California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2287 Compare Versions

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1-Assembly Bill No. 2287 CHAPTER 208 An act to amend Sections 36971, 36972, 36979, and 36990 of, to amend the heading of Article 4 (commencing with Section 36990) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of, and to repeal Article 3 (commencing with Section 36980) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of, the Public Resources Code, relating to ocean resources. [ Approved by Governor August 29, 2022. Filed with Secretary of State August 29, 2022. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2287, Stone. California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000.Existing law, the California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000, authorizes the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency to enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation to establish a trust to be known as the California Ocean Trust to seek and provide funding for ocean resource science projects and to encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science. Existing law requires the secretary to report to the Legislature on or before September 1, 2002, on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.This bill would rename the trust to the California Ocean Science Trust and make conforming changes. The bill would authorize the trust to administer grants and expenditures of the trust for specified purposes from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust. The bill would authorize the trust to engage with scientific experts for the purpose of gaining knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for specified topics that are relevant to state agencies and departments, as provided. The bill would repeal the provision requiring the secretary to report on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 36971 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36971. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Pacific Ocean and its rich and varied resources provide great environmental, economic, aesthetic, recreational, health, educational, and scientific benefits to the people of California and the nation. The 840-mile coastline and ocean enriches us through a marine economy of over $44 billion, in 2012 dollars, annually.(b) Much of the quality of life and economic vibrancy supported by the states ocean resources depends on successful management of those resources, and successful management depends on an adequate understanding of the natural, ecological, oceanographic, and coastal processes and their interactions with varied human activities, including the impacts of climate change.(c) The state is working to maintain and increase the benefits of its ocean resources to the public; a goal that increases the need for sound management and greater practical understanding of the states ocean and coastal resources.(d) Although California is making progress in ocean management efforts, unsolved existing challenges also point to the need for greater improvements in management and the basic information needed for sound management. Examples of existing challenges include depressed populations of many species that are the targets of state and federally managed fisheries, pollution that results in beach and fishery closures, dredging and dredge spoils disposal necessary to keep the states ports competitive, changing ocean chemistry and ecological impacts resulting from climate change, and coastal erosion that threatens structures and reduces the quality of beaches.(e) Beginning in 2006, California has developed and periodically updated California Climate Change Assessments that assess the impacts and risks from climate change and identify potential solutions focused on integrated action by California.(f) As direct and indirect social, cultural, and economic impacts of climate change continue to amplify and worsen, governance across multiple government sectors, such as infrastructure, natural ecosystem protection, agriculture and aquaculture, and many others, will require a higher degree of coordination relative to developing new research and approaches for effective action. (g) State and federal agencies with ocean and coastal resource management responsibility often lack basic information on which to base decisions, and many management issues are broader than the mandates of individual agencies, and existing means for coordinating agency efforts need to be improved. The result can be ad hoc, short-term management decisions based on inadequate information.(h) California has a wealth of outstanding public and private marine science institutions that have increased their commitments to excellence in applied ocean resource science. Approximately one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in current, recent, or planned marine science projects funded by the federal government, foundations, the University of California and California State University systems, and private institutions could be of great benefit to the states coastal and ocean resource management agencies.(i) The obstacles to collaborative efforts involving those institutions and agencies include all of the following:(1) Inadequate coordination among marine science institutions.(2) Inadequate guidance from management agencies about information needs for management.(3) Important gaps in information, duplication of effort, missed opportunities, and unusable information due to the lack of standardized and coordinated information management techniques. The circumstances and needs identified in the findings in this section are among those recognized in this chapter and in the 1997 report prepared by the Resources Agency entitled Californias Ocean Resources: An Agenda for the Future. This chapter is intended to address some of the basic objectives of that report.SEC. 2. Section 36972 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36972. The Legislature further finds that it is the policy of the state to do all of the following:(a) Ensure adequate coordination of ocean resources management science among state, regional, and federal agencies and marine science institutions, including, but not limited to, science related to climate change mitigation and adaptation.(b) Ensure the most efficient and effective use of state resources devoted to ocean resource management science and encourage the contribution of federal and nongovernmental resources.(c) Advance applied ocean science, graduate-level education, and technology development to meet current and future California ocean resource management needs.SEC. 3. Section 36979 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36979. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) Ocean resources means all living and nonliving resources found in the Pacific Ocean and its contiguous saline or brackish bays and estuaries.(b) Trust means the California Ocean Science Trust authorized by Section 36990.(c) Trustees means the trustees of the trust.SEC. 4. Article 3 (commencing with Section 36980) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of the Public Resources Code is repealed.SEC. 5. The heading of Article 4 (commencing with Section 36990) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read: Article 4. California Ocean Science TrustSEC. 6. Section 36990 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36990. (a) The Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency may enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation with broad experience as the trustee of public funds, court-ordered mitigation funds, or other funds used to assist public agencies in carrying out their responsibilities to establish a nongovernmental trust, to be known as the California Ocean Science Trust.(b) The purposes of the trust shall be all of the following:(1) To seek funds for California ocean resource science projects, emphasizing the development of new funding sources.(2) To fund California ocean resource science projects that help fulfill the missions of the states ocean resource management agencies.(3) To encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science to deliver actionable science solutions that accelerate equitable climate change adaptation.(4) To encourage graduate education programs, training, and workforce development opportunities in management-oriented ocean resource science in public and private universities and colleges in California.(5) To encourage new technologies that reduce the cost, increase the amount, or improve the quality of ocean resource management information.(6) To promote more effective coordination of California ocean resource science useful to management agencies.(c) The trust may administer grants and expenditures of the trust for purposes consistent with this chapter from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust.(d) (1) For the purpose of developing and providing peer reviews, technical guidance, or scientific reports and analyses to state agencies and departments with relevant need, the trust may engage with scientific experts through convenings, including panels, workshops, or symposia, to gain knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for topics consistent with subdivision (b).(2) As funding allows, the trust shall develop an annual list of topics, consistent with subdivision (b), that the trust will undertake to deliver the content pursuant to paragraph (1) to state agencies and departments.
