California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB369 Compare Versions

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1-Senate Bill No. 369 CHAPTER 275An act to add Part 3.5 (commencing with Section 8510) to Division 5 of the Water Code, relating to flood control. [ Approved by Governor September 23, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State September 23, 2021. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 369, Pan. Flood control: Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program.Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. Existing law establishes the Central Valley Flood Protection Board and authorizes the board to engage in various flood control activities along the Sacramento River, the San Joaquin River, their tributaries, and related areas.This bill would establish the Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The bill would define Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership to mean the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by a total of 15 participating federal, state, and local agencies. The bill would require the participating state agencies, including the Natural Resources Agency, the Department of Water Resources, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Central Valley Flood Protection Board, the State Water Resources Control Board, and the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board, to work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance specified objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.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. Part 3.5 (commencing with Section 8510) is added to Division 5 of the Water Code, to read:PART 3.5. Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program8510. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Yolo Bypass is a 59,000-acre flood control facility located in the Counties of Yolo and Solano that absorbs excess flood waters from the Sacramento River and conveys the waters 40 miles south into the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.(b) Authorized by Congress in 1917 and built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the 1920s, the Yolo Bypass provides critical flood protection to over 650,000 people, several small communities, important agricultural land, and over sixty billion dollars ($60,000,000,000) in public and private assets.(c) Agriculture, recreation, and wildlife thrive within the Yolo Bypass, exemplified by the state-owned Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, which supports wildlife-friendly rice cultivation and livestock grazing, managed wetlands for migratory waterfowl, nature education opportunities for the regions schools, nature viewing, and hunting.(d) Cache Slough is located primarily within the County of Solano, intersecting with the southern portion of the Yolo Bypass. Cache Slough supports remnant tidal habitat where restoration of natural conditions could benefit delta smelt and other native aquatic species. Cache Slough is also a regionally significant agricultural area where the location of multiple-benefit projects could affect the operations and maintenance practices of agricultural diverters and core flood control and levee maintenance responsibilities of reclamation districts within the Cache Slough Complex.(e) The North Bay Aqueduct portion of the State Water Project delivers source water directly from the Cache Slough Complex to over 500,000 residents in the Counties of Napa and Solano. Opportunities for multiple-benefit projects must consider impacts to municipal water supply and water quality.(f) Together, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region presents unparalleled opportunities for multiple-benefit projects that improve flood protection, fisheries and wildlife habitat, water supply and water quality, agricultural sustainability, and recreational opportunities. As such, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region is the focus of an increasing number of federal, state, and locally developed projects intended to improve these multiple public values.(g) The numerous interests in this complex and important region present an opportunity and an imperative for governmental agencies at the federal, state, and local levels to collaboratively align planning efforts and project implementation.(h) In May 2016, a total of 15 federal, state, and local agencies signed a memorandum of understanding outlining principles necessary to achieve a common vision for the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The resulting Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership serves as a model for public agency cooperation and achievement.8511. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership means the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by all of the following public agencies:(1) United States Bureau of Reclamation.(2) United States Fish and Wildlife Service.(3) National Marine Fisheries Service.(4) United States Army Corps of Engineers.(5) County of Yolo.(6) County of Solano.(7) Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency.(8) Solano County Water Agency.(9) Reclamation District No. 2068.(10) Natural Resources Agency.(11) Department of Water Resources.(12) Department of Fish and Wildlife.(13) Central Valley Flood Protection Board.(14) State Water Resources Control Board.(15) Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board.(b) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program means the program established pursuant to Section 8512.8512. The Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program is hereby established to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The participating state agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 shall work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance all of the following objectives:(a) Prioritize projects that accommodate multiple objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.(b) Identify project implementation challenges and work collaboratively to resolve those challenges.(c) Develop programmatic and expedited approaches for regulatory compliance.(d) Identify funding mechanisms for project implementation and long-term operations and maintenance.(e) Develop strategies to foster regional agricultural sustainability, recreational opportunities, and long-term water supply reliability.
