California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB896 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 896Introduced by Assembly Member Aguiar-CurryFebruary 14, 2023An act to add Sections 12663.1 and 12663.2 to the Water Code, relating to water.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 896, as amended, Aguiar-Curry. Flood control: City of Woodland: Lower Cache Creek.Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. For certain flood control projects authorized on or after January 1, 2002, or for small flood management projects for which specified findings have been made on or after that date, existing law requires the state to pay 50% of specified nonfederal costs. Existing law authorizes the state to pay up to 70% of those nonfederal costs upon the recommendation of the Department of Water Resources or the Central Valley Flood Protection Board if either entity determines that the project will advance one of several specified objectives. Existing law authorizes a plan of improvement for flood control and water conservation on Cache Creek, including Clear Lake, in the Counties of Yolo and Lake.This bill would specifically adopt and approve the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project, as provided. The bill would also authorize the state to provide funds, up to 99% of the costs, as specified, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, and would authorize the City of Woodland to receive funds for these purposes under specified conditions. The bill would also authorize the state to authorize funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project if the Director of Water Resources makes specified findings.This bill would make legislative findings and declarations as to the necessity of a special statute for the City of Woodland.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. The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Lower Cache Creek Project protecting the City of Woodland in the County of Yolo, was authorized by the United States Congress in Section 209 of the Flood Control Act of 1962 (Public Law 87-874), Section 202(a)(11) of the Water Resource Development Act of 2020 (Division AA of Public Law 116-260), and Section 401(2) of the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(b) The City of Woodland partnering with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Central Valley Flood Protection Board (board), and the Department of Water Resources (department) prepared a feasibility study that concluded the City of Woodland is at risk of flooding in a seven-year flood event. The study proposes a project to meet State Urban Level of Flood Protection requirements.(c) The recommended project was based on a series of engineering and environmental impact studies prepared by the USACE with the cooperation of the department, the board, and the City of Woodland. These studies supported federal authorization of regional improvements to the Sacramento River Flood Control Project, including federal authorizations in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(d) Residents in the floodplain meet the state definition of being an economically disadvantaged community. The project will provide ecological benefits that contribute to the Central Valley Flood Protection Plans Conservation Strategy. The City of Woodlands entire industrial area, which employs over 10,000 people and is a vital part of the regions food and agricultural economy, is in the floodplain and would benefit from the project.(e) The voters of the City of Woodland enacted an initiative measure (Measure S) in 2004 that established a city policy to encourage a regional flood control project that would protect both the City of Woodland and other nearby areas of the County of Yolo. To help implement that policy, Measure S prohibited the city from funding or taking any other action to support the Lower Cache Creek Flood Barrier or any substantially similar structure without voter approval. This act does not affect the validity of Measure S, its applicability to any flood control project, including the subject of this act, or the outcome of the litigation challenging the citys approval of the project.SEC. 2. Section 12663.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, June 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.SEC. 3. Section 12663.2 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.SEC. 4. This act does not affect, and shall not be construed to affect, the validity of City of Woodland Measure S (2004), its applicability to any flood control project, including the subject of this act, or the outcome of the litigation in Yolo County Farm Bureau v. City of Woodland (Yolo County Superior Court Case No. CV 2021-0564; 3rd District Court of Appeal Case No. C09702).SEC. 4.SEC. 5. The Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique need to improve flood control on the Lower Cache Creek located in the County of Yolo as described in Section 1 of this act.