1+Enrolled August 12, 2022 Passed IN Senate August 08, 2022 Passed IN Assembly August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2022 Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2287Introduced by Assembly Member Stone(Coauthor: Assembly Member Ting)(Coauthor: Senator Laird)February 16, 2022 An act to amend Sections 36971, 36972, 36979, and 36990 of, to amend the heading of Article 4 (commencing with Section 36990) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of, and to repeal Article 3 (commencing with Section 36980) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of, the Public Resources Code, relating to ocean resources. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2287, Stone. California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000.Existing law, the California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000, authorizes the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency to enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation to establish a trust to be known as the California Ocean Trust to seek and provide funding for ocean resource science projects and to encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science. Existing law requires the secretary to report to the Legislature on or before September 1, 2002, on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.This bill would rename the trust to the California Ocean Science Trust and make conforming changes. The bill would authorize the trust to administer grants and expenditures of the trust for specified purposes from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust. The bill would authorize the trust to engage with scientific experts for the purpose of gaining knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for specified topics that are relevant to state agencies and departments, as provided. The bill would repeal the provision requiring the secretary to report on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 36971 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36971. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Pacific Ocean and its rich and varied resources provide great environmental, economic, aesthetic, recreational, health, educational, and scientific benefits to the people of California and the nation. The 840-mile coastline and ocean enriches us through a marine economy of over $44 billion, in 2012 dollars, annually.(b) Much of the quality of life and economic vibrancy supported by the states ocean resources depends on successful management of those resources, and successful management depends on an adequate understanding of the natural, ecological, oceanographic, and coastal processes and their interactions with varied human activities, including the impacts of climate change.(c) The state is working to maintain and increase the benefits of its ocean resources to the public; a goal that increases the need for sound management and greater practical understanding of the states ocean and coastal resources.(d) Although California is making progress in ocean management efforts, unsolved existing challenges also point to the need for greater improvements in management and the basic information needed for sound management. Examples of existing challenges include depressed populations of many species that are the targets of state and federally managed fisheries, pollution that results in beach and fishery closures, dredging and dredge spoils disposal necessary to keep the states ports competitive, changing ocean chemistry and ecological impacts resulting from climate change, and coastal erosion that threatens structures and reduces the quality of beaches.(e) Beginning in 2006, California has developed and periodically updated California Climate Change Assessments that assess the impacts and risks from climate change and identify potential solutions focused on integrated action by California.(f) As direct and indirect social, cultural, and economic impacts of climate change continue to amplify and worsen, governance across multiple government sectors, such as infrastructure, natural ecosystem protection, agriculture and aquaculture, and many others, will require a higher degree of coordination relative to developing new research and approaches for effective action. (g) State and federal agencies with ocean and coastal resource management responsibility often lack basic information on which to base decisions, and many management issues are broader than the mandates of individual agencies, and existing means for coordinating agency efforts need to be improved. The result can be ad hoc, short-term management decisions based on inadequate information.(h) California has a wealth of outstanding public and private marine science institutions that have increased their commitments to excellence in applied ocean resource science. Approximately one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in current, recent, or planned marine science projects funded by the federal government, foundations, the University of California and California State University systems, and private institutions could be of great benefit to the states coastal and ocean resource management agencies.(i) The obstacles to collaborative efforts involving those institutions and agencies include all of the following:(1) Inadequate coordination among marine science institutions.(2) Inadequate guidance from management agencies about information needs for management.(3) Important gaps in information, duplication of effort, missed opportunities, and unusable information due to the lack of standardized and coordinated information management techniques. The circumstances and needs identified in the findings in this section are among those recognized in this chapter and in the 1997 report prepared by the Resources Agency entitled Californias Ocean Resources: An Agenda for the Future. This chapter is intended to address some of the basic objectives of that report.SEC. 2. Section 36972 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36972. The Legislature further finds that it is the policy of the state to do all of the following:(a) Ensure adequate coordination of ocean resources management science among state, regional, and federal agencies and marine science institutions, including, but not limited to, science related to climate change mitigation and adaptation.(b) Ensure the most efficient and effective use of state resources devoted to ocean resource management science and encourage the contribution of federal and nongovernmental resources.(c) Advance applied ocean science, graduate-level education, and technology development to meet current and future California ocean resource management needs.SEC. 3. Section 36979 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36979. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) Ocean resources means all living and nonliving resources found in the Pacific Ocean and its contiguous saline or brackish bays and estuaries.(b) Trust means the California Ocean Science Trust authorized by Section 36990.(c) Trustees means the trustees of the trust.SEC. 4. Article 3 (commencing with Section 36980) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of the Public Resources Code is repealed.SEC. 5. The heading of Article 4 (commencing with Section 36990) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read: Article 4. California Ocean Science TrustSEC. 6. Section 36990 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36990. (a) The Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency may enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation with broad experience as the trustee of public funds, court-ordered mitigation funds, or other funds used to assist public agencies in carrying out their responsibilities to establish a nongovernmental trust, to be known as the California Ocean Science Trust.(b) The purposes of the trust shall be all of the following:(1) To seek funds for California ocean resource science projects, emphasizing the development of new funding sources.(2) To fund California ocean resource science projects that help fulfill the missions of the states ocean resource management agencies.(3) To encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science to deliver actionable science solutions that accelerate equitable climate change adaptation.(4) To encourage graduate education programs, training, and workforce development opportunities in management-oriented ocean resource science in public and private universities and colleges in California.(5) To encourage new technologies that reduce the cost, increase the amount, or improve the quality of ocean resource management information.(6) To promote more effective coordination of California ocean resource science useful to management agencies.(c) The trust may administer grants and expenditures of the trust for purposes consistent with this chapter from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust.(d) (1) For the purpose of developing and providing peer reviews, technical guidance, or scientific reports and analyses to state agencies and departments with relevant need, the trust may engage with scientific experts through convenings, including panels, workshops, or symposia, to gain knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for topics consistent with subdivision (b).(2) As funding allows, the trust shall develop an annual list of topics, consistent with subdivision (b), that the trust will undertake to deliver the content pursuant to paragraph (1) to state agencies and departments.