1+Enrolled September 07, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 03, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 02, 2021 Amended IN Assembly June 14, 2021 Amended IN Assembly May 24, 2021 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 369Introduced by Senator PanFebruary 10, 2021An act to add Part 3.5 (commencing with Section 8510) to Division 5 of the Water Code, relating to flood control.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 369, Pan. Flood control: Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program.Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. Existing law establishes the Central Valley Flood Protection Board and authorizes the board to engage in various flood control activities along the Sacramento River, the San Joaquin River, their tributaries, and related areas.This bill would establish the Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The bill would define Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership to mean the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by a total of 15 participating federal, state, and local agencies. The bill would require the participating state agencies, including the Natural Resources Agency, the Department of Water Resources, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Central Valley Flood Protection Board, the State Water Resources Control Board, and the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board, to work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance specified objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.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. Part 3.5 (commencing with Section 8510) is added to Division 5 of the Water Code, to read:PART 3.5. Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program8510. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Yolo Bypass is a 59,000-acre flood control facility located in the Counties of Yolo and Solano that absorbs excess flood waters from the Sacramento River and conveys the waters 40 miles south into the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.(b) Authorized by Congress in 1917 and built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the 1920s, the Yolo Bypass provides critical flood protection to over 650,000 people, several small communities, important agricultural land, and over sixty billion dollars ($60,000,000,000) in public and private assets.(c) Agriculture, recreation, and wildlife thrive within the Yolo Bypass, exemplified by the state-owned Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, which supports wildlife-friendly rice cultivation and livestock grazing, managed wetlands for migratory waterfowl, nature education opportunities for the regions schools, nature viewing, and hunting.(d) Cache Slough is located primarily within the County of Solano, intersecting with the southern portion of the Yolo Bypass. Cache Slough supports remnant tidal habitat where restoration of natural conditions could benefit delta smelt and other native aquatic species. Cache Slough is also a regionally significant agricultural area where the location of multiple-benefit projects could affect the operations and maintenance practices of agricultural diverters and core flood control and levee maintenance responsibilities of reclamation districts within the Cache Slough Complex.(e) The North Bay Aqueduct portion of the State Water Project delivers source water directly from the Cache Slough Complex to over 500,000 residents in the Counties of Napa and Solano. Opportunities for multiple-benefit projects must consider impacts to municipal water supply and water quality.(f) Together, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region presents unparalleled opportunities for multiple-benefit projects that improve flood protection, fisheries and wildlife habitat, water supply and water quality, agricultural sustainability, and recreational opportunities. As such, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region is the focus of an increasing number of federal, state, and locally developed projects intended to improve these multiple public values.(g) The numerous interests in this complex and important region present an opportunity and an imperative for governmental agencies at the federal, state, and local levels to collaboratively align planning efforts and project implementation.(h) In May 2016, a total of 15 federal, state, and local agencies signed a memorandum of understanding outlining principles necessary to achieve a common vision for the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The resulting Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership serves as a model for public agency cooperation and achievement.8511. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership means the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by all of the following public agencies:(1) United States Bureau of Reclamation.(2) United States Fish and Wildlife Service.(3) National Marine Fisheries Service.(4) United States Army Corps of Engineers.(5) County of Yolo.(6) County of Solano.(7) Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency.(8) Solano County Water Agency.(9) Reclamation District No. 2068.(10) Natural Resources Agency.(11) Department of Water Resources.(12) Department of Fish and Wildlife.(13) Central Valley Flood Protection Board.(14) State Water Resources Control Board.(15) Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board.(b) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program means the program established pursuant to Section 8512.8512. The Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program is hereby established to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The participating state agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 shall work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance all of the following objectives:(a) Prioritize projects that accommodate multiple objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.(b) Identify project implementation challenges and work collaboratively to resolve those challenges.(c) Develop programmatic and expedited approaches for regulatory compliance.(d) Identify funding mechanisms for project implementation and long-term operations and maintenance.(e) Develop strategies to foster regional agricultural sustainability, recreational opportunities, and long-term water supply reliability.
