2.
Response
to
Comments
2.9
Individual
Responses
to
Comments
from
Organizations
Consequently,
the
Final
EIR
includes
an
updated
estimation
of
Project
Site
development-related
GHG
emissions
based
on
the
latest
version
of
the
CalEEMod
model.
See
Section
4.F,
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
,
of
Volume
III
of
the
Final
EIR.
BCC-209
[See page
5-204 for the original comment]
Refuse
from
residential,
commercial,
and
industrial
activities
including
shipyard
waste;
construction
rubble;
tires;
and
sewage
were
placed
in
the
landfill
prior
to
cessation
of
operations
in
1967.
A
more
complete
description
of
the
Brisbane
Landfill
is
presented
in
the
Draft
EIR
on
pages
4.G-23
through
4.G-34.
The
type
of
waste,
solid
or
liquid,
by
volume
of
total
waste
has
been
estimated
as
73
percent
solid,
25
percent
inert
fill
such
as
earthquake
rubble
and
soil
used
as
daily
cover
and
2
percent
as
liquid.
See
Master Response 13
for
discussion
regarding
the
remediation
review
and
approval
process
and
master
Response 15
for
discussion
regarding
the
adequacy
of
existing
studies
for
use
in
the
Draft
EIR.
[See page
5-204 for the original comment]
See
Master Response 15
regarding
the
adequacy
of
existing
studies
for
use
in
the
Draft
EIR.
The
statement
cited
in
this
comment
does
not
refer
to
the
report
prepared
on
behalf
of
the
City
of
Brisbane
in
2005
13
,
but
to
CDM’s
subsequent
peer
review
of
existing
studies,
including
those
prepared
subsequent
to
2005
.
[See page
5-204 for the original comment]
See
Master Response 15
for
discussion
of
the
adequacy
of
existing
studies
for
use
in
the
Draft
EIR.
See
Master Response
5
for
discussion
regarding
compliance
with
the
law
as
mitigation
under
CEQA.
[See page
5-205 for the original comment]
The
exposure
pathways
--
ingestion,
inhalation,
and
dermal
contact
--
are
mechanisms
whereby
people
come
into
contact
with
constituents
of
concern.
Specifically,
people
can
be
exposed
to
substances
in
soil,
sediment,
and
dust
by
ingesting
soil
particles,
touching
the
media
or
inhaling
fine
particulates
entrained
in
dust.
Exposure
pathways
are
assessed
in
human
health
risk
assessments
that
are
used
to
develop
site-specific
risk
based
cleanup
goals
and
determine
the
specific
remediation
technologies
to
be
implemented.
As
discussed
in
Master Response 13,
the
RWQCB
and
DTSC
have
the
regulatory
responsibility
to
determine
risk-based
cleanup
goals
and
the
specific
technologies
(including
phytoremediation
if
deemed
appropriate)
that
will
be
employed
to
achieve
those
goals.
BCC-210
BCC-211
BCC-212
13
Camp
Dresser
&
McKee
(CDM),
Final
Report
of
Findings,
Environmental
Engineering
Peer
Review,
Baylands
Remediation
Efforts
,
November
2,
2005.
This
report
can
be
found
as
part
of
the
reference
documents
used
in
preparation
of
the
Brisbane
Baylands
Draft
EIR.
Brisbane
Baylands
Final
EIR
2.9.2-80
May
2015
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