1+Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 896Introduced by Assembly Member Aguiar-CurryFebruary 14, 2023An act to amend Section 10004 of the Water Code, relating to water resources. An act to add Sections 12663.1 and 12663.2 to the Water Code, relating to water.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 896, as amended, Aguiar-Curry. The California Water Plan. Flood control: City of Woodland: Lower Cache Creek.Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. For certain flood control projects authorized on or after January 1, 2002, or for small flood management projects for which specified findings have been made on or after that date, existing law requires the state to pay 50% of specified nonfederal costs. Existing law authorizes the state to pay up to 70% of those nonfederal costs upon the recommendation of the Department of Water Resources or the Central Valley Flood Protection Board if either entity determines that the project will advance one of several specified objectives. Existing law authorizes a plan of improvement for flood control and water conservation on Cache Creek, including Clear Lake, in the Counties of Yolo and Lake.This bill would specifically adopt and approve the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project, as provided. The bill would also authorize the state to provide funds, up to 99% of the costs, as specified, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, and would authorize the City of Woodland to receive funds for these purposes under specified conditions. The bill would also authorize the state to authorize funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project if the Director of Water Resources makes specified findings.This bill would make legislative findings and declarations as to the necessity of a special statute for the City of Woodland.Existing law requires the Department of Water Resources to update every 5 years the plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is known as The California Water Plan.This bill would make nonsubstantive changes to those provisions.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NOYES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Lower Cache Creek Project protecting the City of Woodland in the County of Yolo, was authorized by the United States Congress in Section 209 of the Flood Control Act of 1962 (Public Law 87-874), Section 202(a)(11) of the Water Resource Development Act of 2020 (Division AA of Public Law 116-260), and Section 401(2) of the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(b) The City of Woodland partnering with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Central Valley Flood Protection Board (board), and the Department of Water Resources (department) prepared a feasibility study that concluded the City of Woodland is at risk of flooding in a seven-year flood event. The study proposes a project to meet State Urban Level of Flood Protection requirements.(c) The recommended project was based on a series of engineering and environmental impact studies prepared by the USACE with the cooperation of the department, the board, and the City of Woodland. These studies supported federal authorization of regional improvements to the Sacramento River Flood Control Project, including federal authorizations in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(d) Residents in the floodplain meet the state definition of being an economically disadvantaged community. The project will provide ecological benefits that contribute to the Central Valley Flood Protection Plans Conservation Strategy. The City of Woodlands entire industrial area, which employs over 10,000 people and is a vital part of the regions food and agricultural economy, is in the floodplain and would benefit from the project.SEC. 2. Section 12663.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.SEC. 3. Section 12663.2 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.SEC. 4. The Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique need to improve flood control on the Lower Cache Creek located in the County of Yolo as described in Section 1 of this act.SECTION 1.Section 10004 of the Water Code is amended to read:10004.(a)The plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is set forth and described in Bulletin No. 1 of the State Water Resources Board titled, Water Resources of California, Bulletin No. 2 of the State Water Resources Board titled, Water Utilization and Requirements of California, and Bulletin No. 3 of the department titled, The California Water Plan, with the necessary amendments, supplements, and additions to the plan, shall be known as The California Water Plan.(b)(1)The department shall update The California Water Plan on or before December 31, 2003, and every five years thereafter. The department shall report the amendments, supplements, and additions included in the updates of The California Water Plan, together with a summary of the departments conclusions and recommendations, to the Legislature in the session in which the updated plan is issued.(2)The department shall establish an advisory committee, comprised of representatives of agricultural and urban water suppliers, local government, business, production agriculture, and environmental interests, and other interested parties, to assist the department in updating The California Water Plan. The department shall consult with the advisory committee in carrying out this section. The department shall provide written notice of meetings of the advisory committee to any interested person or entity that requests the notice. The meetings shall be open to the public.(3)The department shall release a preliminary draft of The California Water Plan, as updated, upon request, to interested persons and entities throughout the state for their review and comments. The department shall provide these persons and entities an opportunity to present written or oral comments on the preliminary draft. The department shall consider these comments in the preparation of the final publication of The California Water Plan, as updated.
