California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB98 Compare Versions

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1-Assembly Bill No. 98 CHAPTER 931An act to add Section 65302.02 to, and to add Chapter 2.8 (commencing with Section 65098) to Division 1 of Title 7 of, the Government Code, and to add Sections 40458.5 and 40522.7 to the Health and Safety Code, relating to land use. [ Approved by Governor September 29, 2024. Filed with Secretary of State September 29, 2024. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 98, Juan Carrillo. Planning and zoning: logistics use: truck routes.(1) Existing law, the Planning and Zoning Law, sets forth various requirements relating to the review of development project permit applications and the issuance of development permits for specified classes of development projects.This bill, beginning January 1, 2026, would prescribe various statewide warehouse design and build standards for any proposed new or expanded logistics use developments, as specified, including, among other things, standards for building design and location, parking, truck loading bays, landscaping buffers, entry gates, and signage. The bill would except from those design and build standards certain existing logistics use developments, proposed expansions of a logistics use development, and property currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, under prescribed conditions. The bill would require a facility operator, prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, to establish and submit for approval by a city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county, as prescribed. The bill would require a facility operator to enforce the plan. The bill would provide for the revision of the plan in specified circumstances.The bill would prohibit a city, county, or city and county from approving development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in the bill. The bill would require a city, county, or city and county to condition approval of a logistics use on 2-to-1 replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, as specified, and payments to displaced tenants if residential dwellings are affected through purchase, as prescribed. The bill would define terms for these purposes.(2) The Planning and Zoning Law requires the legislative body of each county and city to adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the county or city and specified land outside its boundaries that includes, among other specified mandatory elements, a circulation element consisting of the general location and extent of existing and proposed major thoroughfares, transportation routes, terminals, any military airports and ports, and other local public utilities and facilities, all correlated with the land use element of the plan. Existing law requires, upon any substantive revision of the circulation element, that the legislative body modify the element to address specified additional issues.This bill would require a county or city, by January 1, 2028, except as provided, to update its circulation element, as prescribed, including identifying and establishing specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and concentrations of sensitive receptors, as defined. The bill would establish specific standards for truck routes. The bill would require a county or city to provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations. The bill would require a county or city to make truck routes publicly available and share maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers. The bill would authorize the Attorney General to enforce these provisions, as provided, including by imposition of a fine of up to $50,000 every 6 months if the required updates have not been made.(3) Existing law provides for the creation of the South Coast Air Quality Management District in those portions of the Counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino included within the area of the South Coast Air Basin, as specified. Existing law provides that the south coast district is governed by a board consisting of 13 members and requires the district to adopt rules and regulations to carry out the south coast district air quality management plan that are not in conflict with state and federal laws and rules and regulations.This bill would require the south coast district to establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violation of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent, as specified. The bill would require the south coast district, subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, to, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments. The bill would require the south coast district to use the data collected to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors from logistics use development operations and to submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. The bill would also require the district to submit an interim report to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2028, to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, as provided.(4) By modifying the duties of local agencies with regard to the approval of logistics use development and requiring the revision of the circulation element of a general plan, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.(5) The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.(6) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Chapter 2.8 (commencing with Section 65098) is added to Division 1 of Title 7 of the Government Code, to read: CHAPTER 2.8. Warehouse Design and Build Standards65098. As used in this chapter:(a) 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least 1 percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(4) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(5) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2030, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(6) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(b) Expansion of an existing logistics use means the expansion of an existing logistics use by 20 percent or more of the existing square footage. Office space shall not be included as part of the existing square footage or in the square footage for the 20-percent expansion threshold.(c) Heavy-duty truck means a class 7 or class 8 truck. As used in this subdivision:(1) Class 7 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of 26,001 to 33,000 pounds.(2) Class 8 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of greater than 33,000 pounds.(d) Logistics use means a building in which cargo, goods, or products are moved or stored for later distribution to business or retail customers, or both, that does not predominantly serve retail customers for onsite purchases, and heavy-duty trucks are primarily involved in the movement of the cargo, goods, or products. Logistics use does not include any of the following:(1) Facilities where food or household goods are sold directly to consumers and are accessible to the public.(2) A building primarily served by rail to move cargo goods or product.(3) (A) A Strategic Intermodal Facility.(B) For purposes of this subdivision, Strategic Intermodal Facility means a project that satisfies all of the following requirements:(i) Logistics facilities, including warehousing and transloading facilities, served by rail.(ii) Intermodal freight transport services.(iii) All facility structures and related rail operations are located within a single site footprint.(e) Sensitive receptor means one or more of the following:(1) A residence, including, but not limited to, a private home, apartment, condominium unit, group home, dormitory unit, or retirement home.(2) A school, including, but not limited to, a preschool, prekindergarten, or school maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(3) A daycare facility, including, but not limited to, in-home daycare.(4) Publicly owned parks, playgrounds, and recreational areas or facilities primarily used by children, unless the development of the park and recreation areas are included as a condition of approval for the development of a logistics use.(5) Nursing homes, long-term care facilities, hospices, convalescent facilities, or similar live-in housing.(6) Hospitals, as defined in Section 128700 of the Health and Safety Code.(f) Small off-road engines means spark-ignition engines rated at or below 19 kilowatts.(g) Tier 1 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) (i) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(ii) For purposes of the photovoltaic system installation requirement in clause (i), all warehouse square footage should be considered conditioned space.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least one percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Has a microgrid-ready switchgear system capable of supporting distributed energy resources.(4) Is advanced smart metering ready.(5) Has a minimum of 50 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces preinstalled with conduit and all necessary physical infrastructure to support future charging of electric vehicles.(6) Has a minimum of 10 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces installed with electric vehicle charging stations.