Got good news. The tester came out and said I have sandy clay and doesn't recommend any sub-base stone.
He did say I could put #57 under the footer to move water but not required.
Also the footer is going thru a part of the yard where a tree was just cut down. Still has roots underground and will need to be backfilled. He recommend sand over #57 or crush run because it drains better and easier to grade.
He also recommended covering the slab in sand to get a level grade. Sand = better drainage in the event water comes in.
Question:
1) Would you still put #57 under the footer?
2) Would you backfill the organic tree roots with sand?
3) Would you add sand to the slab area or just leave compacted soil + vapor barrier?
Question 1 - I'm not sure where the water is going to move to in the bottom of a trench dug in clay - don't bother with the stone.
Question 2 - So the plan is to excavate to remove the tree roots? Thats good. Sand is fine as a backfill material although I prefer a larger aggregate. I don't have an engineering justification - I just feel like sand displaces more easily than stone or gravel.
So up here, what we call gravel is a material that contains a range of aggregate sizes including fines that compacts without voids. I'm aware that the term has a different meaning elsewhere. I like using gravel because it eliminates the possibility of other materials migrating into it such as sand placed over crushed stone.
Question 3 - See previous comments.

I don't like sand because it can wash or subside into voids in adjacent materials. I'd prefer to use a smaller stone that is easier to fine grade rather then sand. If you use a 15 mil vapor barrier, it will hold up fine over stone.