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3- Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 896Introduced by Assembly Member Aguiar-CurryFebruary 14, 2023An act to add Sections 12663.1 and 12663.2 to the Water Code, relating to water.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 896, as amended, Aguiar-Curry. Flood control: City of Woodland: Lower Cache Creek.Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. For certain flood control projects authorized on or after January 1, 2002, or for small flood management projects for which specified findings have been made on or after that date, existing law requires the state to pay 50% of specified nonfederal costs. Existing law authorizes the state to pay up to 70% of those nonfederal costs upon the recommendation of the Department of Water Resources or the Central Valley Flood Protection Board if either entity determines that the project will advance one of several specified objectives. Existing law authorizes a plan of improvement for flood control and water conservation on Cache Creek, including Clear Lake, in the Counties of Yolo and Lake.This bill would specifically adopt and approve the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project, as provided. The bill would also authorize the state to provide funds, up to 99% of the costs, as specified, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, and would authorize the City of Woodland to receive funds for these purposes under specified conditions. The bill would also authorize the state to authorize funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project if the Director of Water Resources makes specified findings.This bill would make legislative findings and declarations as to the necessity of a special statute for the City of Woodland.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 896Introduced by Assembly Member Aguiar-CurryFebruary 14, 2023An act to amend Section 10004 of the Water Code, relating to water resources. An act to add Sections 12663.1 and 12663.2 to the Water Code, relating to water.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 896, as amended, Aguiar-Curry. The California Water Plan. Flood control: City of Woodland: Lower Cache Creek.Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. For certain flood control projects authorized on or after January 1, 2002, or for small flood management projects for which specified findings have been made on or after that date, existing law requires the state to pay 50% of specified nonfederal costs. Existing law authorizes the state to pay up to 70% of those nonfederal costs upon the recommendation of the Department of Water Resources or the Central Valley Flood Protection Board if either entity determines that the project will advance one of several specified objectives. Existing law authorizes a plan of improvement for flood control and water conservation on Cache Creek, including Clear Lake, in the Counties of Yolo and Lake.This bill would specifically adopt and approve the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project, as provided. The bill would also authorize the state to provide funds, up to 99% of the costs, as specified, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, and would authorize the City of Woodland to receive funds for these purposes under specified conditions. The bill would also authorize the state to authorize funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project if the Director of Water Resources makes specified findings.This bill would make legislative findings and declarations as to the necessity of a special statute for the City of Woodland.Existing law requires the Department of Water Resources to update every 5 years the plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is known as The California Water Plan.This bill would make nonsubstantive changes to those provisions.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NOYES Local Program: NO
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5- Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023
5+ Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023
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7-Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2023
87 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023
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109 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
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1211 Assembly Bill
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1413 No. 896
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1615 Introduced by Assembly Member Aguiar-CurryFebruary 14, 2023
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1817 Introduced by Assembly Member Aguiar-Curry
1918 February 14, 2023
2019
21-An act to add Sections 12663.1 and 12663.2 to the Water Code, relating to water.
20+An act to amend Section 10004 of the Water Code, relating to water resources. An act to add Sections 12663.1 and 12663.2 to the Water Code, relating to water.
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2322 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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2524 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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27-AB 896, as amended, Aguiar-Curry. Flood control: City of Woodland: Lower Cache Creek.
26+AB 896, as amended, Aguiar-Curry. The California Water Plan. Flood control: City of Woodland: Lower Cache Creek.
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29-Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. For certain flood control projects authorized on or after January 1, 2002, or for small flood management projects for which specified findings have been made on or after that date, existing law requires the state to pay 50% of specified nonfederal costs. Existing law authorizes the state to pay up to 70% of those nonfederal costs upon the recommendation of the Department of Water Resources or the Central Valley Flood Protection Board if either entity determines that the project will advance one of several specified objectives. Existing law authorizes a plan of improvement for flood control and water conservation on Cache Creek, including Clear Lake, in the Counties of Yolo and Lake.This bill would specifically adopt and approve the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project, as provided. The bill would also authorize the state to provide funds, up to 99% of the costs, as specified, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, and would authorize the City of Woodland to receive funds for these purposes under specified conditions. The bill would also authorize the state to authorize funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project if the Director of Water Resources makes specified findings.This bill would make legislative findings and declarations as to the necessity of a special statute for the City of Woodland.
28+Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. For certain flood control projects authorized on or after January 1, 2002, or for small flood management projects for which specified findings have been made on or after that date, existing law requires the state to pay 50% of specified nonfederal costs. Existing law authorizes the state to pay up to 70% of those nonfederal costs upon the recommendation of the Department of Water Resources or the Central Valley Flood Protection Board if either entity determines that the project will advance one of several specified objectives. Existing law authorizes a plan of improvement for flood control and water conservation on Cache Creek, including Clear Lake, in the Counties of Yolo and Lake.This bill would specifically adopt and approve the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project, as provided. The bill would also authorize the state to provide funds, up to 99% of the costs, as specified, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, and would authorize the City of Woodland to receive funds for these purposes under specified conditions. The bill would also authorize the state to authorize funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project if the Director of Water Resources makes specified findings.This bill would make legislative findings and declarations as to the necessity of a special statute for the City of Woodland.Existing law requires the Department of Water Resources to update every 5 years the plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is known as The California Water Plan.This bill would make nonsubstantive changes to those provisions.
