AB 691, as amended, Muratsuchi. State lands: granted trust lands: sea level rise.
Existing law vests with the State Lands Commission control over specified state lands, including tidelands and submerged lands. Existing law grants to various local entities the right, title, and interest of the state in and to certain tidelands and submerged lands in trust generally for purposes of commerce, navigation, and fisheries, and for other public trust purposes.
This bill would provide that addressing the impacts from sea level rise for all of its legislatively granted public trustbegin insert landsend insert shall be among the management priorities of a local trustee, as defined. The bill would require a local trustee whose gross public trust revenues exceed $250,000 to prepare and submit to the commission, no later than July 1, 2019, except as
provided,begin delete a descriptive planend deletebegin insert
an assessmentend insert of how it proposes to address sea level rise. The bill would permit, but not require, a local trustee whose gross public trust revenues are $250,000 or less to prepare and submitbegin delete a planend delete to the commissionbegin insert an assessmentend insert. The bill would require a local trustee to consider and use relevant information from specified reports on sea level rise in preparing thebegin delete planend deletebegin insert assessmentend insert. The bill would require that the commission make those begin deleteplansend deletebegin insert
assessmentsend insert available to the public on its Internet Web Site, and send electronic copies to certain other public entities.
By adding to the duties of local agencies that are local trustees of granted public trust lands, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(a) Upon admission to the United States, and as incident of its
4sovereignty, the State of California received title to the tidelands,
5submerged lands, and beds of navigable waterways within its
6borders to be held subject to the public trust doctrine for statewide
7public purposes, including commerce, navigation, fisheries,
8preservation of lands in their natural state, open space, wildlife
9habitat, water-oriented recreation, and other recognized public
10trust uses.
11(b) The state has made grants of public trust lands to over 80
12local
public entities, each of which manages the state’s public trust
13lands as trustee pursuant to the common law public trust doctrine,
14statutory grants, the California Constitution, and other laws
15governing the trust and the trustee’s fiduciary responsibilities.
16(c) A local trustee of granted public trust lands is charged with
17managing the state’s granted public trust lands on behalf of the
18state for the benefit of all the people of California.
19(d) As part of its fiduciary duty, a local trustee of granted public
20trust lands is required to take reasonable steps under the
21circumstances to take and keep control of and preserve the trust
22property.
23(e) The effects of climate change and sea level rise will have
24enormous
implications for the state’s economic and social future,
25and have the potential to have a wide range of impacts to critical
P3 1infrastructure, such as schools, roads, hospitals, emergency
2
facilities, wastewater treatment plants, airports, ports, and energy
3facilities.
4(f) Coastal counties in California are home to approximately 32
5million people.
6(g) The coastal economy contributes more than $50 billion
7annually to the State of California.
8(h) Port activities in California generate an estimated $7 billion
9in state and local tax revenues annually and employ more than
10one-half million people in California. Nationwide more than two
11million jobs are connected to California ports.
12(i) In 2007, more than 40 percent of the total containerized
13cargo entering the United States arrived
at California ports, and
14almost 30 percent of the nation’s exports left from California ports.
15(j) In 2002, cargo operations shutdown at west coast ports for
1610 days, and the estimated loss to the national economy was $1
17billion per day.
18 (i)
end delete
19begin insert(k)end insert Research funded by the state has shown that a 55-inch sea
20level rise, with a 100-year storm event along the California coast,
21places approximately 480,000 people (based on the population in
222009) and nearly $100 billion of property
at risk.
23(j)
end delete
24begin insert(l)end insert Coastal habitats, including wetlands and beaches, provide
25important ecological, recreational, and scenic functions and values,
26which are threatened by sea level rise, unless actions are taken to
27effectively manage these habitats and adjacent lands.
28(k)
end delete
29begin insert(m)end insert Many state
entities, such as the Governor’s Office of
30Planning and Research, the Strategic Growth Council, the Ocean
31Protection Council, the San Francisco Bay Conservation and
32Development Commission, the California Coastal Commission,
33and the State Lands Commission have supported efforts to develop
34tools and to increase accessibility to existing state data, and to
35provide additional data and tools to help local, regional, and state
36agencies make informed decisionsbegin insert about sea level riseend insert.
37(l) In 2007, more than 40 percent of the total containerized cargo
38entering the United States arrived
at California ports, and almost
3930 percent of the nation’s exports left from California ports.
P4 1(m) In 2002, cargo operations shut down at West Coast ports
2for 10 days, and the estimated loss to the national economy was
3$1 billion per day.
4(n) The use of revenues received from trust lands and trust assets
5by a local trustee of granted public trust lands is limited by the
6statutory grant, the public trust doctrine, and other laws governing
7the trust. An evaluation of the impacts of sea level rise on granted
8public trust lands is directly related to the operation and
9management of these resources managed on behalf of the state by
10local trustees and is, therefore, a purpose consistent with the
public
11trust for commerce, navigation, and fisheries, and the applicable
12statutory grants.
13(o) Because a local trustee of granted public trust lands holds
14and manages its public trust property, including the lands and
15revenue derived from that property, as a state asset for the benefit
16of the people of California and cannot use the trust corpus for
17general municipal purposes or other purposes not consistent with
18the public trust doctrine and its statutory grant, and because the
19State Lands Commission is provided with a mechanism in this act
20to exempt a local trustee that does not have sufficient state funds,
21either through the trust or other existing funding mechanisms, to
22pay for the cost ofbegin delete developing a sea level action planend deletebegin insert
assessing the
23impacts of sea level riseend insert, Section 6311.5 of the Public Resources
24Code, as added by this act, will not impose costs on local
25governments.