22
3- Assembly Bill No. 2287 CHAPTER 208 An act to amend Sections 36971, 36972, 36979, and 36990 of, to amend the heading of Article 4 (commencing with Section 36990) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of, and to repeal Article 3 (commencing with Section 36980) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of, the Public Resources Code, relating to ocean resources. [ Approved by Governor August 29, 2022. Filed with Secretary of State August 29, 2022. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2287, Stone. California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000.Existing law, the California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000, authorizes the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency to enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation to establish a trust to be known as the California Ocean Trust to seek and provide funding for ocean resource science projects and to encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science. Existing law requires the secretary to report to the Legislature on or before September 1, 2002, on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.This bill would rename the trust to the California Ocean Science Trust and make conforming changes. The bill would authorize the trust to administer grants and expenditures of the trust for specified purposes from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust. The bill would authorize the trust to engage with scientific experts for the purpose of gaining knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for specified topics that are relevant to state agencies and departments, as provided. The bill would repeal the provision requiring the secretary to report on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Enrolled August 12, 2022 Passed IN Senate August 08, 2022 Passed IN Assembly August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2022 Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2287Introduced by Assembly Member Stone(Coauthor: Assembly Member Ting)(Coauthor: Senator Laird)February 16, 2022 An act to amend Sections 36971, 36972, 36979, and 36990 of, to amend the heading of Article 4 (commencing with Section 36990) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of, and to repeal Article 3 (commencing with Section 36980) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of, the Public Resources Code, relating to ocean resources. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2287, Stone. California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000.Existing law, the California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000, authorizes the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency to enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation to establish a trust to be known as the California Ocean Trust to seek and provide funding for ocean resource science projects and to encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science. Existing law requires the secretary to report to the Legislature on or before September 1, 2002, on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.This bill would rename the trust to the California Ocean Science Trust and make conforming changes. The bill would authorize the trust to administer grants and expenditures of the trust for specified purposes from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust. The bill would authorize the trust to engage with scientific experts for the purpose of gaining knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for specified topics that are relevant to state agencies and departments, as provided. The bill would repeal the provision requiring the secretary to report on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Assembly Bill No. 2287 CHAPTER 208
5+ Enrolled August 12, 2022 Passed IN Senate August 08, 2022 Passed IN Assembly August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 21, 2022 Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2022
66
7- Assembly Bill No. 2287
7+Enrolled August 12, 2022
8+Passed IN Senate August 08, 2022
9+Passed IN Assembly August 11, 2022
10+Amended IN Senate June 21, 2022
11+Amended IN Assembly May 19, 2022
12+Amended IN Assembly March 28, 2022
813
9- CHAPTER 208
14+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
15+
16+ Assembly Bill
17+
18+No. 2287
19+
20+Introduced by Assembly Member Stone(Coauthor: Assembly Member Ting)(Coauthor: Senator Laird)February 16, 2022
21+
22+Introduced by Assembly Member Stone(Coauthor: Assembly Member Ting)(Coauthor: Senator Laird)
23+February 16, 2022
1024
1125 An act to amend Sections 36971, 36972, 36979, and 36990 of, to amend the heading of Article 4 (commencing with Section 36990) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of, and to repeal Article 3 (commencing with Section 36980) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of, the Public Resources Code, relating to ocean resources.
12-
13- [ Approved by Governor August 29, 2022. Filed with Secretary of State August 29, 2022. ]
1426
1527 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1628
1729 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1830
1931 AB 2287, Stone. California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000.
2032
2133 Existing law, the California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000, authorizes the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency to enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation to establish a trust to be known as the California Ocean Trust to seek and provide funding for ocean resource science projects and to encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science. Existing law requires the secretary to report to the Legislature on or before September 1, 2002, on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.This bill would rename the trust to the California Ocean Science Trust and make conforming changes. The bill would authorize the trust to administer grants and expenditures of the trust for specified purposes from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust. The bill would authorize the trust to engage with scientific experts for the purpose of gaining knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for specified topics that are relevant to state agencies and departments, as provided. The bill would repeal the provision requiring the secretary to report on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.
2234
2335 Existing law, the California Ocean Resources Stewardship Act of 2000, authorizes the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency to enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation to establish a trust to be known as the California Ocean Trust to seek and provide funding for ocean resource science projects and to encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science. Existing law requires the secretary to report to the Legislature on or before September 1, 2002, on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.
2436
2537 This bill would rename the trust to the California Ocean Science Trust and make conforming changes. The bill would authorize the trust to administer grants and expenditures of the trust for specified purposes from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust. The bill would authorize the trust to engage with scientific experts for the purpose of gaining knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for specified topics that are relevant to state agencies and departments, as provided. The bill would repeal the provision requiring the secretary to report on the steps taken to ensure adequate coordination of ocean resource management science.
