BILL NUMBER: AB 1088 INTRODUCED
BILL TEXT
INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Muratsuchi
FEBRUARY 22, 2013
An act to amend Section 65007 of the Government Code, relating to
land use.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
AB 1088, as introduced, Muratsuchi. Planning and Zoning Law.
The Planning and Zoning Law requires a city or county general plan
to include specified mandatory elements, including a land use
element that designates the proposed general distribution and general
location and extent of the uses of the land for various purposes and
a conservation element that considers, among other things, the
effect of development within the jurisdiction, as described in the
land use element, on natural resources located on public lands. The
land use element is required to identify areas that are subject to
flooding, and the conservation element may also cover, among other
things, flood control.
This bill would make a technical, nonsubstantive change to a
provision of the Planning and Zoning Law.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no.
State-mandated local program: no.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. Section 65007 of the Government Code is amended to
read:
65007. As used in this title, the following terms have the
following meanings, unless the context requires otherwise:
(a) "Adequate progress" means all of the following:
(1) The total project scope, schedule, and cost of the completed
flood protection system have been developed to meet the appropriate
standard of protection.
(2) (A) Revenues that are sufficient to fund each year of the
project schedule developed in paragraph (1) have been identified and,
in any given year and consistent with that schedule, at least 90
percent of the revenues scheduled to be received by that year have
been appropriated and are currently being expended.
(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for any year in which state
funding is not appropriated consistent with an agreement between a
state agency and a local flood management agency, the Central Valley
Flood Protection Board may find that the local flood management
agency is making adequate progress in working toward the completion
of the flood protection system.
(3) Critical features of the flood protection system are under
construction, and each critical feature is progressing as indicated
by the actual expenditure of the construction budget funds.
(4) The city or county has not been responsible for a significant
delay in the completion of the system.
(5) The local flood management agency shall provide the Department
of Water Resources and the Central Valley Flood Protection Board
with the information specified in this subdivision sufficient to
determine substantial completion of the required flood protection.
The local flood management agency shall annually report to the
Central Valley Flood Protection Board on the efforts in working
toward completion of the flood protection system.
(b) "Central Valley Flood Protection Plan" has the same meaning as
that set forth in Section 9612 of the Water Code.
(c) "Developed area" has the same meaning as that set forth in
Section 59.1 of Title 44 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
(d) "Flood hazard zone" means an area subject to flooding that is
delineated as either a special hazard area or an area of moderate
hazard on an official flood insurance rate map issued by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency. The identification of flood hazard zones
does not imply that areas outside the flood hazard zones, or uses
permitted within flood hazard zones, will be free from flooding or
flood damage.
(e) "National Federal Emergency Management Agency standard of
flood protection" means the level of flood protection that is
necessary to withstand flooding that has a 1-in-100 chance of
occurring in any given year using criteria developed by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency for application in the National Flood
Insurance Program.
(f) "Nonurbanized area" means a developed area or an area outside
a developed area in which there are fewer than 10,000 residents that
is not an urbanizing area.
(g) "Project levee" means any a
levee that is part of the facilities of the State Plan of Flood
Control.
(h) "Sacramento-San Joaquin Valley" means lands in the bed or
along or near the banks of the Sacramento River or San Joaquin River,
or their tributaries or connected therewith, or upon any land
adjacent thereto, or within the overflow basins thereof, or upon land
susceptible to overflow therefrom. The Sacramento-San Joaquin Valley
does not include lands lying within the Tulare Lake basin, including
the Kings River.
(i) "State Plan of Flood Control" has the same meaning as that set
forth in subdivision (j) of Section 5096.805 of the Public Resources
Code.
(j) "Tulare Lake basin" means the Tulare Lake Hydrologic Region as
defined in the California Water Plan Update 2009, prepared by the
Department of Water Resources pursuant to Chapter 1 (commencing with
Section 10004) of Part 1.5 of Division 6 of the Water Code.
(k) "Undetermined risk area" means an urban or urbanizing area
within a moderate flood hazard zone, as delineated on an official
flood insurance rate map issued by the Federal Emergency Management
Agency, which has not been determined to have an urban level of
protection.
(l) "Urban area" means a developed area in which there are 10,000
residents or more.
(m) "Urbanizing area" means a developed area or an area outside a
developed area that is planned or anticipated to have 10,000
residents or more within the next 10 years.
(n) "Urban level of flood protection" means the level of
protection that is necessary to withstand flooding that has a
1-in-200 chance of occurring in any given year using criteria
consistent with, or developed by, the Department of Water Resources.
"Urban level of flood protection" shall not mean shallow flooding or
flooding from local drainage that meets the criteria of the national
Federal Emergency Management Agency standard of flood protection.