Section 6311.5 is added to the Public Resources Code,
27to read:
(a) For the purposes of this section, the following
29terms shall have the following meanings:
30(1) “Local trustee” means a local trustee of granted public trust
31lands that is a county, city, or district, including water, sanitary,
32regional park, port, or harbor district, or any other local political
33or corporate subdivision that has been granted public trust lands
34through a legislative grant.
35(2) “Gross public trust revenues” means those gross revenues
36that are subject to subdivision (b) of Section 6306.
37(b) Addressing the impacts from sea level
rise for all of its
38legislatively granted public trust lands pursuant to this section shall
39be among the management priorities of a local trustee. The
40geographic scope of a local trustee’s assessment of the impacts
P5 1from sea level rise is not required to go beyond the boundaries of
2the local trustee’s granted public trust lands.
3(c) A local trusteebegin insert,end insert whose gross public trust revenues exceed
4two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000), shall prepare and
5submit to the commission, no later than July 1, 2019,begin delete a
6descriptiveend deletebegin deleteplanend deletebegin insert
an assessmentend insert of how the local trustee proposes
7to address sea level rise. A local trustee whose gross public trust
8revenues are two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) or less
9may, but is not requiredbegin delete,end deletebegin deletetoend deletebegin insert to,end insert prepare and submitbegin delete a planend delete to the
10commissionbegin insert an assessmentend insert.
11(d) begin delete(1)end deletebegin delete end deleteFor
the purposes of subdivision (c), a local trustee shall
12consider and use relevant information from the 2009 California
13Climate Adaptation Strategy prepared by the Natural Resources
14Agency, the Report on Sea Level Rise Preparedness prepared by
15the State Lands Commission, the Sea-Level Rise for the Coasts of
16California, Oregon, and Washington: Past, Present, and Future, a
17report prepared by the National Academy of Sciences, the
18Resolution of the California Ocean Protection Council on
19Sea-Level Rise, and the State of California Sea-Level Rise Interim
20Guidance Document, any subsequent updates to those reports that
21become available six months prior to the date thebegin delete planend deletebegin insert assessmentend insert
22 is required to be submitted to the commission. A local
trustee’s
23begin delete planend deletebegin insert assessmentend insert prepared pursuant to subdivision (c) shall include
24all of the following:
25(2)
end delete
26begin insert(1)end insert An assessment of the impact of a range of sea level rise on
27granted public trust lands, as described in the Resolution of the
28California Ocean Protection Council on Sea-level Rise and the
29latest version of the State of California Sea-Level Rise Interim
30Guidance Document.
31(3)
end delete
32begin insert(2)end insert Maps showing the areas that may be affected by sea level
33rise in the years 2030, 2050, and 2100. These maps shall include
34the potential impacts of 100-year storm events. A local trustee may
35rely on appropriate maps generated by other entities.
36(4)
end delete
37begin insert(3)end insert An estimate of the financial cost of the impact of sea level
38rise on granted public trust lands. The estimate shall consider, but
39is not limited to, the potential cost of repair of damage to and the
P6 1value
of lost use of improvements and land, and the anticipated
2cost to prevent or mitigate potential damage.
3(5)
end delete
4begin insert(4)end insert A description of how the local trustee proposes to protect
5and preserve natural and manmade resources and facilities located,
6or proposed to be located, on trust lands and operated in connection
7with the use of the trust lands.
8(e) In addressing the impacts from sea level rise, a local trustee
9shall collaborate with its lessees, appropriate local, state, and
10federal agencies, and other users of the granted public trust lands.
11(f) A local trustee that preparesbegin delete a planend deletebegin insert an assessmentend insert pursuant
12to subdivision (c) shall submit a copy to the commission in hard
13copy and electronic form. The commission shall make thebegin delete planend delete
14begin insert assessmentend insert available to the public on its Internet Web Site and,
15for informational purposes, shall send an electronic copy to each
16member of the Climate Action Team, the climate change program
17manager in the office of the Secretary for Environmental
18Protection, and the Governor’s Office of Planning and Research.
19(g) The commission shall exempt a local trustee of granted
20public trust lands from this section if the commission finds either
21of the following:
22(1) The local trustee’s public trust lands are not subject to sea
23level rise by 2100, based upon the highest projections in the most
24recent version of the State of California Sea-Level Rise Guidance
25Document.
26(2) The cost to providebegin delete a descriptionend deletebegin insert
an assessmentend insert of how the
27local trustee proposes to address the impacts of sea level rise
28substantially outweighs the benefit the action would have in
29preventing the potential economic and environmental harms
30associated with sea level rise on the local trustee’s granted public
31trust lands.
32(h) The commission shall exempt a local trustee from this section
33begin deleteor grant a deadline extension to the July 1, 2019, deadline
34forend deletebegin deletesubmission of the plan end deleteif the revenues derived from its granted
35public trust lands and assets subject to subdivision (b) of Section
366306 or funding made available to it from other sources is not
37sufficient to pay for the cost ofbegin delete addressingend deletebegin insert
assessingend insert the impacts
38of sea level rise on granted public trust land and providingbegin delete a
39description ofend deletebegin deletethese effortsend deletebegin insert this informationend insert to the commission.
P7 1(i) The commission shall consider a local trustee’s request for
2an exemption pursuant to subdivision (g) or (h) at a properly
3noticed commission meeting if the request is made before
4November 1, 2018.
5(j) Other than submission of thebegin delete planend deletebegin insert
assessmentend insert required by
6subdivision (c), this section does not require a local trustee to
7implement any specific actions to address sea level rise pursuant
8to this section.
9(k) Nothing in this section shall be construed to conflict with
10any federal regulations governing sea level rise.
begin insert end insert No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant
12to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
13the costs incurred by a local agency to pay for the program of level
14of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section
1517556 of the Government Code, will be paid solely from the
16revenues derived from the public trust lands and assets that are
17granted to that local agency by the state.
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