2638
2739 ## Digest Key
2840
2941 ## Bill Text
3042
3143 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 36971 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36971. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Pacific Ocean and its rich and varied resources provide great environmental, economic, aesthetic, recreational, health, educational, and scientific benefits to the people of California and the nation. The 840-mile coastline and ocean enriches us through a marine economy of over $44 billion, in 2012 dollars, annually.(b) Much of the quality of life and economic vibrancy supported by the states ocean resources depends on successful management of those resources, and successful management depends on an adequate understanding of the natural, ecological, oceanographic, and coastal processes and their interactions with varied human activities, including the impacts of climate change.(c) The state is working to maintain and increase the benefits of its ocean resources to the public; a goal that increases the need for sound management and greater practical understanding of the states ocean and coastal resources.(d) Although California is making progress in ocean management efforts, unsolved existing challenges also point to the need for greater improvements in management and the basic information needed for sound management. Examples of existing challenges include depressed populations of many species that are the targets of state and federally managed fisheries, pollution that results in beach and fishery closures, dredging and dredge spoils disposal necessary to keep the states ports competitive, changing ocean chemistry and ecological impacts resulting from climate change, and coastal erosion that threatens structures and reduces the quality of beaches.(e) Beginning in 2006, California has developed and periodically updated California Climate Change Assessments that assess the impacts and risks from climate change and identify potential solutions focused on integrated action by California.(f) As direct and indirect social, cultural, and economic impacts of climate change continue to amplify and worsen, governance across multiple government sectors, such as infrastructure, natural ecosystem protection, agriculture and aquaculture, and many others, will require a higher degree of coordination relative to developing new research and approaches for effective action. (g) State and federal agencies with ocean and coastal resource management responsibility often lack basic information on which to base decisions, and many management issues are broader than the mandates of individual agencies, and existing means for coordinating agency efforts need to be improved. The result can be ad hoc, short-term management decisions based on inadequate information.(h) California has a wealth of outstanding public and private marine science institutions that have increased their commitments to excellence in applied ocean resource science. Approximately one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in current, recent, or planned marine science projects funded by the federal government, foundations, the University of California and California State University systems, and private institutions could be of great benefit to the states coastal and ocean resource management agencies.(i) The obstacles to collaborative efforts involving those institutions and agencies include all of the following:(1) Inadequate coordination among marine science institutions.(2) Inadequate guidance from management agencies about information needs for management.(3) Important gaps in information, duplication of effort, missed opportunities, and unusable information due to the lack of standardized and coordinated information management techniques. The circumstances and needs identified in the findings in this section are among those recognized in this chapter and in the 1997 report prepared by the Resources Agency entitled Californias Ocean Resources: An Agenda for the Future. This chapter is intended to address some of the basic objectives of that report.SEC. 2. Section 36972 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36972. The Legislature further finds that it is the policy of the state to do all of the following:(a) Ensure adequate coordination of ocean resources management science among state, regional, and federal agencies and marine science institutions, including, but not limited to, science related to climate change mitigation and adaptation.(b) Ensure the most efficient and effective use of state resources devoted to ocean resource management science and encourage the contribution of federal and nongovernmental resources.(c) Advance applied ocean science, graduate-level education, and technology development to meet current and future California ocean resource management needs.SEC. 3. Section 36979 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36979. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) Ocean resources means all living and nonliving resources found in the Pacific Ocean and its contiguous saline or brackish bays and estuaries.(b) Trust means the California Ocean Science Trust authorized by Section 36990.(c) Trustees means the trustees of the trust.SEC. 4. Article 3 (commencing with Section 36980) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of the Public Resources Code is repealed.SEC. 5. The heading of Article 4 (commencing with Section 36990) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read: Article 4. California Ocean Science TrustSEC. 6. Section 36990 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36990. (a) The Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency may enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation with broad experience as the trustee of public funds, court-ordered mitigation funds, or other funds used to assist public agencies in carrying out their responsibilities to establish a nongovernmental trust, to be known as the California Ocean Science Trust.(b) The purposes of the trust shall be all of the following:(1) To seek funds for California ocean resource science projects, emphasizing the development of new funding sources.(2) To fund California ocean resource science projects that help fulfill the missions of the states ocean resource management agencies.(3) To encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science to deliver actionable science solutions that accelerate equitable climate change adaptation.(4) To encourage graduate education programs, training, and workforce development opportunities in management-oriented ocean resource science in public and private universities and colleges in California.(5) To encourage new technologies that reduce the cost, increase the amount, or improve the quality of ocean resource management information.(6) To promote more effective coordination of California ocean resource science useful to management agencies.(c) The trust may administer grants and expenditures of the trust for purposes consistent with this chapter from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust.(d) (1) For the purpose of developing and providing peer reviews, technical guidance, or scientific reports and analyses to state agencies and departments with relevant need, the trust may engage with scientific experts through convenings, including panels, workshops, or symposia, to gain knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for topics consistent with subdivision (b).(2) As funding allows, the trust shall develop an annual list of topics, consistent with subdivision (b), that the trust will undertake to deliver the content pursuant to paragraph (1) to state agencies and departments.
3244
3345 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
3446
3547 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
3648
3749 SECTION 1. Section 36971 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36971. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Pacific Ocean and its rich and varied resources provide great environmental, economic, aesthetic, recreational, health, educational, and scientific benefits to the people of California and the nation. The 840-mile coastline and ocean enriches us through a marine economy of over $44 billion, in 2012 dollars, annually.(b) Much of the quality of life and economic vibrancy supported by the states ocean resources depends on successful management of those resources, and successful management depends on an adequate understanding of the natural, ecological, oceanographic, and coastal processes and their interactions with varied human activities, including the impacts of climate change.(c) The state is working to maintain and increase the benefits of its ocean resources to the public; a goal that increases the need for sound management and greater practical understanding of the states ocean and coastal resources.(d) Although California is making progress in ocean management efforts, unsolved existing challenges also point to the need for greater improvements in management and the basic information needed for sound management. Examples of existing challenges include depressed populations of many species that are the targets of state and federally managed fisheries, pollution that results in beach and fishery closures, dredging and dredge spoils disposal necessary to keep the states ports competitive, changing ocean chemistry and ecological impacts resulting from climate change, and coastal erosion that threatens structures and reduces the quality of beaches.(e) Beginning in 2006, California has developed and periodically updated California Climate Change Assessments that assess the impacts and risks from climate change and identify potential solutions focused on integrated action by California.(f) As direct and indirect social, cultural, and economic impacts of climate change continue to amplify and worsen, governance across multiple government sectors, such as infrastructure, natural ecosystem protection, agriculture and aquaculture, and many others, will require a higher degree of coordination relative to developing new research and approaches for effective action. (g) State and federal agencies with ocean and coastal resource management responsibility often lack basic information on which to base decisions, and many management issues are broader than the mandates of individual agencies, and existing means for coordinating agency efforts need to be improved. The result can be ad hoc, short-term management decisions based on inadequate information.(h) California has a wealth of outstanding public and private marine science institutions that have increased their commitments to excellence in applied ocean resource science. Approximately one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in current, recent, or planned marine science projects funded by the federal government, foundations, the University of California and California State University systems, and private institutions could be of great benefit to the states coastal and ocean resource management agencies.(i) The obstacles to collaborative efforts involving those institutions and agencies include all of the following:(1) Inadequate coordination among marine science institutions.(2) Inadequate guidance from management agencies about information needs for management.(3) Important gaps in information, duplication of effort, missed opportunities, and unusable information due to the lack of standardized and coordinated information management techniques. The circumstances and needs identified in the findings in this section are among those recognized in this chapter and in the 1997 report prepared by the Resources Agency entitled Californias Ocean Resources: An Agenda for the Future. This chapter is intended to address some of the basic objectives of that report.