(7) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(8) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(9) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2028, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(10) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(h) Warehouse concentration region includes the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino and the Cities of Chino, Colton, Fontana, Jurupa Valley, Moreno Valley, Ontario, Perris, Rancho Cucamonga, Redlands, Rialto, Riverside, and San Bernardino.65098.1. (a) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development 250,000 square feet or more where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 300 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(b) Commencing January 1, 2026, except as provided for in subdivision (c), any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(c) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, and is located in the warehouse concentration region, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(d) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development less than 250,000 square feet where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(2) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(3) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(4) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(5) Provides conduits at loading bays equal to one truck per every loading bay serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(6) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(7) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), on or before January 1, 2028, a city, county, or city and county shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.(2) On or before January 1, 2026, all cities and counties in the warehouse concentration region shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.65098.1.5. (a) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any existing logistics use development in existence as of September 30, 2024, shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a new sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a proposed expansion of a logistics use development is in a local entitlement process, then the proposed expansion shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a property is currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, then the proposed logistics use development shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(b) (1) Any new logistics use developments that require the rezoning of land and must undergo a municipal entitlement process shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if the start of the entitlement process for the logistics use began before any sensitive receptor started its own entitlement or permitting process, unless the proposed sensitive receptor was an existing allowable use according to local zoning regulations.(2) During a logistics use developments entitlement process for a new or expanded logistics use, if a new sensitive receptor is proposed or established within the distances required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, then those distance requirements shall not apply to the logistics use development so long as the logistics use development was not already subject to those requirements prior to the new sensitive receptor being proposed or established.(c) This chapter shall not apply to any logistics projects that were subject to a commenced local entitlement process prior to September 30, 2024.(d) The protection afforded by this section shall remain in effect from the time of the initial application submission through the completion of the entitlement process, including any necessary rezoning actions and through the development period. If no development activity occurs within five years of entitlement approvals, the protections shall be waived.(e) This chapter shall not apply to a logistics project that received an approval by a local agency prior to the effective date of this chapter. For purposes of this subdivision, approval shall have the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 15352 of Chapter 3 of Division 6 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations.65098.2. (a) Any new logistics use facility within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor shall have a buffer as follows:(1) If the logistics use development is subject to the requirements of subdivision (a) or (d) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 50 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(2) If the logistics use development is subject to either subdivision (b) or subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 100 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(b) Buffer areas shall include a solid decorative wall, landscaped berm and wall, or landscaped berm 10 feet or more in height, drought tolerant natural ground landscaping with proper irrigation, and solid-screen buffering trees as described in subdivision (c).(c) Trees shall be used as part of a solid-screen buffering treatment and planted in two rows along the length of the property line adjacent to the sensitive receptor. Trees used for this purpose shall be evergreen, drought tolerant, to the extent feasible, composed of species with low biogenic emissions, of a minimum 36-inch box size at planting, and spaced at no greater distance than 40 feet on center. Palm trees shall not be utilized.65098.2.5. The entry gates into the loading truck court for a new or expanded logistics use facility shall be positioned after a minimum of 50 feet of total available stacking depth inside the property line. The stacking depth shall be increased by 70 feet for every 20 loading bays beyond 50 loading bays, to the extent feasible.65098.2.7. (a) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments, beginning January 1, 2026, are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use development to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(b) (1) Any new logistics use development shall be sited on roadways that meet the following classifications:(A) Arterial roads.(B) Collector roads.(C) Major thoroughfares.(D) Local roads that predominantly serve commercial uses.(2) For purposes of this chapter, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designed for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) A waiver may be granted where siting on the designated roadways pursuant to subdivision (b) is impractical due to unique geographic, economic, or infrastructure-related reasons. The waiver shall be approved by the city, county, or city and county, provided that the applicant demonstrates all of the following:(1) There is no feasible alternative site that exists within the designated roadways.(2) A traffic analysis has been completed and submitted to the local approving authority.(3) The site is an existing industrial zone.(4) The proposed site will incorporate mitigations to minimize traffic and environmental impacts on residential areas to the greatest extent feasible.65098.3. (a) Anti-idling signs indicating a three-minute heavy-duty truck engine idling restriction shall be posted at logistics use developments along entrances to the site and at the truck loading bays.(b) Signs shall be installed at all heavy-duty truck exit driveways directing truck drivers to the truck route as indicated in the truck routing plan, as described in Section 65098.4, and in the state highway system.65098.4. Prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, a facility operator shall establish and submit for approval to the planning director or equivalent position for the city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county. The truck routing plan shall describe the operational characteristics of the use of the facility operator, including, but not limited to, hours of operation, types of items to be stored within the building, and proposed truck routing to and from the facility to designated truck routes that, to the greatest extent possible, avoid passing sensitive receptors. The truck routing plan shall include measures, such as signage and pavement markings, queuing analysis, and enforcement, for preventing truck queuing, circling, stopping, and parking on public streets. The facility operator shall be responsible for enforcement of the truck routing plan. A revised truck routing plan shall be submitted to the planning director or equivalent position prior to a business license being issued by the city, county, or city and county for any new tenant of the property. The planning director or equivalent position shall have discretion to determine if changes to the truck routing plan are necessary, including, but not limited to, any additional measures to alleviate truck routing and parking issues that may arise during the life of the facility.65098.5. (a) A city, county, or city and county shall not approve development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in this chapter.(b) This section shall not be construed to restrict the existing authority of a city, county, or city and county to deny a logistics use facility altogether.65098.6. A city, county, or city and county shall condition approval of a logistics use on the following:(a) Two-to-one replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years, unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, pursuant to Section 17920.3 of the Health and Safety Code, prior to purchase by the developer. For each housing unit demolished, regardless of market value of the unit, two units of affordable housing for persons and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code, that are deed-restricted shall be built within the jurisdiction. Funds from any fee imposed for the replacement of demolished housing units shall be placed in a housing-specific set-aside account and shall be used for housing within three years of collection.(b) If residential dwellings are affected through purchase, the developer shall be required to provide any displaced tenant with an amount equivalent to 12 months rent at the current rate.65098.7. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to supersede mitigation measures required by the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).65098.8. The Legislature finds and declares that the movement and storage of freight and the impact of this activity on public health and communities across the state as set forth in this chapter is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, this chapter applies to all cities, including charter cities.65098.9. The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to a logistics use development if it meets both of the following:(a) The logistics use development is a mixed-use development that may create sensitive receptors on the site of the new logistics use development.