22
3- Senate Bill No. 369 CHAPTER 275An act to add Part 3.5 (commencing with Section 8510) to Division 5 of the Water Code, relating to flood control. [ Approved by Governor September 23, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State September 23, 2021. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 369, Pan. Flood control: Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program.Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. Existing law establishes the Central Valley Flood Protection Board and authorizes the board to engage in various flood control activities along the Sacramento River, the San Joaquin River, their tributaries, and related areas.This bill would establish the Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The bill would define Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership to mean the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by a total of 15 participating federal, state, and local agencies. The bill would require the participating state agencies, including the Natural Resources Agency, the Department of Water Resources, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Central Valley Flood Protection Board, the State Water Resources Control Board, and the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board, to work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance specified objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Enrolled September 07, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 03, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 02, 2021 Amended IN Assembly June 14, 2021 Amended IN Assembly May 24, 2021 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 369Introduced by Senator PanFebruary 10, 2021An act to add Part 3.5 (commencing with Section 8510) to Division 5 of the Water Code, relating to flood control.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 369, Pan. Flood control: Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program.Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. Existing law establishes the Central Valley Flood Protection Board and authorizes the board to engage in various flood control activities along the Sacramento River, the San Joaquin River, their tributaries, and related areas.This bill would establish the Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The bill would define Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership to mean the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by a total of 15 participating federal, state, and local agencies. The bill would require the participating state agencies, including the Natural Resources Agency, the Department of Water Resources, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Central Valley Flood Protection Board, the State Water Resources Control Board, and the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board, to work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance specified objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Senate Bill No. 369 CHAPTER 275
5+ Enrolled September 07, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 03, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 02, 2021 Amended IN Assembly June 14, 2021 Amended IN Assembly May 24, 2021
66
7- Senate Bill No. 369
7+Enrolled September 07, 2021
8+Passed IN Senate September 03, 2021
9+Passed IN Assembly September 02, 2021
10+Amended IN Assembly June 14, 2021
11+Amended IN Assembly May 24, 2021
812
9- CHAPTER 275
13+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
14+
15+ Senate Bill
16+
17+No. 369
18+
19+Introduced by Senator PanFebruary 10, 2021
20+
21+Introduced by Senator Pan
22+February 10, 2021
1023
1124 An act to add Part 3.5 (commencing with Section 8510) to Division 5 of the Water Code, relating to flood control.
12-
13- [ Approved by Governor September 23, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State September 23, 2021. ]
1425
1526 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1627
1728 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1829
1930 SB 369, Pan. Flood control: Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program.
2031
2132 Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. Existing law establishes the Central Valley Flood Protection Board and authorizes the board to engage in various flood control activities along the Sacramento River, the San Joaquin River, their tributaries, and related areas.This bill would establish the Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The bill would define Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership to mean the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by a total of 15 participating federal, state, and local agencies. The bill would require the participating state agencies, including the Natural Resources Agency, the Department of Water Resources, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Central Valley Flood Protection Board, the State Water Resources Control Board, and the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board, to work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance specified objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.
2233
2334 Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. Existing law establishes the Central Valley Flood Protection Board and authorizes the board to engage in various flood control activities along the Sacramento River, the San Joaquin River, their tributaries, and related areas.
2435
2536 This bill would establish the Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The bill would define Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership to mean the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by a total of 15 participating federal, state, and local agencies. The bill would require the participating state agencies, including the Natural Resources Agency, the Department of Water Resources, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Central Valley Flood Protection Board, the State Water Resources Control Board, and the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board, to work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance specified objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.
