AB 1922,
as amended, Gomez. begin deleteHazardous materials: Los Angeles River: revitalization. end deletebegin insertGreenway Development and Sustainment Act.end insert
Existing law establishes various plans and programs intended to preserve, protect, and rehabilitate lands adjacent to rivers in the state.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would enact the Greenway Development and Sustainment Act, which is intended to promote the development of greenways along rivers in the state, including the development of a greenway along the Los Angeles River. The bill would define the term “greenway” for purposes of the bill, and would authorize a city, county, city and county, or other local government entity to designate lands along a river in its jurisdiction, upon approval of its legislative body by ordinance or resolution, or by incorporating such a designation into an adopted general plan element or adopted river master plan, and to apply for public or private funding available for the development of a greenway in its jurisdiction, to be used in a manner consistent with applicable state laws.
end insertbegin insertExisting law authorizes certain entities and organizations to acquire and hold conservation easements, including tax exempt nonprofit organizations qualified to do business in this state that has as its primary purpose the preservation, protection, or enhancement of land in its natural, scenic, historical, agricultural, forested, open-space or use.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would also authorize such a tax exempt nonprofit organization to acquire and hold a conservation easement if the organization has as its primary purpose the development of a greenway.
end insertExisting law authorizes a local agency, pursuant to specified procedures, to take any action that the local agency determines is necessary, consistent with other state and federal laws, to investigate and clean up a release of hazardous materials in a blighted area within the boundaries of the local agency.
end deleteThis bill would declare the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would encourage the clean up of the Los Angeles River for purposes of redevelopment, restoration, and revitalization.
end deleteVote: majority.
Appropriation: no.
Fiscal committee: begin deleteno end deletebegin insertyesend insert.
State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
(a) The Legislature hereby finds and declares
2all of the following:
3(1) Open-space land is necessary not only for the maintenance
4of the economy of the state, but for, among other purposes, the
5enjoyment of scenic beauty, recreation, and the use and
6preservation of natural resources. Moreover, the growing
7population of the state makes it important that existing open-space
8resources be preserved and well maintained, and that access to
9those resources be ensured for the health benefits and well-being
10of the state’s
population. The preservation of open-space land is
11especially critical in urban areas where the amount of usable
12open-space land is limited.
13(2) Open-space land provides relief from the effects of urban
14congestion and opportunities for relaxation, exercise, community
15interaction, and the observation and appreciation of wildlife, which
16helps to combat both physical and psychological stress. Trees
17located on open-space land also provide shade and help reduce
18ambient temperatures and restore oxygen to the atmosphere.
19(3) Greenways are public infrastructure located along natural
20landscape features such as urban watercourses, which, because
21of their linear structure, help to physically and psychologically
P3 1connect various neighborhoods with one another while providing
2a means of habitat connectivity.
3(4) Greenways can
directly improve the quality of life in
4communities by providing important recreational, open-space
5land, wildlife, flood management, water quality, air quality,
6transportation, emergency response, and urban waterfront
7revitalization benefits to those communities.
8(5) Greenways can foster livable communities by utilizing public
9lands for multiple, complementary purposes, such as placemaking,
10connecting diverse communities, reducing dependence on
11automobiles, expanding nonmotorized transportation networks
12with safer routes to jobs, homes, and schools, encouraging more
13transit-oriented development, and facilitating healthier behaviors
14by providing opportunities for exercise and the maintenance of a
15healthy, active lifestyle.
16(6) Greenways can be complemented and enhanced by installing
17public amenities and public-serving retail and services that provide
18additional access to
historically underserved urban communities.
19Greenways also attract residents and visitors, and increase public
20safety by fostering improved civic vigilance. Other public-private
21partnerships in greenways in cities throughout the world have
22demonstrated the effectiveness and benefits of sustainable and
23successful public-private partnerships.
24(7) Greenways encourage healthier residential communities by
25facilitating development that allows people to live closer to job
26centers and use public transportation alternatives.
27(8) Greenways reduce the amount of parking necessary for
28small businesses because of reduced automobile traffic, encourage
29the development of affordable housing in urban areas, and promote
30walking and cycling and increased community interaction.
31(9) Greenways encourage economic investment and community
32
revitalization by connecting people in new ways.
33(b) The Legislature finds and declares the following with regard
34to the development of a greenway along the Los Angeles River:
35(1) The Los Angeles River is a site that is particularly suited
36for the development of a greenway. A Los Angeles River greenway
37that focuses on public-private partnerships aimed at establishing
38a continuous pedestrian bikeway along the Los Angeles River and
39its key tributaries would foster job creation, economic development,
40and community revitalization.