(b) There are no existing sensitive receptors within 900 feet of the loading bay.SEC. 2. Section 65302.02 is added to the Government Code, to read:65302.02. By January 1, 2028, except as provided for in subdivision (h), a county or city shall update its circulation element, as required by subdivision (b) of Section 65302, to do all of the following:(a) Identify and establish specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and sensitive receptors, as defined by Section 65098.(b) Maximize the use of interstate or state divided highways as preferred routes for truck routes. The county or city shall also maximize use of arterial roads, major thoroughfares, and predominantly commercially oriented local streets when state or interstate highways are not utilized. Truck routes shall comply with the following:(1) Major or minor collector streets and roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses shall be used for truck routes only when strictly necessary to reach existing industrial zones.(2) Trucks shall be routed via transportation arteries that minimize exposure to sensitive receptors.(3) On and after January 1, 2028, all proposed development of a logistics use development, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 65098, shall be accessible via arterial roads, major thoroughfares, or roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses.(A) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use developments to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(B) For purposes of this section, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designated for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) The county or city may consult with the Department of Transportation and the California Freight Advisory Committee for technical assistance.(d) The county or city shall provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations.(e) The county or city shall make truck routes publicly available in geographic information system (GIS) format and share GIS maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers.(f) The city or county shall provide opportunities for the involvement of citizens, California Native American Indian tribes, public agencies, public utility companies, and civic, educational, and other community groups through public hearings and any other means the planning agency deems appropriate, consistent with Section 65351.(g) The city or county shall make a diligent effort to achieve public participation of all economic segments of the community in the development of the changes required pursuant to this section.(h) The warehouse concentration region, as defined in Section 65098, shall implement the provisions of this section by January 1, 2026.(i) The Attorney General may enforce this section.(1) The Attorney General may impose a fine against a jurisdiction that is in violation of this section of up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) every six months if the required updates have not been made.(2) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, any fines collected shall be distributed by the Attorney General and returned to the local air quality management district in which the fine was imposed and be used for the districts efforts to improve air quality.SEC. 3. Section 40458.5 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:40458.5. (a) Subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, the south coast district shall, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments.(b) The south coast district shall use the data collected pursuant to subdivision (a) to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors.(c) The south coast district shall submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. On or before January 1, 2028, the south coast district shall submit an interim report to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors. This report shall be used to assess the effectiveness of setbacks on public health.(d) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed pursuant to subdivision (c) is inoperative on January 1, 2040, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (c) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 4. Section 40522.7 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:40522.7. The south coast district shall establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violations of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent. The south coast district shall ensure a wide range of community groups are included in the process and that groups represent the geographic areas where there are high numbers of warehouse facilities.SEC. 5. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code.
1+Enrolled September 05, 2024 Passed IN Senate August 31, 2024 Passed IN Assembly August 31, 2024 Amended IN Senate August 28, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 98Introduced by Assembly Members Juan Carrillo and ReyesJanuary 09, 2023An act to add Section 65302.02 to, and to add Chapter 2.8 (commencing with Section 65098) to Division 1 of Title 7 of, the Government Code, and to add Sections 40458.5 and 40522.7 to the Health and Safety Code, relating to land use.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 98, Juan Carrillo. Planning and zoning: logistics use: truck routes.(1) Existing law, the Planning and Zoning Law, sets forth various requirements relating to the review of development project permit applications and the issuance of development permits for specified classes of development projects.This bill, beginning January 1, 2026, would prescribe various statewide warehouse design and build standards for any proposed new or expanded logistics use developments, as specified, including, among other things, standards for building design and location, parking, truck loading bays, landscaping buffers, entry gates, and signage. The bill would except from those design and build standards certain existing logistics use developments, proposed expansions of a logistics use development, and property currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, under prescribed conditions. The bill would require a facility operator, prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, to establish and submit for approval by a city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county, as prescribed. The bill would require a facility operator to enforce the plan. The bill would provide for the revision of the plan in specified circumstances.The bill would prohibit a city, county, or city and county from approving development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in the bill. The bill would require a city, county, or city and county to condition approval of a logistics use on 2-to-1 replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, as specified, and payments to displaced tenants if residential dwellings are affected through purchase, as prescribed. The bill would define terms for these purposes.(2) The Planning and Zoning Law requires the legislative body of each county and city to adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the county or city and specified land outside its boundaries that includes, among other specified mandatory elements, a circulation element consisting of the general location and extent of existing and proposed major thoroughfares, transportation routes, terminals, any military airports and ports, and other local public utilities and facilities, all correlated with the land use element of the plan. Existing law requires, upon any substantive revision of the circulation element, that the legislative body modify the element to address specified additional issues.This bill would require a county or city, by January 1, 2028, except as provided, to update its circulation element, as prescribed, including identifying and establishing specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and concentrations of sensitive receptors, as defined. The bill would establish specific standards for truck routes. The bill would require a county or city to provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations. The bill would require a county or city to make truck routes publicly available and share maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers. The bill would authorize the Attorney General to enforce these provisions, as provided, including by imposition of a fine of up to $50,000 every 6 months if the required updates have not been made.(3) Existing law provides for the creation of the South Coast Air Quality Management District in those portions of the Counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino included within the area of the South Coast Air Basin, as specified. Existing law provides that the south coast district is governed by a board consisting of 13 members and requires the district to adopt rules and regulations to carry out the south coast district air quality management plan that are not in conflict with state and federal laws and rules and regulations.This bill would require the south coast district to establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violation of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent, as specified. The bill would require the south coast district, subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, to, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments. The bill would require the south coast district to use the data collected to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors from logistics use development operations and to submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. The bill would also require the district to submit an interim report to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2028, to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, as provided.