2637
2738 ## Digest Key
2839
2940 ## Bill Text
3041
3142 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Part 3.5 (commencing with Section 8510) is added to Division 5 of the Water Code, to read:PART 3.5. Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program8510. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Yolo Bypass is a 59,000-acre flood control facility located in the Counties of Yolo and Solano that absorbs excess flood waters from the Sacramento River and conveys the waters 40 miles south into the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.(b) Authorized by Congress in 1917 and built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the 1920s, the Yolo Bypass provides critical flood protection to over 650,000 people, several small communities, important agricultural land, and over sixty billion dollars ($60,000,000,000) in public and private assets.(c) Agriculture, recreation, and wildlife thrive within the Yolo Bypass, exemplified by the state-owned Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, which supports wildlife-friendly rice cultivation and livestock grazing, managed wetlands for migratory waterfowl, nature education opportunities for the regions schools, nature viewing, and hunting.(d) Cache Slough is located primarily within the County of Solano, intersecting with the southern portion of the Yolo Bypass. Cache Slough supports remnant tidal habitat where restoration of natural conditions could benefit delta smelt and other native aquatic species. Cache Slough is also a regionally significant agricultural area where the location of multiple-benefit projects could affect the operations and maintenance practices of agricultural diverters and core flood control and levee maintenance responsibilities of reclamation districts within the Cache Slough Complex.(e) The North Bay Aqueduct portion of the State Water Project delivers source water directly from the Cache Slough Complex to over 500,000 residents in the Counties of Napa and Solano. Opportunities for multiple-benefit projects must consider impacts to municipal water supply and water quality.(f) Together, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region presents unparalleled opportunities for multiple-benefit projects that improve flood protection, fisheries and wildlife habitat, water supply and water quality, agricultural sustainability, and recreational opportunities. As such, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region is the focus of an increasing number of federal, state, and locally developed projects intended to improve these multiple public values.(g) The numerous interests in this complex and important region present an opportunity and an imperative for governmental agencies at the federal, state, and local levels to collaboratively align planning efforts and project implementation.(h) In May 2016, a total of 15 federal, state, and local agencies signed a memorandum of understanding outlining principles necessary to achieve a common vision for the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The resulting Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership serves as a model for public agency cooperation and achievement.8511. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership means the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by all of the following public agencies:(1) United States Bureau of Reclamation.(2) United States Fish and Wildlife Service.(3) National Marine Fisheries Service.(4) United States Army Corps of Engineers.(5) County of Yolo.(6) County of Solano.(7) Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency.(8) Solano County Water Agency.(9) Reclamation District No. 2068.(10) Natural Resources Agency.(11) Department of Water Resources.(12) Department of Fish and Wildlife.(13) Central Valley Flood Protection Board.(14) State Water Resources Control Board.(15) Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board.(b) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program means the program established pursuant to Section 8512.8512. The Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program is hereby established to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The participating state agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 shall work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance all of the following objectives:(a) Prioritize projects that accommodate multiple objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.(b) Identify project implementation challenges and work collaboratively to resolve those challenges.(c) Develop programmatic and expedited approaches for regulatory compliance.(d) Identify funding mechanisms for project implementation and long-term operations and maintenance.(e) Develop strategies to foster regional agricultural sustainability, recreational opportunities, and long-term water supply reliability.