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3130 Existing law provides for state cooperation with the federal government in the construction of specified flood control projects. For certain flood control projects authorized on or after January 1, 2002, or for small flood management projects for which specified findings have been made on or after that date, existing law requires the state to pay 50% of specified nonfederal costs. Existing law authorizes the state to pay up to 70% of those nonfederal costs upon the recommendation of the Department of Water Resources or the Central Valley Flood Protection Board if either entity determines that the project will advance one of several specified objectives. Existing law authorizes a plan of improvement for flood control and water conservation on Cache Creek, including Clear Lake, in the Counties of Yolo and Lake.
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3332 This bill would specifically adopt and approve the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project, as provided. The bill would also authorize the state to provide funds, up to 99% of the costs, as specified, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, and would authorize the City of Woodland to receive funds for these purposes under specified conditions. The bill would also authorize the state to authorize funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project if the Director of Water Resources makes specified findings.
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3534 This bill would make legislative findings and declarations as to the necessity of a special statute for the City of Woodland.
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36+Existing law requires the Department of Water Resources to update every 5 years the plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is known as The California Water Plan.
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38+
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40+This bill would make nonsubstantive changes to those provisions.
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43+
3744 ## Digest Key
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3946 ## Bill Text
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41-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Lower Cache Creek Project protecting the City of Woodland in the County of Yolo, was authorized by the United States Congress in Section 209 of the Flood Control Act of 1962 (Public Law 87-874), Section 202(a)(11) of the Water Resource Development Act of 2020 (Division AA of Public Law 116-260), and Section 401(2) of the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(b) The City of Woodland partnering with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Central Valley Flood Protection Board (board), and the Department of Water Resources (department) prepared a feasibility study that concluded the City of Woodland is at risk of flooding in a seven-year flood event. The study proposes a project to meet State Urban Level of Flood Protection requirements.(c) The recommended project was based on a series of engineering and environmental impact studies prepared by the USACE with the cooperation of the department, the board, and the City of Woodland. These studies supported federal authorization of regional improvements to the Sacramento River Flood Control Project, including federal authorizations in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(d) Residents in the floodplain meet the state definition of being an economically disadvantaged community. The project will provide ecological benefits that contribute to the Central Valley Flood Protection Plans Conservation Strategy. The City of Woodlands entire industrial area, which employs over 10,000 people and is a vital part of the regions food and agricultural economy, is in the floodplain and would benefit from the project.(e) The voters of the City of Woodland enacted an initiative measure (Measure S) in 2004 that established a city policy to encourage a regional flood control project that would protect both the City of Woodland and other nearby areas of the County of Yolo. To help implement that policy, Measure S prohibited the city from funding or taking any other action to support the Lower Cache Creek Flood Barrier or any substantially similar structure without voter approval. This act does not affect the validity of Measure S, its applicability to any flood control project, including the subject of this act, or the outcome of the litigation challenging the citys approval of the project.SEC. 2. Section 12663.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, June 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.SEC. 3. Section 12663.2 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.SEC. 4. This act does not affect, and shall not be construed to affect, the validity of City of Woodland Measure S (2004), its applicability to any flood control project, including the subject of this act, or the outcome of the litigation in Yolo County Farm Bureau v. City of Woodland (Yolo County Superior Court Case No. CV 2021-0564; 3rd District Court of Appeal Case No. C09702).SEC. 4.SEC. 5. The Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique need to improve flood control on the Lower Cache Creek located in the County of Yolo as described in Section 1 of this act.