3850
3951 SECTION 1. Section 36971 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:
4052
4153 ### SECTION 1.
4254
4355 36971. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Pacific Ocean and its rich and varied resources provide great environmental, economic, aesthetic, recreational, health, educational, and scientific benefits to the people of California and the nation. The 840-mile coastline and ocean enriches us through a marine economy of over $44 billion, in 2012 dollars, annually.(b) Much of the quality of life and economic vibrancy supported by the states ocean resources depends on successful management of those resources, and successful management depends on an adequate understanding of the natural, ecological, oceanographic, and coastal processes and their interactions with varied human activities, including the impacts of climate change.(c) The state is working to maintain and increase the benefits of its ocean resources to the public; a goal that increases the need for sound management and greater practical understanding of the states ocean and coastal resources.(d) Although California is making progress in ocean management efforts, unsolved existing challenges also point to the need for greater improvements in management and the basic information needed for sound management. Examples of existing challenges include depressed populations of many species that are the targets of state and federally managed fisheries, pollution that results in beach and fishery closures, dredging and dredge spoils disposal necessary to keep the states ports competitive, changing ocean chemistry and ecological impacts resulting from climate change, and coastal erosion that threatens structures and reduces the quality of beaches.(e) Beginning in 2006, California has developed and periodically updated California Climate Change Assessments that assess the impacts and risks from climate change and identify potential solutions focused on integrated action by California.(f) As direct and indirect social, cultural, and economic impacts of climate change continue to amplify and worsen, governance across multiple government sectors, such as infrastructure, natural ecosystem protection, agriculture and aquaculture, and many others, will require a higher degree of coordination relative to developing new research and approaches for effective action. (g) State and federal agencies with ocean and coastal resource management responsibility often lack basic information on which to base decisions, and many management issues are broader than the mandates of individual agencies, and existing means for coordinating agency efforts need to be improved. The result can be ad hoc, short-term management decisions based on inadequate information.(h) California has a wealth of outstanding public and private marine science institutions that have increased their commitments to excellence in applied ocean resource science. Approximately one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in current, recent, or planned marine science projects funded by the federal government, foundations, the University of California and California State University systems, and private institutions could be of great benefit to the states coastal and ocean resource management agencies.(i) The obstacles to collaborative efforts involving those institutions and agencies include all of the following:(1) Inadequate coordination among marine science institutions.(2) Inadequate guidance from management agencies about information needs for management.(3) Important gaps in information, duplication of effort, missed opportunities, and unusable information due to the lack of standardized and coordinated information management techniques. The circumstances and needs identified in the findings in this section are among those recognized in this chapter and in the 1997 report prepared by the Resources Agency entitled Californias Ocean Resources: An Agenda for the Future. This chapter is intended to address some of the basic objectives of that report.
4456
4557 36971. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Pacific Ocean and its rich and varied resources provide great environmental, economic, aesthetic, recreational, health, educational, and scientific benefits to the people of California and the nation. The 840-mile coastline and ocean enriches us through a marine economy of over $44 billion, in 2012 dollars, annually.(b) Much of the quality of life and economic vibrancy supported by the states ocean resources depends on successful management of those resources, and successful management depends on an adequate understanding of the natural, ecological, oceanographic, and coastal processes and their interactions with varied human activities, including the impacts of climate change.(c) The state is working to maintain and increase the benefits of its ocean resources to the public; a goal that increases the need for sound management and greater practical understanding of the states ocean and coastal resources.(d) Although California is making progress in ocean management efforts, unsolved existing challenges also point to the need for greater improvements in management and the basic information needed for sound management. Examples of existing challenges include depressed populations of many species that are the targets of state and federally managed fisheries, pollution that results in beach and fishery closures, dredging and dredge spoils disposal necessary to keep the states ports competitive, changing ocean chemistry and ecological impacts resulting from climate change, and coastal erosion that threatens structures and reduces the quality of beaches.(e) Beginning in 2006, California has developed and periodically updated California Climate Change Assessments that assess the impacts and risks from climate change and identify potential solutions focused on integrated action by California.(f) As direct and indirect social, cultural, and economic impacts of climate change continue to amplify and worsen, governance across multiple government sectors, such as infrastructure, natural ecosystem protection, agriculture and aquaculture, and many others, will require a higher degree of coordination relative to developing new research and approaches for effective action. (g) State and federal agencies with ocean and coastal resource management responsibility often lack basic information on which to base decisions, and many management issues are broader than the mandates of individual agencies, and existing means for coordinating agency efforts need to be improved. The result can be ad hoc, short-term management decisions based on inadequate information.(h) California has a wealth of outstanding public and private marine science institutions that have increased their commitments to excellence in applied ocean resource science. Approximately one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in current, recent, or planned marine science projects funded by the federal government, foundations, the University of California and California State University systems, and private institutions could be of great benefit to the states coastal and ocean resource management agencies.(i) The obstacles to collaborative efforts involving those institutions and agencies include all of the following:(1) Inadequate coordination among marine science institutions.(2) Inadequate guidance from management agencies about information needs for management.(3) Important gaps in information, duplication of effort, missed opportunities, and unusable information due to the lack of standardized and coordinated information management techniques. The circumstances and needs identified in the findings in this section are among those recognized in this chapter and in the 1997 report prepared by the Resources Agency entitled Californias Ocean Resources: An Agenda for the Future. This chapter is intended to address some of the basic objectives of that report.