(4) By modifying the duties of local agencies with regard to the approval of logistics use development and requiring the revision of the circulation element of a general plan, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.(5) The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.(6) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Chapter 2.8 (commencing with Section 65098) is added to Division 1 of Title 7 of the Government Code, to read: CHAPTER 2.8. Warehouse Design and Build Standards65098. As used in this chapter:(a) 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least 1 percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(4) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(5) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2030, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(6) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(b) Expansion of an existing logistics use means the expansion of an existing logistics use by 20 percent or more of the existing square footage. Office space shall not be included as part of the existing square footage or in the square footage for the 20-percent expansion threshold.(c) Heavy-duty truck means a class 7 or class 8 truck. As used in this subdivision:(1) Class 7 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of 26,001 to 33,000 pounds.(2) Class 8 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of greater than 33,000 pounds.(d) Logistics use means a building in which cargo, goods, or products are moved or stored for later distribution to business or retail customers, or both, that does not predominantly serve retail customers for onsite purchases, and heavy-duty trucks are primarily involved in the movement of the cargo, goods, or products. Logistics use does not include any of the following:(1) Facilities where food or household goods are sold directly to consumers and are accessible to the public.(2) A building primarily served by rail to move cargo goods or product.(3) (A) A Strategic Intermodal Facility.(B) For purposes of this subdivision, Strategic Intermodal Facility means a project that satisfies all of the following requirements:(i) Logistics facilities, including warehousing and transloading facilities, served by rail.(ii) Intermodal freight transport services.(iii) All facility structures and related rail operations are located within a single site footprint.(e) Sensitive receptor means one or more of the following:(1) A residence, including, but not limited to, a private home, apartment, condominium unit, group home, dormitory unit, or retirement home.(2) A school, including, but not limited to, a preschool, prekindergarten, or school maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(3) A daycare facility, including, but not limited to, in-home daycare.(4) Publicly owned parks, playgrounds, and recreational areas or facilities primarily used by children, unless the development of the park and recreation areas are included as a condition of approval for the development of a logistics use.(5) Nursing homes, long-term care facilities, hospices, convalescent facilities, or similar live-in housing.(6) Hospitals, as defined in Section 128700 of the Health and Safety Code.(f) Small off-road engines means spark-ignition engines rated at or below 19 kilowatts.(g) Tier 1 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) (i) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(ii) For purposes of the photovoltaic system installation requirement in clause (i), all warehouse square footage should be considered conditioned space.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least one percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Has a microgrid-ready switchgear system capable of supporting distributed energy resources.(4) Is advanced smart metering ready.(5) Has a minimum of 50 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces preinstalled with conduit and all necessary physical infrastructure to support future charging of electric vehicles.(6) Has a minimum of 10 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces installed with electric vehicle charging stations.(7) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(8) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(9) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2028, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(10) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(h) Warehouse concentration region includes the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino and the Cities of Chino, Colton, Fontana, Jurupa Valley, Moreno Valley, Ontario, Perris, Rancho Cucamonga, Redlands, Rialto, Riverside, and San Bernardino.65098.1. (a) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development 250,000 square feet or more where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 300 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(b) Commencing January 1, 2026, except as provided for in subdivision (c), any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(c) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, and is located in the warehouse concentration region, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(d) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development less than 250,000 square feet where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(2) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(3) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(4) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(5) Provides conduits at loading bays equal to one truck per every loading bay serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(6) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(7) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), on or before January 1, 2028, a city, county, or city and county shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.(2) On or before January 1, 2026, all cities and counties in the warehouse concentration region shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.65098.1.5. (a) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any existing logistics use development in existence as of September 30, 2024, shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a new sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a proposed expansion of a logistics use development is in a local entitlement process, then the proposed expansion shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a property is currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, then the proposed logistics use development shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(b) (1) Any new logistics use developments that require the rezoning of land and must undergo a municipal entitlement process shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if the start of the entitlement process for the logistics use began before any sensitive receptor started its own entitlement or permitting process, unless the proposed sensitive receptor was an existing allowable use according to local zoning regulations.(2) During a logistics use developments entitlement process for a new or expanded logistics use, if a new sensitive receptor is proposed or established within the distances required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, then those distance requirements shall not apply to the logistics use development so long as the logistics use development was not already subject to those requirements prior to the new sensitive receptor being proposed or established.(c) This chapter shall not apply to any logistics projects that were subject to a commenced local entitlement process prior to September 30, 2024.(d) The protection afforded by this section shall remain in effect from the time of the initial application submission through the completion of the entitlement process, including any necessary rezoning actions and through the development period. If no development activity occurs within five years of entitlement approvals, the protections shall be waived.(e) This chapter shall not apply to a logistics project that received an approval by a local agency prior to the effective date of this chapter. For purposes of this subdivision, approval shall have the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 15352 of Chapter 3 of Division 6 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations.65098.2. (a) Any new logistics use facility within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor shall have a buffer as follows:(1) If the logistics use development is subject to the requirements of subdivision (a) or (d) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 50 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(2) If the logistics use development is subject to either subdivision (b) or subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 100 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(b) Buffer areas shall include a solid decorative wall, landscaped berm and wall, or landscaped berm 10 feet or more in height, drought tolerant natural ground landscaping with proper irrigation, and solid-screen buffering trees as described in subdivision (c).(c) Trees shall be used as part of a solid-screen buffering treatment and planted in two rows along the length of the property line adjacent to the sensitive receptor. Trees used for this purpose shall be evergreen, drought tolerant, to the extent feasible, composed of species with low biogenic emissions, of a minimum 36-inch box size at planting, and spaced at no greater distance than 40 feet on center. Palm trees shall not be utilized.65098.2.5. The entry gates into the loading truck court for a new or expanded logistics use facility shall be positioned after a minimum of 50 feet of total available stacking depth inside the property line. The stacking depth shall be increased by 70 feet for every 20 loading bays beyond 50 loading bays, to the extent feasible.65098.2.7. (a) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments, beginning January 1, 2026, are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use development to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(b) (1) Any new logistics use development shall be sited on roadways that meet the following classifications:(A) Arterial roads.