P4 1(2) A Los Angeles River greenway that establishes a continuous
2pedestrian bikeway along the Los Angeles River and its key
3tributaries would encourage community revitalization by investing
4in an efficient cycling and walking recreational transit route
5following the 51-mile Los Angeles River
corridor. The greenway
6would also connect existing communities along the Los Angeles
7River to a network of parks and multiuse public trails.
8(3) A Los Angeles River greenway would build upon a long
9history of support for a multiuse greenway network along the most
10significant river in the nation’s second largest city. Since the 1980s,
11residents of the Los Angeles area have been advocating for the
12development of a trail network along the Los Angeles River. The
13County of Los Angeles’ Los Angeles River Master Plan in 1996,
14the City of Los Angeles’ Los Angeles River Revitalization Master
15Plan in 2007, the City of Los Angeles Bicycle Plan in 2010, the
16County of Los Angeles Bicycle Plan in 2012, and President
17Obama’s prioritization of the Los Angeles River trail system in
18the President’s America’s Great Outdoors Initiative in 2012 all
19promote the development of a river trail system along the Los
20Angeles River.
21(4) A Los Angeles River greenway would build upon a long
22history of investment by the state in the development of parks and
23trails along the Los Angeles River, including Rio de Los Angeles
24State Park and Los Angeles State Historic Park. Moreover, a Los
25Angeles River greenway would complement the work of key state
26entities, including the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy and
27various other state rivers and mountains conservancies.
28(5) Because of its ability to leverage private investments to
29match commitments of public funds, the development of a Los
30Angeles River greenway by the City of Los Angeles would allow
31the state to concentrate and streamline investments it has already
32made in communities adjacent to the Los Angeles River, and would
33provide a funding model for types of investments funding
34greenways that may be replicated in other priority urban
35waterways in the future.
36(6) Because a greenway is a transportation corridor that
37promotes sustainability, it is eligible for alternative fuels funding,
38transportation funding, and other nontraditional river funding.
39(7) Given the current fiscal constraints facing public agencies,
40it is time for the state to acknowledge and take advantage of the
P5 1ability of private sector investments to sustain public infrastructure
2at all levels. Efforts to promote investment in the Los Angeles River
3trail system should be encouraged to prevent partial, disjointed,
4and inefficient development of the trail system.
5(8) A Los Angeles River greenway would provide a social and
6natural resource amenity that would be complete and accessible
7to the public in the next seven years, and would be a resource that
8could be utilized and enjoyed by children in the Los Angeles
area
9during their childhood years.
10(9) A Los Angeles River greenway would improve the conditions
11of daily life in Los Angeles’ urban communities and would increase
12the value of the state’s investments while providing critically
13needed, tangible urban waterway revitalization in the Los Angeles
14area.
15(10) A greenway should be established in the area encompassing
16the Los Angeles River from its headwaters in the Community of
17Canoga Park to a point of discharge into the Pacific Ocean at San
18Pedro Bay in the City of Long Beach, with a width of one-quarter
19to one mile on both banks and at least one mile upstream along
20both banks of its tributaries, as feasible. Within the City of Los
21Angeles, the greenway could be coterminous with the area included
22in the Los Angeles River Improvement Overlay district.
23(11) The County of
Los Angeles’ Los Angeles River Master Plan
24and the City of Los Angeles’ Los Angeles River Revitalization
25Master Plan call for the development of a greenway along the Los
26Angeles River.
27(c) It is therefore the intent of the Legislature in enacting
28Chapter 10.5 (commencing with Section 5845) of Division 5 of the
29Public Resources Code to promote the development of greenways
30along rivers in the state through public and private partnership,
31including the development of a greenway along the Los Angeles
32River.
begin insertSection 815.3 of the end insertbegin insertCivil Codeend insertbegin insert is amended to read:end insert
Only the following entities or organizations may acquire
35and hold conservation easements:
36(a) A tax-exempt nonprofit organization qualified under Section
37501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and qualified to do business
38in this statebegin delete whichend deletebegin insert thatend insert has as its primary purpose the preservation,
39protection, or enhancement of land in its natural, scenic, historical,
40agricultural, forested,begin delete orend delete open-space condition or usebegin insert,
or the
P6 1development of a greenway, as defined in Section 5846 of the
2Public Resources Codeend insert.
3(b) The state or any city, county, city and county, district, or
4other state or local governmental entity, if otherwise authorized
5to acquire and hold title to real property and if the conservation
6easement is voluntarily conveyed. No local governmental entity
7may condition the issuance of an entitlement for use on the
8applicant’s granting of a conservation easement pursuant to this
9chapter.