3243
3344 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
3445
3546 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
3647
3748 SECTION 1. Part 3.5 (commencing with Section 8510) is added to Division 5 of the Water Code, to read:PART 3.5. Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program8510. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Yolo Bypass is a 59,000-acre flood control facility located in the Counties of Yolo and Solano that absorbs excess flood waters from the Sacramento River and conveys the waters 40 miles south into the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.(b) Authorized by Congress in 1917 and built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the 1920s, the Yolo Bypass provides critical flood protection to over 650,000 people, several small communities, important agricultural land, and over sixty billion dollars ($60,000,000,000) in public and private assets.(c) Agriculture, recreation, and wildlife thrive within the Yolo Bypass, exemplified by the state-owned Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, which supports wildlife-friendly rice cultivation and livestock grazing, managed wetlands for migratory waterfowl, nature education opportunities for the regions schools, nature viewing, and hunting.(d) Cache Slough is located primarily within the County of Solano, intersecting with the southern portion of the Yolo Bypass. Cache Slough supports remnant tidal habitat where restoration of natural conditions could benefit delta smelt and other native aquatic species. Cache Slough is also a regionally significant agricultural area where the location of multiple-benefit projects could affect the operations and maintenance practices of agricultural diverters and core flood control and levee maintenance responsibilities of reclamation districts within the Cache Slough Complex.(e) The North Bay Aqueduct portion of the State Water Project delivers source water directly from the Cache Slough Complex to over 500,000 residents in the Counties of Napa and Solano. Opportunities for multiple-benefit projects must consider impacts to municipal water supply and water quality.(f) Together, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region presents unparalleled opportunities for multiple-benefit projects that improve flood protection, fisheries and wildlife habitat, water supply and water quality, agricultural sustainability, and recreational opportunities. As such, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region is the focus of an increasing number of federal, state, and locally developed projects intended to improve these multiple public values.(g) The numerous interests in this complex and important region present an opportunity and an imperative for governmental agencies at the federal, state, and local levels to collaboratively align planning efforts and project implementation.(h) In May 2016, a total of 15 federal, state, and local agencies signed a memorandum of understanding outlining principles necessary to achieve a common vision for the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The resulting Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership serves as a model for public agency cooperation and achievement.8511. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership means the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by all of the following public agencies:(1) United States Bureau of Reclamation.(2) United States Fish and Wildlife Service.(3) National Marine Fisheries Service.(4) United States Army Corps of Engineers.(5) County of Yolo.(6) County of Solano.(7) Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency.(8) Solano County Water Agency.(9) Reclamation District No. 2068.(10) Natural Resources Agency.(11) Department of Water Resources.(12) Department of Fish and Wildlife.(13) Central Valley Flood Protection Board.(14) State Water Resources Control Board.(15) Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board.(b) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program means the program established pursuant to Section 8512.8512. The Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program is hereby established to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The participating state agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 shall work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance all of the following objectives:(a) Prioritize projects that accommodate multiple objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.(b) Identify project implementation challenges and work collaboratively to resolve those challenges.(c) Develop programmatic and expedited approaches for regulatory compliance.(d) Identify funding mechanisms for project implementation and long-term operations and maintenance.(e) Develop strategies to foster regional agricultural sustainability, recreational opportunities, and long-term water supply reliability.
3849
3950 SECTION 1. Part 3.5 (commencing with Section 8510) is added to Division 5 of the Water Code, to read:
4051
4152 ### SECTION 1.
4253
4354 PART 3.5. Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program8510. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Yolo Bypass is a 59,000-acre flood control facility located in the Counties of Yolo and Solano that absorbs excess flood waters from the Sacramento River and conveys the waters 40 miles south into the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.(b) Authorized by Congress in 1917 and built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the 1920s, the Yolo Bypass provides critical flood protection to over 650,000 people, several small communities, important agricultural land, and over sixty billion dollars ($60,000,000,000) in public and private assets.(c) Agriculture, recreation, and wildlife thrive within the Yolo Bypass, exemplified by the state-owned Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, which supports wildlife-friendly rice cultivation and livestock grazing, managed wetlands for migratory waterfowl, nature education opportunities for the regions schools, nature viewing, and hunting.(d) Cache Slough is located primarily within the County of Solano, intersecting with the southern portion of the Yolo Bypass. Cache Slough supports remnant tidal habitat where restoration of natural conditions could benefit delta smelt and other native aquatic species. Cache Slough is also a regionally significant agricultural area where the location of multiple-benefit projects could affect the operations and maintenance practices of agricultural diverters and core flood control and levee maintenance responsibilities of reclamation districts within the Cache Slough Complex.(e) The North Bay Aqueduct portion of the State Water Project delivers source water directly from the Cache Slough Complex to over 500,000 residents in the Counties of Napa and Solano. Opportunities for multiple-benefit projects must consider impacts to municipal water supply and water quality.(f) Together, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region presents unparalleled opportunities for multiple-benefit projects that improve flood protection, fisheries and wildlife habitat, water supply and water quality, agricultural sustainability, and recreational opportunities. As such, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region is the focus of an increasing number of federal, state, and locally developed projects intended to improve these multiple public values.