A borrow pit was dug in a nearby city in the 1970s by the early '80s it had been filled up with general household garbage, construction debris , whatever comes from a nearby asphalt plant and nobody really knows what else. Being that it was a borrow pit filled and covered with 24" of dirt before the federal oversight program in the 1980s, it's unlined, unfenced, unregulated, and the city's done its best to hide it. Meanwhile, downslope, a children's water park was built - and it gets worse, especially the part about the children's water park expanding directly into the plume zone. I need experts in defacto urban landfills to review only the key documents to help me understand what appears to be an exceptionally dangerous situation for children, everyone living around the downslope lake and playing in it and the seniors in a new senior center built right over a methane pocket. The testing seems purposefully inadequate. The state appears to have totally dropped the ball. It stopped being used right before the federal oversight guidelines kicked in. Can experts in geology, urban landfills unlined dumps, leachate plumes, engineering and design records, groundwater testing, etc please offer to look over reports relevant to their specialty? I have spent about a hundred hours looking at reports online and getting general information about all of the numbers in America and around the world of unlined dumps and the problems they create. But I need people who can read these specific reports and give me their best opinions on their adequacy in the specialties I listed above. I am a local NPR member station environment reporter trying to perhaps save lives. Thank you so much.