4658
4759 36971. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Pacific Ocean and its rich and varied resources provide great environmental, economic, aesthetic, recreational, health, educational, and scientific benefits to the people of California and the nation. The 840-mile coastline and ocean enriches us through a marine economy of over $44 billion, in 2012 dollars, annually.(b) Much of the quality of life and economic vibrancy supported by the states ocean resources depends on successful management of those resources, and successful management depends on an adequate understanding of the natural, ecological, oceanographic, and coastal processes and their interactions with varied human activities, including the impacts of climate change.(c) The state is working to maintain and increase the benefits of its ocean resources to the public; a goal that increases the need for sound management and greater practical understanding of the states ocean and coastal resources.(d) Although California is making progress in ocean management efforts, unsolved existing challenges also point to the need for greater improvements in management and the basic information needed for sound management. Examples of existing challenges include depressed populations of many species that are the targets of state and federally managed fisheries, pollution that results in beach and fishery closures, dredging and dredge spoils disposal necessary to keep the states ports competitive, changing ocean chemistry and ecological impacts resulting from climate change, and coastal erosion that threatens structures and reduces the quality of beaches.(e) Beginning in 2006, California has developed and periodically updated California Climate Change Assessments that assess the impacts and risks from climate change and identify potential solutions focused on integrated action by California.(f) As direct and indirect social, cultural, and economic impacts of climate change continue to amplify and worsen, governance across multiple government sectors, such as infrastructure, natural ecosystem protection, agriculture and aquaculture, and many others, will require a higher degree of coordination relative to developing new research and approaches for effective action. (g) State and federal agencies with ocean and coastal resource management responsibility often lack basic information on which to base decisions, and many management issues are broader than the mandates of individual agencies, and existing means for coordinating agency efforts need to be improved. The result can be ad hoc, short-term management decisions based on inadequate information.(h) California has a wealth of outstanding public and private marine science institutions that have increased their commitments to excellence in applied ocean resource science. Approximately one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in current, recent, or planned marine science projects funded by the federal government, foundations, the University of California and California State University systems, and private institutions could be of great benefit to the states coastal and ocean resource management agencies.(i) The obstacles to collaborative efforts involving those institutions and agencies include all of the following:(1) Inadequate coordination among marine science institutions.(2) Inadequate guidance from management agencies about information needs for management.(3) Important gaps in information, duplication of effort, missed opportunities, and unusable information due to the lack of standardized and coordinated information management techniques. The circumstances and needs identified in the findings in this section are among those recognized in this chapter and in the 1997 report prepared by the Resources Agency entitled Californias Ocean Resources: An Agenda for the Future. This chapter is intended to address some of the basic objectives of that report.
4860
4961
5062
5163 36971. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5264
5365 (a) The Pacific Ocean and its rich and varied resources provide great environmental, economic, aesthetic, recreational, health, educational, and scientific benefits to the people of California and the nation. The 840-mile coastline and ocean enriches us through a marine economy of over $44 billion, in 2012 dollars, annually.
5466
5567 (b) Much of the quality of life and economic vibrancy supported by the states ocean resources depends on successful management of those resources, and successful management depends on an adequate understanding of the natural, ecological, oceanographic, and coastal processes and their interactions with varied human activities, including the impacts of climate change.
5668
5769 (c) The state is working to maintain and increase the benefits of its ocean resources to the public; a goal that increases the need for sound management and greater practical understanding of the states ocean and coastal resources.
5870
5971 (d) Although California is making progress in ocean management efforts, unsolved existing challenges also point to the need for greater improvements in management and the basic information needed for sound management. Examples of existing challenges include depressed populations of many species that are the targets of state and federally managed fisheries, pollution that results in beach and fishery closures, dredging and dredge spoils disposal necessary to keep the states ports competitive, changing ocean chemistry and ecological impacts resulting from climate change, and coastal erosion that threatens structures and reduces the quality of beaches.
6072
6173 (e) Beginning in 2006, California has developed and periodically updated California Climate Change Assessments that assess the impacts and risks from climate change and identify potential solutions focused on integrated action by California.
6274
6375 (f) As direct and indirect social, cultural, and economic impacts of climate change continue to amplify and worsen, governance across multiple government sectors, such as infrastructure, natural ecosystem protection, agriculture and aquaculture, and many others, will require a higher degree of coordination relative to developing new research and approaches for effective action.
6476
6577 (g) State and federal agencies with ocean and coastal resource management responsibility often lack basic information on which to base decisions, and many management issues are broader than the mandates of individual agencies, and existing means for coordinating agency efforts need to be improved. The result can be ad hoc, short-term management decisions based on inadequate information.
6678
6779 (h) California has a wealth of outstanding public and private marine science institutions that have increased their commitments to excellence in applied ocean resource science. Approximately one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in current, recent, or planned marine science projects funded by the federal government, foundations, the University of California and California State University systems, and private institutions could be of great benefit to the states coastal and ocean resource management agencies.
6880
6981 (i) The obstacles to collaborative efforts involving those institutions and agencies include all of the following:
7082
7183 (1) Inadequate coordination among marine science institutions.
7284
7385 (2) Inadequate guidance from management agencies about information needs for management.
7486
7587 (3) Important gaps in information, duplication of effort, missed opportunities, and unusable information due to the lack of standardized and coordinated information management techniques. The circumstances and needs identified in the findings in this section are among those recognized in this chapter and in the 1997 report prepared by the Resources Agency entitled Californias Ocean Resources: An Agenda for the Future. This chapter is intended to address some of the basic objectives of that report.
7688
7789 SEC. 2. Section 36972 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36972. The Legislature further finds that it is the policy of the state to do all of the following:(a) Ensure adequate coordination of ocean resources management science among state, regional, and federal agencies and marine science institutions, including, but not limited to, science related to climate change mitigation and adaptation.(b) Ensure the most efficient and effective use of state resources devoted to ocean resource management science and encourage the contribution of federal and nongovernmental resources.(c) Advance applied ocean science, graduate-level education, and technology development to meet current and future California ocean resource management needs.