48+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Lower Cache Creek Project protecting the City of Woodland in the County of Yolo, was authorized by the United States Congress in Section 209 of the Flood Control Act of 1962 (Public Law 87-874), Section 202(a)(11) of the Water Resource Development Act of 2020 (Division AA of Public Law 116-260), and Section 401(2) of the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(b) The City of Woodland partnering with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Central Valley Flood Protection Board (board), and the Department of Water Resources (department) prepared a feasibility study that concluded the City of Woodland is at risk of flooding in a seven-year flood event. The study proposes a project to meet State Urban Level of Flood Protection requirements.(c) The recommended project was based on a series of engineering and environmental impact studies prepared by the USACE with the cooperation of the department, the board, and the City of Woodland. These studies supported federal authorization of regional improvements to the Sacramento River Flood Control Project, including federal authorizations in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(d) Residents in the floodplain meet the state definition of being an economically disadvantaged community. The project will provide ecological benefits that contribute to the Central Valley Flood Protection Plans Conservation Strategy. The City of Woodlands entire industrial area, which employs over 10,000 people and is a vital part of the regions food and agricultural economy, is in the floodplain and would benefit from the project.SEC. 2. Section 12663.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.SEC. 3. Section 12663.2 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.SEC. 4. The Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique need to improve flood control on the Lower Cache Creek located in the County of Yolo as described in Section 1 of this act.SECTION 1.Section 10004 of the Water Code is amended to read:10004.(a)The plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is set forth and described in Bulletin No. 1 of the State Water Resources Board titled, Water Resources of California, Bulletin No. 2 of the State Water Resources Board titled, Water Utilization and Requirements of California, and Bulletin No. 3 of the department titled, The California Water Plan, with the necessary amendments, supplements, and additions to the plan, shall be known as The California Water Plan.(b)(1)The department shall update The California Water Plan on or before December 31, 2003, and every five years thereafter. The department shall report the amendments, supplements, and additions included in the updates of The California Water Plan, together with a summary of the departments conclusions and recommendations, to the Legislature in the session in which the updated plan is issued.(2)The department shall establish an advisory committee, comprised of representatives of agricultural and urban water suppliers, local government, business, production agriculture, and environmental interests, and other interested parties, to assist the department in updating The California Water Plan. The department shall consult with the advisory committee in carrying out this section. The department shall provide written notice of meetings of the advisory committee to any interested person or entity that requests the notice. The meetings shall be open to the public.(3)The department shall release a preliminary draft of The California Water Plan, as updated, upon request, to interested persons and entities throughout the state for their review and comments. The department shall provide these persons and entities an opportunity to present written or oral comments on the preliminary draft. The department shall consider these comments in the preparation of the final publication of The California Water Plan, as updated.
4249
4350 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4451
4552 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4653
47-SECTION 1. The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Lower Cache Creek Project protecting the City of Woodland in the County of Yolo, was authorized by the United States Congress in Section 209 of the Flood Control Act of 1962 (Public Law 87-874), Section 202(a)(11) of the Water Resource Development Act of 2020 (Division AA of Public Law 116-260), and Section 401(2) of the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(b) The City of Woodland partnering with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Central Valley Flood Protection Board (board), and the Department of Water Resources (department) prepared a feasibility study that concluded the City of Woodland is at risk of flooding in a seven-year flood event. The study proposes a project to meet State Urban Level of Flood Protection requirements.(c) The recommended project was based on a series of engineering and environmental impact studies prepared by the USACE with the cooperation of the department, the board, and the City of Woodland. These studies supported federal authorization of regional improvements to the Sacramento River Flood Control Project, including federal authorizations in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(d) Residents in the floodplain meet the state definition of being an economically disadvantaged community. The project will provide ecological benefits that contribute to the Central Valley Flood Protection Plans Conservation Strategy. The City of Woodlands entire industrial area, which employs over 10,000 people and is a vital part of the regions food and agricultural economy, is in the floodplain and would benefit from the project.(e) The voters of the City of Woodland enacted an initiative measure (Measure S) in 2004 that established a city policy to encourage a regional flood control project that would protect both the City of Woodland and other nearby areas of the County of Yolo. To help implement that policy, Measure S prohibited the city from funding or taking any other action to support the Lower Cache Creek Flood Barrier or any substantially similar structure without voter approval. This act does not affect the validity of Measure S, its applicability to any flood control project, including the subject of this act, or the outcome of the litigation challenging the citys approval of the project.