(g) The numerous interests in this complex and important region present an opportunity and an imperative for governmental agencies at the federal, state, and local levels to collaboratively align planning efforts and project implementation.(h) In May 2016, a total of 15 federal, state, and local agencies signed a memorandum of understanding outlining principles necessary to achieve a common vision for the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The resulting Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership serves as a model for public agency cooperation and achievement.8511. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership means the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by all of the following public agencies:(1) United States Bureau of Reclamation.(2) United States Fish and Wildlife Service.(3) National Marine Fisheries Service.(4) United States Army Corps of Engineers.(5) County of Yolo.(6) County of Solano.(7) Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency.(8) Solano County Water Agency.(9) Reclamation District No. 2068.(10) Natural Resources Agency.(11) Department of Water Resources.(12) Department of Fish and Wildlife.(13) Central Valley Flood Protection Board.(14) State Water Resources Control Board.(15) Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board.(b) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program means the program established pursuant to Section 8512.8512. The Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program is hereby established to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The participating state agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 shall work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance all of the following objectives:(a) Prioritize projects that accommodate multiple objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.(b) Identify project implementation challenges and work collaboratively to resolve those challenges.(c) Develop programmatic and expedited approaches for regulatory compliance.(d) Identify funding mechanisms for project implementation and long-term operations and maintenance.(e) Develop strategies to foster regional agricultural sustainability, recreational opportunities, and long-term water supply reliability.
4455
4556 PART 3.5. Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program8510. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Yolo Bypass is a 59,000-acre flood control facility located in the Counties of Yolo and Solano that absorbs excess flood waters from the Sacramento River and conveys the waters 40 miles south into the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.(b) Authorized by Congress in 1917 and built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the 1920s, the Yolo Bypass provides critical flood protection to over 650,000 people, several small communities, important agricultural land, and over sixty billion dollars ($60,000,000,000) in public and private assets.(c) Agriculture, recreation, and wildlife thrive within the Yolo Bypass, exemplified by the state-owned Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, which supports wildlife-friendly rice cultivation and livestock grazing, managed wetlands for migratory waterfowl, nature education opportunities for the regions schools, nature viewing, and hunting.(d) Cache Slough is located primarily within the County of Solano, intersecting with the southern portion of the Yolo Bypass. Cache Slough supports remnant tidal habitat where restoration of natural conditions could benefit delta smelt and other native aquatic species. Cache Slough is also a regionally significant agricultural area where the location of multiple-benefit projects could affect the operations and maintenance practices of agricultural diverters and core flood control and levee maintenance responsibilities of reclamation districts within the Cache Slough Complex.(e) The North Bay Aqueduct portion of the State Water Project delivers source water directly from the Cache Slough Complex to over 500,000 residents in the Counties of Napa and Solano. Opportunities for multiple-benefit projects must consider impacts to municipal water supply and water quality.(f) Together, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region presents unparalleled opportunities for multiple-benefit projects that improve flood protection, fisheries and wildlife habitat, water supply and water quality, agricultural sustainability, and recreational opportunities. As such, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region is the focus of an increasing number of federal, state, and locally developed projects intended to improve these multiple public values.(g) The numerous interests in this complex and important region present an opportunity and an imperative for governmental agencies at the federal, state, and local levels to collaboratively align planning efforts and project implementation.(h) In May 2016, a total of 15 federal, state, and local agencies signed a memorandum of understanding outlining principles necessary to achieve a common vision for the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The resulting Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership serves as a model for public agency cooperation and achievement.8511. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership means the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by all of the following public agencies:(1) United States Bureau of Reclamation.(2) United States Fish and Wildlife Service.(3) National Marine Fisheries Service.(4) United States Army Corps of Engineers.(5) County of Yolo.(6) County of Solano.(7) Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency.(8) Solano County Water Agency.(9) Reclamation District No. 2068.(10) Natural Resources Agency.(11) Department of Water Resources.(12) Department of Fish and Wildlife.(13) Central Valley Flood Protection Board.(14) State Water Resources Control Board.(15) Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board.(b) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program means the program established pursuant to Section 8512.8512. The Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program is hereby established to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The participating state agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 shall work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance all of the following objectives:(a) Prioritize projects that accommodate multiple objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.(b) Identify project implementation challenges and work collaboratively to resolve those challenges.(c) Develop programmatic and expedited approaches for regulatory compliance.(d) Identify funding mechanisms for project implementation and long-term operations and maintenance.(e) Develop strategies to foster regional agricultural sustainability, recreational opportunities, and long-term water supply reliability.