7890
7991 SEC. 2. Section 36972 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:
8092
8193 ### SEC. 2.
8294
8395 36972. The Legislature further finds that it is the policy of the state to do all of the following:(a) Ensure adequate coordination of ocean resources management science among state, regional, and federal agencies and marine science institutions, including, but not limited to, science related to climate change mitigation and adaptation.(b) Ensure the most efficient and effective use of state resources devoted to ocean resource management science and encourage the contribution of federal and nongovernmental resources.(c) Advance applied ocean science, graduate-level education, and technology development to meet current and future California ocean resource management needs.
8496
8597 36972. The Legislature further finds that it is the policy of the state to do all of the following:(a) Ensure adequate coordination of ocean resources management science among state, regional, and federal agencies and marine science institutions, including, but not limited to, science related to climate change mitigation and adaptation.(b) Ensure the most efficient and effective use of state resources devoted to ocean resource management science and encourage the contribution of federal and nongovernmental resources.(c) Advance applied ocean science, graduate-level education, and technology development to meet current and future California ocean resource management needs.
8698
8799 36972. The Legislature further finds that it is the policy of the state to do all of the following:(a) Ensure adequate coordination of ocean resources management science among state, regional, and federal agencies and marine science institutions, including, but not limited to, science related to climate change mitigation and adaptation.(b) Ensure the most efficient and effective use of state resources devoted to ocean resource management science and encourage the contribution of federal and nongovernmental resources.(c) Advance applied ocean science, graduate-level education, and technology development to meet current and future California ocean resource management needs.
88100
89101
90102
91103 36972. The Legislature further finds that it is the policy of the state to do all of the following:
92104
93105 (a) Ensure adequate coordination of ocean resources management science among state, regional, and federal agencies and marine science institutions, including, but not limited to, science related to climate change mitigation and adaptation.
94106
95107 (b) Ensure the most efficient and effective use of state resources devoted to ocean resource management science and encourage the contribution of federal and nongovernmental resources.
96108
97109 (c) Advance applied ocean science, graduate-level education, and technology development to meet current and future California ocean resource management needs.
98110
99111 SEC. 3. Section 36979 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36979. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) Ocean resources means all living and nonliving resources found in the Pacific Ocean and its contiguous saline or brackish bays and estuaries.(b) Trust means the California Ocean Science Trust authorized by Section 36990.(c) Trustees means the trustees of the trust.
100112
101113 SEC. 3. Section 36979 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:
102114
103115 ### SEC. 3.
104116
105117 36979. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) Ocean resources means all living and nonliving resources found in the Pacific Ocean and its contiguous saline or brackish bays and estuaries.(b) Trust means the California Ocean Science Trust authorized by Section 36990.(c) Trustees means the trustees of the trust.
106118
107119 36979. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) Ocean resources means all living and nonliving resources found in the Pacific Ocean and its contiguous saline or brackish bays and estuaries.(b) Trust means the California Ocean Science Trust authorized by Section 36990.(c) Trustees means the trustees of the trust.
108120
109121 36979. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) Ocean resources means all living and nonliving resources found in the Pacific Ocean and its contiguous saline or brackish bays and estuaries.(b) Trust means the California Ocean Science Trust authorized by Section 36990.(c) Trustees means the trustees of the trust.
110122
111123
112124
113125 36979. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
114126
115127 (a) Ocean resources means all living and nonliving resources found in the Pacific Ocean and its contiguous saline or brackish bays and estuaries.
116128
117129 (b) Trust means the California Ocean Science Trust authorized by Section 36990.
118130
119131 (c) Trustees means the trustees of the trust.
120132
121133 SEC. 4. Article 3 (commencing with Section 36980) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of the Public Resources Code is repealed.
122134
123135 SEC. 4. Article 3 (commencing with Section 36980) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of the Public Resources Code is repealed.
124136
125137 ### SEC. 4.
126138
127139
128140
129141 SEC. 5. The heading of Article 4 (commencing with Section 36990) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read: Article 4. California Ocean Science Trust
130142
131143 SEC. 5. The heading of Article 4 (commencing with Section 36990) of Chapter 8 of Division 27 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:
132144
133145 ### SEC. 5.
134146
135147 Article 4. California Ocean Science Trust
136148
137149 Article 4. California Ocean Science Trust
138150
139151 Article 4. California Ocean Science Trust
140152
141153 Article 4. California Ocean Science Trust
142154
143155 SEC. 6. Section 36990 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:36990. (a) The Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency may enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation with broad experience as the trustee of public funds, court-ordered mitigation funds, or other funds used to assist public agencies in carrying out their responsibilities to establish a nongovernmental trust, to be known as the California Ocean Science Trust.(b) The purposes of the trust shall be all of the following:(1) To seek funds for California ocean resource science projects, emphasizing the development of new funding sources.(2) To fund California ocean resource science projects that help fulfill the missions of the states ocean resource management agencies.(3) To encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science to deliver actionable science solutions that accelerate equitable climate change adaptation.(4) To encourage graduate education programs, training, and workforce development opportunities in management-oriented ocean resource science in public and private universities and colleges in California.(5) To encourage new technologies that reduce the cost, increase the amount, or improve the quality of ocean resource management information.(6) To promote more effective coordination of California ocean resource science useful to management agencies.(c) The trust may administer grants and expenditures of the trust for purposes consistent with this chapter from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust.(d) (1) For the purpose of developing and providing peer reviews, technical guidance, or scientific reports and analyses to state agencies and departments with relevant need, the trust may engage with scientific experts through convenings, including panels, workshops, or symposia, to gain knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for topics consistent with subdivision (b).(2) As funding allows, the trust shall develop an annual list of topics, consistent with subdivision (b), that the trust will undertake to deliver the content pursuant to paragraph (1) to state agencies and departments.
144156
145157 SEC. 6. Section 36990 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:
146158
147159 ### SEC. 6.
