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Most Experienced Sargent Hazardous Waste Management

Environmental Logistics, Inc is the Sargent leader in the collection, transportation, treatment and disposal of hazardous waste and delivers the crucial foundation needed to keep the City of Sargent land and people safe.

Decades Serving Sargent

Hazardous waste can be located in all kinds of Sargent business’s and industries. Hazmat, Inc. is happy to provide City government and business’s of Sargent, California an all inclusive solution for the transportation, treatment, storage and disposal of all hazardous/non-hazardous and universal wastes.

Sargent Hazardous Waste Disposal & Recycling Services

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Sargent was an unincorporated community located at the Santa Clara-San Benito County border. The weight of the community is shown on the Santa Clara County, or north, side of the line. It is 150 feet above mean sea level. It appeared on 1950s Thomas Brothers maps but has dropped off the company’s 21st century maps.

The area can be easily identified by passing motorists on US 101 by the sugar beet loading conveyor along the Union Pacific Railroad track. The conveyor is west of US 101. The feature appears on a variety of railroad maps from the 1930s to present and may have been a passenger train stop at some point in history. The area is named for James P. Sargent (1823–1890) owner of the Rancho Juristac Mexican Land grant. A Sargent Hills and Sargent Creek are also located nearby to the west.

The ZIP Code is 95045 and the community is inside area code 408.

An active oil field with about four operating wells exists about 5.25 miles at 199 degrees off true North from the eastbound SR152 and US101 interchange. The area is called the Sargent Oil Field. The field is located on Tar Creek just north of the Santa Cruz County line. Tar Creek is sometimes called the Spanish equivalent, La Brea Creek, on some historic maps. Latitude and longitude for the oilfield are listed as 36°55′49″N 121°35′11″W / 36.93028°N 121.58639°W / 36.93028; -121.58639.

Exploration dates back to 1886, probably as a result of oil seepages along the La Brea Creek.

Sargent Wikipedia Page