(B) Collector roads.(C) Major thoroughfares.(D) Local roads that predominantly serve commercial uses.(2) For purposes of this chapter, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designed for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) A waiver may be granted where siting on the designated roadways pursuant to subdivision (b) is impractical due to unique geographic, economic, or infrastructure-related reasons. The waiver shall be approved by the city, county, or city and county, provided that the applicant demonstrates all of the following:(1) There is no feasible alternative site that exists within the designated roadways.(2) A traffic analysis has been completed and submitted to the local approving authority.(3) The site is an existing industrial zone.(4) The proposed site will incorporate mitigations to minimize traffic and environmental impacts on residential areas to the greatest extent feasible.65098.3. (a) Anti-idling signs indicating a three-minute heavy-duty truck engine idling restriction shall be posted at logistics use developments along entrances to the site and at the truck loading bays.(b) Signs shall be installed at all heavy-duty truck exit driveways directing truck drivers to the truck route as indicated in the truck routing plan, as described in Section 65098.4, and in the state highway system.65098.4. Prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, a facility operator shall establish and submit for approval to the planning director or equivalent position for the city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county. The truck routing plan shall describe the operational characteristics of the use of the facility operator, including, but not limited to, hours of operation, types of items to be stored within the building, and proposed truck routing to and from the facility to designated truck routes that, to the greatest extent possible, avoid passing sensitive receptors. The truck routing plan shall include measures, such as signage and pavement markings, queuing analysis, and enforcement, for preventing truck queuing, circling, stopping, and parking on public streets. The facility operator shall be responsible for enforcement of the truck routing plan. A revised truck routing plan shall be submitted to the planning director or equivalent position prior to a business license being issued by the city, county, or city and county for any new tenant of the property. The planning director or equivalent position shall have discretion to determine if changes to the truck routing plan are necessary, including, but not limited to, any additional measures to alleviate truck routing and parking issues that may arise during the life of the facility.65098.5. (a) A city, county, or city and county shall not approve development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in this chapter.(b) This section shall not be construed to restrict the existing authority of a city, county, or city and county to deny a logistics use facility altogether.65098.6. A city, county, or city and county shall condition approval of a logistics use on the following:(a) Two-to-one replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years, unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, pursuant to Section 17920.3 of the Health and Safety Code, prior to purchase by the developer. For each housing unit demolished, regardless of market value of the unit, two units of affordable housing for persons and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code, that are deed-restricted shall be built within the jurisdiction. Funds from any fee imposed for the replacement of demolished housing units shall be placed in a housing-specific set-aside account and shall be used for housing within three years of collection.(b) If residential dwellings are affected through purchase, the developer shall be required to provide any displaced tenant with an amount equivalent to 12 months rent at the current rate.65098.7. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to supersede mitigation measures required by the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).65098.8. The Legislature finds and declares that the movement and storage of freight and the impact of this activity on public health and communities across the state as set forth in this chapter is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, this chapter applies to all cities, including charter cities.65098.9. The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to a logistics use development if it meets both of the following:(a) The logistics use development is a mixed-use development that may create sensitive receptors on the site of the new logistics use development.(b) There are no existing sensitive receptors within 900 feet of the loading bay.SEC. 2. Section 65302.02 is added to the Government Code, to read:65302.02. By January 1, 2028, except as provided for in subdivision (h), a county or city shall update its circulation element, as required by subdivision (b) of Section 65302, to do all of the following:(a) Identify and establish specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and sensitive receptors, as defined by Section 65098.(b) Maximize the use of interstate or state divided highways as preferred routes for truck routes. The county or city shall also maximize use of arterial roads, major thoroughfares, and predominantly commercially oriented local streets when state or interstate highways are not utilized. Truck routes shall comply with the following:(1) Major or minor collector streets and roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses shall be used for truck routes only when strictly necessary to reach existing industrial zones.(2) Trucks shall be routed via transportation arteries that minimize exposure to sensitive receptors.(3) On and after January 1, 2028, all proposed development of a logistics use development, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 65098, shall be accessible via arterial roads, major thoroughfares, or roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses.(A) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use developments to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(B) For purposes of this section, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designated for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) The county or city may consult with the Department of Transportation and the California Freight Advisory Committee for technical assistance.(d) The county or city shall provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations.(e) The county or city shall make truck routes publicly available in geographic information system (GIS) format and share GIS maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers.(f) The city or county shall provide opportunities for the involvement of citizens, California Native American Indian tribes, public agencies, public utility companies, and civic, educational, and other community groups through public hearings and any other means the planning agency deems appropriate, consistent with Section 65351.(g) The city or county shall make a diligent effort to achieve public participation of all economic segments of the community in the development of the changes required pursuant to this section.(h) The warehouse concentration region, as defined in Section 65098, shall implement the provisions of this section by January 1, 2026.(i) The Attorney General may enforce this section.(1) The Attorney General may impose a fine against a jurisdiction that is in violation of this section of up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) every six months if the required updates have not been made.(2) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, any fines collected shall be distributed by the Attorney General and returned to the local air quality management district in which the fine was imposed and be used for the districts efforts to improve air quality.SEC. 3. Section 40458.5 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:40458.5. (a) Subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, the south coast district shall, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments.(b) The south coast district shall use the data collected pursuant to subdivision (a) to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors.(c) The south coast district shall submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. On or before January 1, 2028, the south coast district shall submit an interim report to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors. This report shall be used to assess the effectiveness of setbacks on public health.(d) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed pursuant to subdivision (c) is inoperative on January 1, 2040, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (c) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 4. Section 40522.7 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:40522.7. The south coast district shall establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violations of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent. The south coast district shall ensure a wide range of community groups are included in the process and that groups represent the geographic areas where there are high numbers of warehouse facilities.SEC. 5. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code.