54+SECTION 1. The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Lower Cache Creek Project protecting the City of Woodland in the County of Yolo, was authorized by the United States Congress in Section 209 of the Flood Control Act of 1962 (Public Law 87-874), Section 202(a)(11) of the Water Resource Development Act of 2020 (Division AA of Public Law 116-260), and Section 401(2) of the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(b) The City of Woodland partnering with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Central Valley Flood Protection Board (board), and the Department of Water Resources (department) prepared a feasibility study that concluded the City of Woodland is at risk of flooding in a seven-year flood event. The study proposes a project to meet State Urban Level of Flood Protection requirements.(c) The recommended project was based on a series of engineering and environmental impact studies prepared by the USACE with the cooperation of the department, the board, and the City of Woodland. These studies supported federal authorization of regional improvements to the Sacramento River Flood Control Project, including federal authorizations in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(d) Residents in the floodplain meet the state definition of being an economically disadvantaged community. The project will provide ecological benefits that contribute to the Central Valley Flood Protection Plans Conservation Strategy. The City of Woodlands entire industrial area, which employs over 10,000 people and is a vital part of the regions food and agricultural economy, is in the floodplain and would benefit from the project.
4855
49-SECTION 1. The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Lower Cache Creek Project protecting the City of Woodland in the County of Yolo, was authorized by the United States Congress in Section 209 of the Flood Control Act of 1962 (Public Law 87-874), Section 202(a)(11) of the Water Resource Development Act of 2020 (Division AA of Public Law 116-260), and Section 401(2) of the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(b) The City of Woodland partnering with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Central Valley Flood Protection Board (board), and the Department of Water Resources (department) prepared a feasibility study that concluded the City of Woodland is at risk of flooding in a seven-year flood event. The study proposes a project to meet State Urban Level of Flood Protection requirements.(c) The recommended project was based on a series of engineering and environmental impact studies prepared by the USACE with the cooperation of the department, the board, and the City of Woodland. These studies supported federal authorization of regional improvements to the Sacramento River Flood Control Project, including federal authorizations in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(d) Residents in the floodplain meet the state definition of being an economically disadvantaged community. The project will provide ecological benefits that contribute to the Central Valley Flood Protection Plans Conservation Strategy. The City of Woodlands entire industrial area, which employs over 10,000 people and is a vital part of the regions food and agricultural economy, is in the floodplain and would benefit from the project.(e) The voters of the City of Woodland enacted an initiative measure (Measure S) in 2004 that established a city policy to encourage a regional flood control project that would protect both the City of Woodland and other nearby areas of the County of Yolo. To help implement that policy, Measure S prohibited the city from funding or taking any other action to support the Lower Cache Creek Flood Barrier or any substantially similar structure without voter approval. This act does not affect the validity of Measure S, its applicability to any flood control project, including the subject of this act, or the outcome of the litigation challenging the citys approval of the project.
56+SECTION 1. The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) The Lower Cache Creek Project protecting the City of Woodland in the County of Yolo, was authorized by the United States Congress in Section 209 of the Flood Control Act of 1962 (Public Law 87-874), Section 202(a)(11) of the Water Resource Development Act of 2020 (Division AA of Public Law 116-260), and Section 401(2) of the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(b) The City of Woodland partnering with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Central Valley Flood Protection Board (board), and the Department of Water Resources (department) prepared a feasibility study that concluded the City of Woodland is at risk of flooding in a seven-year flood event. The study proposes a project to meet State Urban Level of Flood Protection requirements.(c) The recommended project was based on a series of engineering and environmental impact studies prepared by the USACE with the cooperation of the department, the board, and the City of Woodland. These studies supported federal authorization of regional improvements to the Sacramento River Flood Control Project, including federal authorizations in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).(d) Residents in the floodplain meet the state definition of being an economically disadvantaged community. The project will provide ecological benefits that contribute to the Central Valley Flood Protection Plans Conservation Strategy. The City of Woodlands entire industrial area, which employs over 10,000 people and is a vital part of the regions food and agricultural economy, is in the floodplain and would benefit from the project.
5057
5158 SECTION 1. The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:
5259
5360 ### SECTION 1.
5461
5562 (a) The Lower Cache Creek Project protecting the City of Woodland in the County of Yolo, was authorized by the United States Congress in Section 209 of the Flood Control Act of 1962 (Public Law 87-874), Section 202(a)(11) of the Water Resource Development Act of 2020 (Division AA of Public Law 116-260), and Section 401(2) of the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).
5663
5764 (b) The City of Woodland partnering with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Central Valley Flood Protection Board (board), and the Department of Water Resources (department) prepared a feasibility study that concluded the City of Woodland is at risk of flooding in a seven-year flood event. The study proposes a project to meet State Urban Level of Flood Protection requirements.