4657
4758 PART 3.5. Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program
4859
4960 PART 3.5. Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program
5061
5162 8510. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Yolo Bypass is a 59,000-acre flood control facility located in the Counties of Yolo and Solano that absorbs excess flood waters from the Sacramento River and conveys the waters 40 miles south into the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.(b) Authorized by Congress in 1917 and built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the 1920s, the Yolo Bypass provides critical flood protection to over 650,000 people, several small communities, important agricultural land, and over sixty billion dollars ($60,000,000,000) in public and private assets.(c) Agriculture, recreation, and wildlife thrive within the Yolo Bypass, exemplified by the state-owned Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, which supports wildlife-friendly rice cultivation and livestock grazing, managed wetlands for migratory waterfowl, nature education opportunities for the regions schools, nature viewing, and hunting.(d) Cache Slough is located primarily within the County of Solano, intersecting with the southern portion of the Yolo Bypass. Cache Slough supports remnant tidal habitat where restoration of natural conditions could benefit delta smelt and other native aquatic species. Cache Slough is also a regionally significant agricultural area where the location of multiple-benefit projects could affect the operations and maintenance practices of agricultural diverters and core flood control and levee maintenance responsibilities of reclamation districts within the Cache Slough Complex.(e) The North Bay Aqueduct portion of the State Water Project delivers source water directly from the Cache Slough Complex to over 500,000 residents in the Counties of Napa and Solano. Opportunities for multiple-benefit projects must consider impacts to municipal water supply and water quality.(f) Together, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region presents unparalleled opportunities for multiple-benefit projects that improve flood protection, fisheries and wildlife habitat, water supply and water quality, agricultural sustainability, and recreational opportunities. As such, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region is the focus of an increasing number of federal, state, and locally developed projects intended to improve these multiple public values.(g) The numerous interests in this complex and important region present an opportunity and an imperative for governmental agencies at the federal, state, and local levels to collaboratively align planning efforts and project implementation.(h) In May 2016, a total of 15 federal, state, and local agencies signed a memorandum of understanding outlining principles necessary to achieve a common vision for the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The resulting Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership serves as a model for public agency cooperation and achievement.
5263
5364
5465
5566 8510. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5667
5768 (a) The Yolo Bypass is a 59,000-acre flood control facility located in the Counties of Yolo and Solano that absorbs excess flood waters from the Sacramento River and conveys the waters 40 miles south into the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
5869
5970 (b) Authorized by Congress in 1917 and built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the 1920s, the Yolo Bypass provides critical flood protection to over 650,000 people, several small communities, important agricultural land, and over sixty billion dollars ($60,000,000,000) in public and private assets.
6071
6172 (c) Agriculture, recreation, and wildlife thrive within the Yolo Bypass, exemplified by the state-owned Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, which supports wildlife-friendly rice cultivation and livestock grazing, managed wetlands for migratory waterfowl, nature education opportunities for the regions schools, nature viewing, and hunting.
6273
6374 (d) Cache Slough is located primarily within the County of Solano, intersecting with the southern portion of the Yolo Bypass. Cache Slough supports remnant tidal habitat where restoration of natural conditions could benefit delta smelt and other native aquatic species. Cache Slough is also a regionally significant agricultural area where the location of multiple-benefit projects could affect the operations and maintenance practices of agricultural diverters and core flood control and levee maintenance responsibilities of reclamation districts within the Cache Slough Complex.