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3- Assembly Bill No. 98 CHAPTER 931An act to add Section 65302.02 to, and to add Chapter 2.8 (commencing with Section 65098) to Division 1 of Title 7 of, the Government Code, and to add Sections 40458.5 and 40522.7 to the Health and Safety Code, relating to land use. [ Approved by Governor September 29, 2024. Filed with Secretary of State September 29, 2024. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 98, Juan Carrillo. Planning and zoning: logistics use: truck routes.(1) Existing law, the Planning and Zoning Law, sets forth various requirements relating to the review of development project permit applications and the issuance of development permits for specified classes of development projects.This bill, beginning January 1, 2026, would prescribe various statewide warehouse design and build standards for any proposed new or expanded logistics use developments, as specified, including, among other things, standards for building design and location, parking, truck loading bays, landscaping buffers, entry gates, and signage. The bill would except from those design and build standards certain existing logistics use developments, proposed expansions of a logistics use development, and property currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, under prescribed conditions. The bill would require a facility operator, prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, to establish and submit for approval by a city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county, as prescribed. The bill would require a facility operator to enforce the plan. The bill would provide for the revision of the plan in specified circumstances.The bill would prohibit a city, county, or city and county from approving development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in the bill. The bill would require a city, county, or city and county to condition approval of a logistics use on 2-to-1 replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, as specified, and payments to displaced tenants if residential dwellings are affected through purchase, as prescribed. The bill would define terms for these purposes.(2) The Planning and Zoning Law requires the legislative body of each county and city to adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the county or city and specified land outside its boundaries that includes, among other specified mandatory elements, a circulation element consisting of the general location and extent of existing and proposed major thoroughfares, transportation routes, terminals, any military airports and ports, and other local public utilities and facilities, all correlated with the land use element of the plan. Existing law requires, upon any substantive revision of the circulation element, that the legislative body modify the element to address specified additional issues.This bill would require a county or city, by January 1, 2028, except as provided, to update its circulation element, as prescribed, including identifying and establishing specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and concentrations of sensitive receptors, as defined. The bill would establish specific standards for truck routes. The bill would require a county or city to provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations. The bill would require a county or city to make truck routes publicly available and share maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers. The bill would authorize the Attorney General to enforce these provisions, as provided, including by imposition of a fine of up to $50,000 every 6 months if the required updates have not been made.(3) Existing law provides for the creation of the South Coast Air Quality Management District in those portions of the Counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino included within the area of the South Coast Air Basin, as specified. Existing law provides that the south coast district is governed by a board consisting of 13 members and requires the district to adopt rules and regulations to carry out the south coast district air quality management plan that are not in conflict with state and federal laws and rules and regulations.This bill would require the south coast district to establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violation of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent, as specified. The bill would require the south coast district, subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, to, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments. The bill would require the south coast district to use the data collected to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors from logistics use development operations and to submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. The bill would also require the district to submit an interim report to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2028, to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, as provided.(4) By modifying the duties of local agencies with regard to the approval of logistics use development and requiring the revision of the circulation element of a general plan, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.(5) The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.(6) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ Enrolled September 05, 2024 Passed IN Senate August 31, 2024 Passed IN Assembly August 31, 2024 Amended IN Senate August 28, 2024 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 98Introduced by Assembly Members Juan Carrillo and ReyesJanuary 09, 2023An act to add Section 65302.02 to, and to add Chapter 2.8 (commencing with Section 65098) to Division 1 of Title 7 of, the Government Code, and to add Sections 40458.5 and 40522.7 to the Health and Safety Code, relating to land use.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 98, Juan Carrillo. Planning and zoning: logistics use: truck routes.(1) Existing law, the Planning and Zoning Law, sets forth various requirements relating to the review of development project permit applications and the issuance of development permits for specified classes of development projects.This bill, beginning January 1, 2026, would prescribe various statewide warehouse design and build standards for any proposed new or expanded logistics use developments, as specified, including, among other things, standards for building design and location, parking, truck loading bays, landscaping buffers, entry gates, and signage. The bill would except from those design and build standards certain existing logistics use developments, proposed expansions of a logistics use development, and property currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, under prescribed conditions. The bill would require a facility operator, prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, to establish and submit for approval by a city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county, as prescribed. The bill would require a facility operator to enforce the plan. The bill would provide for the revision of the plan in specified circumstances.The bill would prohibit a city, county, or city and county from approving development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in the bill. The bill would require a city, county, or city and county to condition approval of a logistics use on 2-to-1 replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, as specified, and payments to displaced tenants if residential dwellings are affected through purchase, as prescribed. The bill would define terms for these purposes.(2) The Planning and Zoning Law requires the legislative body of each county and city to adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the county or city and specified land outside its boundaries that includes, among other specified mandatory elements, a circulation element consisting of the general location and extent of existing and proposed major thoroughfares, transportation routes, terminals, any military airports and ports, and other local public utilities and facilities, all correlated with the land use element of the plan. Existing law requires, upon any substantive revision of the circulation element, that the legislative body modify the element to address specified additional issues.This bill would require a county or city, by January 1, 2028, except as provided, to update its circulation element, as prescribed, including identifying and establishing specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and concentrations of sensitive receptors, as defined. The bill would establish specific standards for truck routes. The bill would require a county or city to provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations. The bill would require a county or city to make truck routes publicly available and share maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers. The bill would authorize the Attorney General to enforce these provisions, as provided, including by imposition of a fine of up to $50,000 every 6 months if the required updates have not been made.(3) Existing law provides for the creation of the South Coast Air Quality Management District in those portions of the Counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino included within the area of the South Coast Air Basin, as specified. Existing law provides that the south coast district is governed by a board consisting of 13 members and requires the district to adopt rules and regulations to carry out the south coast district air quality management plan that are not in conflict with state and federal laws and rules and regulations.This bill would require the south coast district to establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violation of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent, as specified. The bill would require the south coast district, subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, to, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments. The bill would require the south coast district to use the data collected to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors from logistics use development operations and to submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. The bill would also require the district to submit an interim report to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2028, to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, as provided.(4) By modifying the duties of local agencies with regard to the approval of logistics use development and requiring the revision of the circulation element of a general plan, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.(5) The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.(6) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
44
5- Assembly Bill No. 98 CHAPTER 931
5+ Enrolled September 05, 2024 Passed IN Senate August 31, 2024 Passed IN Assembly August 31, 2024 Amended IN Senate August 28, 2024
66
7- Assembly Bill No. 98
7+Enrolled September 05, 2024
8+Passed IN Senate August 31, 2024
9+Passed IN Assembly August 31, 2024
10+Amended IN Senate August 28, 2024
811
9- CHAPTER 931
12+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
13+
14+ Assembly Bill
15+
16+No. 98
17+
18+Introduced by Assembly Members Juan Carrillo and ReyesJanuary 09, 2023
19+
20+Introduced by Assembly Members Juan Carrillo and Reyes
21+January 09, 2023
1022
1123 An act to add Section 65302.02 to, and to add Chapter 2.8 (commencing with Section 65098) to Division 1 of Title 7 of, the Government Code, and to add Sections 40458.5 and 40522.7 to the Health and Safety Code, relating to land use.