5865
5966 (c) The recommended project was based on a series of engineering and environmental impact studies prepared by the USACE with the cooperation of the department, the board, and the City of Woodland. These studies supported federal authorization of regional improvements to the Sacramento River Flood Control Project, including federal authorizations in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263).
6067
6168 (d) Residents in the floodplain meet the state definition of being an economically disadvantaged community. The project will provide ecological benefits that contribute to the Central Valley Flood Protection Plans Conservation Strategy. The City of Woodlands entire industrial area, which employs over 10,000 people and is a vital part of the regions food and agricultural economy, is in the floodplain and would benefit from the project.
6269
63-(e) The voters of the City of Woodland enacted an initiative measure (Measure S) in 2004 that established a city policy to encourage a regional flood control project that would protect both the City of Woodland and other nearby areas of the County of Yolo. To help implement that policy, Measure S prohibited the city from funding or taking any other action to support the Lower Cache Creek Flood Barrier or any substantially similar structure without voter approval. This act does not affect the validity of Measure S, its applicability to any flood control project, including the subject of this act, or the outcome of the litigation challenging the citys approval of the project.
64-
65-SEC. 2. Section 12663.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, June 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.
70+SEC. 2. Section 12663.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.
6671
6772 SEC. 2. Section 12663.1 is added to the Water Code, to read:
6873
6974 ### SEC. 2.
7075
71-12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, June 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.
76+12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.
7277
73-12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, June 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.
78+12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.
7479
75-12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, June 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.
80+12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.
7681
7782
7883
79-12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, June 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.
84+12663.1. The Lower Cache Creek Project along Cache Creek adopted and authorized by the United States Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263), is hereby adopted and approved substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report and dated June, 21, 2021, at an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated by the Legislature for state participation, upon the recommendation and advice of the department or the board.
8085
81-SEC. 3. Section 12663.2 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.
86+SEC. 3. Section 12663.2 is added to the Water Code, to read:12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.
8287
8388 SEC. 3. Section 12663.2 is added to the Water Code, to read:
8489
8590 ### SEC. 3.
8691
87-12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.
92+12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.
8893
89-12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.
94+12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.
9095
91-12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.
96+12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.(b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:(1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.(2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.(c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.(d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.(e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:(1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.(2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.(f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.
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95100 12663.2. (a) Notwithstanding Section 12585.7, the state may provide funds, up to 99 percent of the costs, for the project for flood control on the Lower Cache Creek in the County of Yolo, that is substantially in accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Chiefs Report dated June 21, 2021, as follows:
96101
97-(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) one hundred twenty-eight million two hundred thirty-five thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($128,235,450) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.
102+(1) At an estimated cost to the state of the sum of one hundred fourteen million six hundred ninety-two thousand five hundred dollars ($114,692,500) that may be appropriated for state cooperation by the Legislature upon the recommendations and advice of the department.
98103
99104 (2) Upon a specific written determination by the department that the project meets the requirements of Section 12582.7.
100105
101106 (b) The state assumes no liability for damages that may result from the project by either of the following:
102107
103108 (1) Authorizing the project in accordance with this section.
104109
105110 (2) The appropriation by the Legislature of funds upon the recommendations and advice of the department.
106111
107112 (c) The City of Woodland may receive funds only if it enters into an agreement with the department pursuant to which the City of Woodland agrees to indemnify and hold and save harmless the state, its officers, agents, and employees for any and all liability for damages that may result from the project.
108113
109114 (d) State funding, upon appropriation by the Legislature, may be used for planning, engineering, designing, mitigation, and constructing the project within authorized project boundaries as set forth in the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, as authorized by the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-263) and the additional project features identified in the Woodland Flood Risk Management Project Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) and any future supplements or addendums to this EIR. The state may advance funds for the planning, engineering, design, and construction of the authorized project and supplemental features identified in the EIR, and the acquisition of required lands, easements, rights-of-way, utility relocations, disposal sites, and borrow areas for, and mitigation of, the authorized project, as specified in the Army Corps of Engineers report entitled Lower Cache Creek, Yolo County, Woodland and Vicinity, California Final Interim Feasibility Report Flood Risk Management. The state shall have the discretion to reduce retention withheld under any cost-share agreement to fund the Lower Cache Creek Flood Risk Management Project to 0 percent and is authorized to advance funding in the absence, in whole or in part, of federal funding, in which case the funding shall not exceed the amount that would be the equivalent nonfederal share if there was federal project funding.