6475
6576 (e) The North Bay Aqueduct portion of the State Water Project delivers source water directly from the Cache Slough Complex to over 500,000 residents in the Counties of Napa and Solano. Opportunities for multiple-benefit projects must consider impacts to municipal water supply and water quality.
6677
6778 (f) Together, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region presents unparalleled opportunities for multiple-benefit projects that improve flood protection, fisheries and wildlife habitat, water supply and water quality, agricultural sustainability, and recreational opportunities. As such, the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region is the focus of an increasing number of federal, state, and locally developed projects intended to improve these multiple public values.
6879
6980 (g) The numerous interests in this complex and important region present an opportunity and an imperative for governmental agencies at the federal, state, and local levels to collaboratively align planning efforts and project implementation.
7081
7182 (h) In May 2016, a total of 15 federal, state, and local agencies signed a memorandum of understanding outlining principles necessary to achieve a common vision for the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The resulting Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership serves as a model for public agency cooperation and achievement.
7283
7384 8511. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership means the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by all of the following public agencies:(1) United States Bureau of Reclamation.(2) United States Fish and Wildlife Service.(3) National Marine Fisheries Service.(4) United States Army Corps of Engineers.(5) County of Yolo.(6) County of Solano.(7) Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency.(8) Solano County Water Agency.(9) Reclamation District No. 2068.(10) Natural Resources Agency.(11) Department of Water Resources.(12) Department of Fish and Wildlife.(13) Central Valley Flood Protection Board.(14) State Water Resources Control Board.(15) Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board.(b) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program means the program established pursuant to Section 8512.
7485
7586
7687
7788 8511. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
7889
7990 (a) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership means the multiagency partnership established pursuant to a memorandum of understanding signed in May 2016 by all of the following public agencies:
8091
8192 (1) United States Bureau of Reclamation.
8293
8394 (2) United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
8495
8596 (3) National Marine Fisheries Service.
8697
8798 (4) United States Army Corps of Engineers.
8899
89100 (5) County of Yolo.
90101
91102 (6) County of Solano.
92103
93104 (7) Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency.
94105
95106 (8) Solano County Water Agency.
96107
97108 (9) Reclamation District No. 2068.
98109
99110 (10) Natural Resources Agency.
100111
101112 (11) Department of Water Resources.
102113
103114 (12) Department of Fish and Wildlife.
104115
105116 (13) Central Valley Flood Protection Board.
106117
107118 (14) State Water Resources Control Board.
108119
109120 (15) Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board.
110121
111122 (b) Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program means the program established pursuant to Section 8512.
112123
113124 8512. The Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program is hereby established to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The participating state agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 shall work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance all of the following objectives:(a) Prioritize projects that accommodate multiple objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.(b) Identify project implementation challenges and work collaboratively to resolve those challenges.(c) Develop programmatic and expedited approaches for regulatory compliance.(d) Identify funding mechanisms for project implementation and long-term operations and maintenance.(e) Develop strategies to foster regional agricultural sustainability, recreational opportunities, and long-term water supply reliability.
114125
115126
116127
117128 8512. The Yolo Bypass Cache Slough Partnership Multibenefit Program is hereby established to support the development and implementation of projects within the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region. The participating state agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 shall work in collaboration with the participating federal and local agencies enumerated in subdivision (a) of Section 8511 and the City of West Sacramento, if it chooses to participate, to advance all of the following objectives:
118129
119130 (a) Prioritize projects that accommodate multiple objectives in the Yolo Bypass and Cache Slough region.
120131
121132 (b) Identify project implementation challenges and work collaboratively to resolve those challenges.
122133
123134 (c) Develop programmatic and expedited approaches for regulatory compliance.
124135
125136 (d) Identify funding mechanisms for project implementation and long-term operations and maintenance.
126137
127138 (e) Develop strategies to foster regional agricultural sustainability, recreational opportunities, and long-term water supply reliability.