10(c) A federally recognized California Native American tribe or
11a nonfederally recognized California Native American tribe that
12is on the contact list maintained by the Native American Heritage
13Commission to protect a California Native American prehistoric,
14archaeological, cultural, spiritual, or ceremonial place, if the
15conservation easement is voluntarily
conveyed.
begin insertSection 65560 of the end insertbegin insertGovernment Codeend insertbegin insert is amended to
17read:end insert
(a) “Local open-space plan” is the open-space element
19of a county or city general plan adopted by the board or council,
20either as the local open-space plan or as the interim local
21open-space plan adopted pursuant to Section 65563.
22(b) “Open-space land” is any parcel or area of land or water that
23is essentially unimproved and devoted to an open-space use as
24defined in this section, and that is designated on a local, regional
25or state open-space plan as any of the following:
26(1) Open space for the preservation of natural resources
27including, but not limited to, areas required for the preservation
28of plant and animal life, including habitat for fish and
wildlife
29species; areas required for ecologic and other scientific study
30purposes; rivers, streams, bays and estuaries; and coastal beaches,
31lakeshores, banks of rivers and streams,begin insert greenways,end insert and watershed
32lands.
33(2) Open space used for the managed production of resources,
34including but not limited to, forest lands, rangeland, agricultural
35lands and areas of economic importance for the production of food
36or fiber; areas required for recharge of groundwater basins; bays,
37estuaries, marshes, rivers and streams which are important for the
38management of commercial fisheries; and areas containing major
39mineral deposits, including those in short supply.
P7 1(3) Open space for outdoor recreation, including but not limited
2to, areas of outstanding scenic, historic and cultural value;
areas
3particularly suited for park and recreation purposes, including
4access to lakeshores, beaches, and rivers and streams; and areas
5begin delete whichend deletebegin insert thatend insert serve as links between major recreation and open-space
6reservations, including utility easements, banks of rivers and
7streams, trails,begin insert greenways,end insert and scenic highway corridors.
8(4) Open space for public health and safety, including, but not
9limited to, areasbegin delete whichend deletebegin insert thatend insert require special management or
10regulation because of
hazardous or special conditions such as
11earthquake fault zones, unstable soil areas, flood plains, watersheds,
12areas presenting high fire risks, areas required for the protection
13of water quality and water reservoirsbegin insert,end insert and areas required for the
14protection and enhancement of air quality.
15(5) Open space in support of the mission of military installations
16that comprises areas adjacent to military installations, military
17training routes, and underlying restricted airspace that can provide
18additional buffer zones to military activities and complement the
19resource values of the military lands.
20(6) Open space for the protection of places, features, and objects
21described in Sections 5097.9 and 5097.993 of the Public Resources
22Code.
begin insertChapter 10.5 (commencing with Section 5845) is added
24to Division 5 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Resources Codeend insertbegin insert, to read:end insert
25
This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the
30Greenway Development and Sustainment Act.
For purposes of this chapter, “greenway” means a
32pedestrian and bicycle, nonmotorized vehicle transportation, and
33recreational travel corridor that meets the following requirements:
34(a) Is separated and protected from shared roadways, parallels
35an urban waterway, and incorporates both ease of access to
36adjacent communities and an array of amenities and services for
37the users of the corridor and nearby communities.
38(b) Is publicly accessible and located on a combination of public
39and private lands, if public access to those lands is provided by
40lands owned in fee simple, leases, or easements.
P8 1(c) Reflects design standards with appropriate widths,
2clearances, setbacks from obstructions, and centerlines protecting
3directional travel, where appropriate.
4(d) Incorporates appropriate landscaping, lighting, public
5amenities, and art.
(a) A city, county, city and county, or other local
7government entity may designate lands along a river in its
8jurisdiction as a greenway, upon approval of its legislative body
9by ordinance or resolution, or by incorporating such a designation
10into an adopted general plan element or an adopted river master
11plan.
12(b) A city, county, city and county, or other local government
13entity may adopt ordinances or resolutions that regulate public
14health and safety or traffic within a designated greenway in its
15jurisdiction.
A city, county, city and county, or other local government
17entity may apply for public or private funding available for the
18development of a greenway in its jurisdiction, and any funds
19secured for that purpose shall be used in a manner consistent with
20applicable state laws. Funding that may be secured for the
21purposes of this chapter is not limited to parkway, riverway, or
22other water-related funds. A city, county, or city and county may
23also seek transportation, alternative fuel, greenhouse gas
24reduction, or other land use funds for the purposes of this chapter.
A city, county, city and county, or other local government
26entity that obtains federal lands access program funding under
27Section 204(a)(1) of Title 23 of the United States Code shall be
28given priority with regard to the provision of state funding for
29greenway development under this chapter.
It is the intent of the Legislature to enact
31legislation that would encourage the clean up of the Los Angeles
32River for purposes of redevelopment, restoration, and revitalization.
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