a property there, I'd certainly read the reports!