148160
149161 36990. (a) The Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency may enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation with broad experience as the trustee of public funds, court-ordered mitigation funds, or other funds used to assist public agencies in carrying out their responsibilities to establish a nongovernmental trust, to be known as the California Ocean Science Trust.(b) The purposes of the trust shall be all of the following:(1) To seek funds for California ocean resource science projects, emphasizing the development of new funding sources.(2) To fund California ocean resource science projects that help fulfill the missions of the states ocean resource management agencies.(3) To encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science to deliver actionable science solutions that accelerate equitable climate change adaptation.(4) To encourage graduate education programs, training, and workforce development opportunities in management-oriented ocean resource science in public and private universities and colleges in California.(5) To encourage new technologies that reduce the cost, increase the amount, or improve the quality of ocean resource management information.(6) To promote more effective coordination of California ocean resource science useful to management agencies.(c) The trust may administer grants and expenditures of the trust for purposes consistent with this chapter from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust.(d) (1) For the purpose of developing and providing peer reviews, technical guidance, or scientific reports and analyses to state agencies and departments with relevant need, the trust may engage with scientific experts through convenings, including panels, workshops, or symposia, to gain knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for topics consistent with subdivision (b).(2) As funding allows, the trust shall develop an annual list of topics, consistent with subdivision (b), that the trust will undertake to deliver the content pursuant to paragraph (1) to state agencies and departments.
150162
151163 36990. (a) The Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency may enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation with broad experience as the trustee of public funds, court-ordered mitigation funds, or other funds used to assist public agencies in carrying out their responsibilities to establish a nongovernmental trust, to be known as the California Ocean Science Trust.(b) The purposes of the trust shall be all of the following:(1) To seek funds for California ocean resource science projects, emphasizing the development of new funding sources.(2) To fund California ocean resource science projects that help fulfill the missions of the states ocean resource management agencies.(3) To encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science to deliver actionable science solutions that accelerate equitable climate change adaptation.(4) To encourage graduate education programs, training, and workforce development opportunities in management-oriented ocean resource science in public and private universities and colleges in California.(5) To encourage new technologies that reduce the cost, increase the amount, or improve the quality of ocean resource management information.(6) To promote more effective coordination of California ocean resource science useful to management agencies.(c) The trust may administer grants and expenditures of the trust for purposes consistent with this chapter from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust.(d) (1) For the purpose of developing and providing peer reviews, technical guidance, or scientific reports and analyses to state agencies and departments with relevant need, the trust may engage with scientific experts through convenings, including panels, workshops, or symposia, to gain knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for topics consistent with subdivision (b).(2) As funding allows, the trust shall develop an annual list of topics, consistent with subdivision (b), that the trust will undertake to deliver the content pursuant to paragraph (1) to state agencies and departments.
152164
153165 36990. (a) The Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency may enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation with broad experience as the trustee of public funds, court-ordered mitigation funds, or other funds used to assist public agencies in carrying out their responsibilities to establish a nongovernmental trust, to be known as the California Ocean Science Trust.(b) The purposes of the trust shall be all of the following:(1) To seek funds for California ocean resource science projects, emphasizing the development of new funding sources.(2) To fund California ocean resource science projects that help fulfill the missions of the states ocean resource management agencies.(3) To encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science to deliver actionable science solutions that accelerate equitable climate change adaptation.(4) To encourage graduate education programs, training, and workforce development opportunities in management-oriented ocean resource science in public and private universities and colleges in California.(5) To encourage new technologies that reduce the cost, increase the amount, or improve the quality of ocean resource management information.(6) To promote more effective coordination of California ocean resource science useful to management agencies.(c) The trust may administer grants and expenditures of the trust for purposes consistent with this chapter from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust.(d) (1) For the purpose of developing and providing peer reviews, technical guidance, or scientific reports and analyses to state agencies and departments with relevant need, the trust may engage with scientific experts through convenings, including panels, workshops, or symposia, to gain knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for topics consistent with subdivision (b).(2) As funding allows, the trust shall develop an annual list of topics, consistent with subdivision (b), that the trust will undertake to deliver the content pursuant to paragraph (1) to state agencies and departments.
154166
155167
156168
157169 36990. (a) The Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency may enter into an agreement with an existing nonprofit corporation with broad experience as the trustee of public funds, court-ordered mitigation funds, or other funds used to assist public agencies in carrying out their responsibilities to establish a nongovernmental trust, to be known as the California Ocean Science Trust.
158170
159171 (b) The purposes of the trust shall be all of the following:
160172
161173 (1) To seek funds for California ocean resource science projects, emphasizing the development of new funding sources.
162174
163175 (2) To fund California ocean resource science projects that help fulfill the missions of the states ocean resource management agencies.
164176
165177 (3) To encourage coordinated, multiagency, multiinstitution approaches to ocean resource science to deliver actionable science solutions that accelerate equitable climate change adaptation.
166178
167179 (4) To encourage graduate education programs, training, and workforce development opportunities in management-oriented ocean resource science in public and private universities and colleges in California.
168180
169181 (5) To encourage new technologies that reduce the cost, increase the amount, or improve the quality of ocean resource management information.
170182
171183 (6) To promote more effective coordination of California ocean resource science useful to management agencies.
172184
173185 (c) The trust may administer grants and expenditures of the trust for purposes consistent with this chapter from private and public fund sources, including, but not limited to, direct appropriations from the annual Budget Act and block grants from other state agencies with relevant need for coordination and engagement with the trust.
174186
175187 (d) (1) For the purpose of developing and providing peer reviews, technical guidance, or scientific reports and analyses to state agencies and departments with relevant need, the trust may engage with scientific experts through convenings, including panels, workshops, or symposia, to gain knowledge, solutions, and recommendations for topics consistent with subdivision (b).
176188
177189 (2) As funding allows, the trust shall develop an annual list of topics, consistent with subdivision (b), that the trust will undertake to deliver the content pursuant to paragraph (1) to state agencies and departments.