12-
13- [ Approved by Governor September 29, 2024. Filed with Secretary of State September 29, 2024. ]
1424
1525 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1626
1727 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1828
1929 AB 98, Juan Carrillo. Planning and zoning: logistics use: truck routes.
2030
2131 (1) Existing law, the Planning and Zoning Law, sets forth various requirements relating to the review of development project permit applications and the issuance of development permits for specified classes of development projects.This bill, beginning January 1, 2026, would prescribe various statewide warehouse design and build standards for any proposed new or expanded logistics use developments, as specified, including, among other things, standards for building design and location, parking, truck loading bays, landscaping buffers, entry gates, and signage. The bill would except from those design and build standards certain existing logistics use developments, proposed expansions of a logistics use development, and property currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, under prescribed conditions. The bill would require a facility operator, prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, to establish and submit for approval by a city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county, as prescribed. The bill would require a facility operator to enforce the plan. The bill would provide for the revision of the plan in specified circumstances.The bill would prohibit a city, county, or city and county from approving development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in the bill. The bill would require a city, county, or city and county to condition approval of a logistics use on 2-to-1 replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, as specified, and payments to displaced tenants if residential dwellings are affected through purchase, as prescribed. The bill would define terms for these purposes.(2) The Planning and Zoning Law requires the legislative body of each county and city to adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the county or city and specified land outside its boundaries that includes, among other specified mandatory elements, a circulation element consisting of the general location and extent of existing and proposed major thoroughfares, transportation routes, terminals, any military airports and ports, and other local public utilities and facilities, all correlated with the land use element of the plan. Existing law requires, upon any substantive revision of the circulation element, that the legislative body modify the element to address specified additional issues.This bill would require a county or city, by January 1, 2028, except as provided, to update its circulation element, as prescribed, including identifying and establishing specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and concentrations of sensitive receptors, as defined. The bill would establish specific standards for truck routes. The bill would require a county or city to provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations. The bill would require a county or city to make truck routes publicly available and share maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers. The bill would authorize the Attorney General to enforce these provisions, as provided, including by imposition of a fine of up to $50,000 every 6 months if the required updates have not been made.(3) Existing law provides for the creation of the South Coast Air Quality Management District in those portions of the Counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino included within the area of the South Coast Air Basin, as specified. Existing law provides that the south coast district is governed by a board consisting of 13 members and requires the district to adopt rules and regulations to carry out the south coast district air quality management plan that are not in conflict with state and federal laws and rules and regulations.This bill would require the south coast district to establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violation of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent, as specified. The bill would require the south coast district, subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, to, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments. The bill would require the south coast district to use the data collected to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors from logistics use development operations and to submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. The bill would also require the district to submit an interim report to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2028, to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, as provided.(4) By modifying the duties of local agencies with regard to the approval of logistics use development and requiring the revision of the circulation element of a general plan, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.(5) The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.(6) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
2232
2333 (1) Existing law, the Planning and Zoning Law, sets forth various requirements relating to the review of development project permit applications and the issuance of development permits for specified classes of development projects.
2434
2535 This bill, beginning January 1, 2026, would prescribe various statewide warehouse design and build standards for any proposed new or expanded logistics use developments, as specified, including, among other things, standards for building design and location, parking, truck loading bays, landscaping buffers, entry gates, and signage. The bill would except from those design and build standards certain existing logistics use developments, proposed expansions of a logistics use development, and property currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, under prescribed conditions. The bill would require a facility operator, prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, to establish and submit for approval by a city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county, as prescribed. The bill would require a facility operator to enforce the plan. The bill would provide for the revision of the plan in specified circumstances.
2636
2737 The bill would prohibit a city, county, or city and county from approving development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in the bill. The bill would require a city, county, or city and county to condition approval of a logistics use on 2-to-1 replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, as specified, and payments to displaced tenants if residential dwellings are affected through purchase, as prescribed. The bill would define terms for these purposes.
2838
2939 (2) The Planning and Zoning Law requires the legislative body of each county and city to adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the county or city and specified land outside its boundaries that includes, among other specified mandatory elements, a circulation element consisting of the general location and extent of existing and proposed major thoroughfares, transportation routes, terminals, any military airports and ports, and other local public utilities and facilities, all correlated with the land use element of the plan. Existing law requires, upon any substantive revision of the circulation element, that the legislative body modify the element to address specified additional issues.
3040
3141 This bill would require a county or city, by January 1, 2028, except as provided, to update its circulation element, as prescribed, including identifying and establishing specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and concentrations of sensitive receptors, as defined. The bill would establish specific standards for truck routes. The bill would require a county or city to provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations. The bill would require a county or city to make truck routes publicly available and share maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers. The bill would authorize the Attorney General to enforce these provisions, as provided, including by imposition of a fine of up to $50,000 every 6 months if the required updates have not been made.
3242
3343 (3) Existing law provides for the creation of the South Coast Air Quality Management District in those portions of the Counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino included within the area of the South Coast Air Basin, as specified. Existing law provides that the south coast district is governed by a board consisting of 13 members and requires the district to adopt rules and regulations to carry out the south coast district air quality management plan that are not in conflict with state and federal laws and rules and regulations.
3444
3545 This bill would require the south coast district to establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violation of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent, as specified. The bill would require the south coast district, subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, to, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments. The bill would require the south coast district to use the data collected to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors from logistics use development operations and to submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. The bill would also require the district to submit an interim report to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2028, to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, as provided.
3646
3747 (4) By modifying the duties of local agencies with regard to the approval of logistics use development and requiring the revision of the circulation element of a general plan, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
3848
3949 (5) The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.