110115
111116 (e) Before any funds appropriated by the Legislature are provided to the flood control project, the director shall find both of the following:
112117
113118 (1) The project qualifies for a 99 percent state cost share based upon the gross calculation of the cumulative benefits the project provides as described in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project.
114119
115120 (2) The project is located in the County of Yolo, contains significant state assets, and economic hardship exists within the benefit area of the project, as demonstrated in a nonfederal cost-share report submitted to the department for the project, and the project would include setback levees.
116121
117122 (f) For purposes of this section, liability for damages includes, but is not limited to, liability for damages relating to the construction or operation of the project or the failure of the project to operate as intended.
118123
119-SEC. 4. This act does not affect, and shall not be construed to affect, the validity of City of Woodland Measure S (2004), its applicability to any flood control project, including the subject of this act, or the outcome of the litigation in Yolo County Farm Bureau v. City of Woodland (Yolo County Superior Court Case No. CV 2021-0564; 3rd District Court of Appeal Case No. C09702).
124+SEC. 4. The Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique need to improve flood control on the Lower Cache Creek located in the County of Yolo as described in Section 1 of this act.
120125
121-SEC. 4. This act does not affect, and shall not be construed to affect, the validity of City of Woodland Measure S (2004), its applicability to any flood control project, including the subject of this act, or the outcome of the litigation in Yolo County Farm Bureau v. City of Woodland (Yolo County Superior Court Case No. CV 2021-0564; 3rd District Court of Appeal Case No. C09702).
126+SEC. 4. The Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique need to improve flood control on the Lower Cache Creek located in the County of Yolo as described in Section 1 of this act.
122127
123-SEC. 4. This act does not affect, and shall not be construed to affect, the validity of City of Woodland Measure S (2004), its applicability to any flood control project, including the subject of this act, or the outcome of the litigation in Yolo County Farm Bureau v. City of Woodland (Yolo County Superior Court Case No. CV 2021-0564; 3rd District Court of Appeal Case No. C09702).
128+SEC. 4. The Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique need to improve flood control on the Lower Cache Creek located in the County of Yolo as described in Section 1 of this act.
124129
125130 ### SEC. 4.
126131
127-SEC. 4.SEC. 5. The Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique need to improve flood control on the Lower Cache Creek located in the County of Yolo as described in Section 1 of this act.
128132
129-SEC. 4.SEC. 5. The Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique need to improve flood control on the Lower Cache Creek located in the County of Yolo as described in Section 1 of this act.
130133
131-SEC. 4.SEC. 5. The Legislature finds and declares that a special statute is necessary and that a general statute cannot be made applicable within the meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution because of the unique need to improve flood control on the Lower Cache Creek located in the County of Yolo as described in Section 1 of this act.
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133-### SEC. 4.SEC. 5.
135+
136+(a)The plan for the orderly and coordinated control, protection, conservation, development, and use of the water resources of the state, which is set forth and described in Bulletin No. 1 of the State Water Resources Board titled, Water Resources of California, Bulletin No. 2 of the State Water Resources Board titled, Water Utilization and Requirements of California, and Bulletin No. 3 of the department titled, The California Water Plan, with the necessary amendments, supplements, and additions to the plan, shall be known as The California Water Plan.
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140+(b)(1)The department shall update The California Water Plan on or before December 31, 2003, and every five years thereafter. The department shall report the amendments, supplements, and additions included in the updates of The California Water Plan, together with a summary of the departments conclusions and recommendations, to the Legislature in the session in which the updated plan is issued.
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144+(2)The department shall establish an advisory committee, comprised of representatives of agricultural and urban water suppliers, local government, business, production agriculture, and environmental interests, and other interested parties, to assist the department in updating The California Water Plan. The department shall consult with the advisory committee in carrying out this section. The department shall provide written notice of meetings of the advisory committee to any interested person or entity that requests the notice. The meetings shall be open to the public.
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148+(3)The department shall release a preliminary draft of The California Water Plan, as updated, upon request, to interested persons and entities throughout the state for their review and comments. The department shall provide these persons and entities an opportunity to present written or oral comments on the preliminary draft. The department shall consider these comments in the preparation of the final publication of The California Water Plan, as updated.