4050
4151 (6) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
4252
4353 This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
4454
4555 ## Digest Key
4656
4757 ## Bill Text
4858
4959 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Chapter 2.8 (commencing with Section 65098) is added to Division 1 of Title 7 of the Government Code, to read: CHAPTER 2.8. Warehouse Design and Build Standards65098. As used in this chapter:(a) 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least 1 percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(4) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(5) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2030, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(6) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(b) Expansion of an existing logistics use means the expansion of an existing logistics use by 20 percent or more of the existing square footage. Office space shall not be included as part of the existing square footage or in the square footage for the 20-percent expansion threshold.(c) Heavy-duty truck means a class 7 or class 8 truck. As used in this subdivision:(1) Class 7 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of 26,001 to 33,000 pounds.(2) Class 8 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of greater than 33,000 pounds.(d) Logistics use means a building in which cargo, goods, or products are moved or stored for later distribution to business or retail customers, or both, that does not predominantly serve retail customers for onsite purchases, and heavy-duty trucks are primarily involved in the movement of the cargo, goods, or products. Logistics use does not include any of the following:(1) Facilities where food or household goods are sold directly to consumers and are accessible to the public.(2) A building primarily served by rail to move cargo goods or product.(3) (A) A Strategic Intermodal Facility.(B) For purposes of this subdivision, Strategic Intermodal Facility means a project that satisfies all of the following requirements:(i) Logistics facilities, including warehousing and transloading facilities, served by rail.(ii) Intermodal freight transport services.(iii) All facility structures and related rail operations are located within a single site footprint.(e) Sensitive receptor means one or more of the following:(1) A residence, including, but not limited to, a private home, apartment, condominium unit, group home, dormitory unit, or retirement home.(2) A school, including, but not limited to, a preschool, prekindergarten, or school maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(3) A daycare facility, including, but not limited to, in-home daycare.(4) Publicly owned parks, playgrounds, and recreational areas or facilities primarily used by children, unless the development of the park and recreation areas are included as a condition of approval for the development of a logistics use.(5) Nursing homes, long-term care facilities, hospices, convalescent facilities, or similar live-in housing.(6) Hospitals, as defined in Section 128700 of the Health and Safety Code.(f) Small off-road engines means spark-ignition engines rated at or below 19 kilowatts.(g) Tier 1 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) (i) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(ii) For purposes of the photovoltaic system installation requirement in clause (i), all warehouse square footage should be considered conditioned space.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least one percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Has a microgrid-ready switchgear system capable of supporting distributed energy resources.(4) Is advanced smart metering ready.(5) Has a minimum of 50 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces preinstalled with conduit and all necessary physical infrastructure to support future charging of electric vehicles.(6) Has a minimum of 10 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces installed with electric vehicle charging stations.(7) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(8) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(9) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2028, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(10) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(h) Warehouse concentration region includes the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino and the Cities of Chino, Colton, Fontana, Jurupa Valley, Moreno Valley, Ontario, Perris, Rancho Cucamonga, Redlands, Rialto, Riverside, and San Bernardino.65098.1. (a) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development 250,000 square feet or more where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 300 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(b) Commencing January 1, 2026, except as provided for in subdivision (c), any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(c) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, and is located in the warehouse concentration region, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(d) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development less than 250,000 square feet where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(2) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(3) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(4) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(5) Provides conduits at loading bays equal to one truck per every loading bay serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(6) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(7) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), on or before January 1, 2028, a city, county, or city and county shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.(2) On or before January 1, 2026, all cities and counties in the warehouse concentration region shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.65098.1.5. (a) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any existing logistics use development in existence as of September 30, 2024, shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a new sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a proposed expansion of a logistics use development is in a local entitlement process, then the proposed expansion shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a property is currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, then the proposed logistics use development shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(b) (1) Any new logistics use developments that require the rezoning of land and must undergo a municipal entitlement process shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if the start of the entitlement process for the logistics use began before any sensitive receptor started its own entitlement or permitting process, unless the proposed sensitive receptor was an existing allowable use according to local zoning regulations.(2) During a logistics use developments entitlement process for a new or expanded logistics use, if a new sensitive receptor is proposed or established within the distances required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, then those distance requirements shall not apply to the logistics use development so long as the logistics use development was not already subject to those requirements prior to the new sensitive receptor being proposed or established.(c) This chapter shall not apply to any logistics projects that were subject to a commenced local entitlement process prior to September 30, 2024.(d) The protection afforded by this section shall remain in effect from the time of the initial application submission through the completion of the entitlement process, including any necessary rezoning actions and through the development period. If no development activity occurs within five years of entitlement approvals, the protections shall be waived.(e) This chapter shall not apply to a logistics project that received an approval by a local agency prior to the effective date of this chapter. For purposes of this subdivision, approval shall have the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 15352 of Chapter 3 of Division 6 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations.65098.2. (a) Any new logistics use facility within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor shall have a buffer as follows:(1) If the logistics use development is subject to the requirements of subdivision (a) or (d) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 50 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(2) If the logistics use development is subject to either subdivision (b) or subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 100 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(b) Buffer areas shall include a solid decorative wall, landscaped berm and wall, or landscaped berm 10 feet or more in height, drought tolerant natural ground landscaping with proper irrigation, and solid-screen buffering trees as described in subdivision (c).(c) Trees shall be used as part of a solid-screen buffering treatment and planted in two rows along the length of the property line adjacent to the sensitive receptor. Trees used for this purpose shall be evergreen, drought tolerant, to the extent feasible, composed of species with low biogenic emissions, of a minimum 36-inch box size at planting, and spaced at no greater distance than 40 feet on center. Palm trees shall not be utilized.65098.2.5. The entry gates into the loading truck court for a new or expanded logistics use facility shall be positioned after a minimum of 50 feet of total available stacking depth inside the property line. The stacking depth shall be increased by 70 feet for every 20 loading bays beyond 50 loading bays, to the extent feasible.65098.2.7. (a) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments, beginning January 1, 2026, are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use development to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(b) (1) Any new logistics use development shall be sited on roadways that meet the following classifications:(A) Arterial roads.(B) Collector roads.(C) Major thoroughfares.(D) Local roads that predominantly serve commercial uses.(2) For purposes of this chapter, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designed for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) A waiver may be granted where siting on the designated roadways pursuant to subdivision (b) is impractical due to unique geographic, economic, or infrastructure-related reasons. The waiver shall be approved by the city, county, or city and county, provided that the applicant demonstrates all of the following:(1) There is no feasible alternative site that exists within the designated roadways.(2) A traffic analysis has been completed and submitted to the local approving authority.(3) The site is an existing industrial zone.(4) The proposed site will incorporate mitigations to minimize traffic and environmental impacts on residential areas to the greatest extent feasible.65098.3. (a) Anti-idling signs indicating a three-minute heavy-duty truck engine idling restriction shall be posted at logistics use developments along entrances to the site and at the truck loading bays.(b) Signs shall be installed at all heavy-duty truck exit driveways directing truck drivers to the truck route as indicated in the truck routing plan, as described in Section 65098.4, and in the state highway system.65098.4. Prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, a facility operator shall establish and submit for approval to the planning director or equivalent position for the city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county. The truck routing plan shall describe the operational characteristics of the use of the facility operator, including, but not limited to, hours of operation, types of items to be stored within the building, and proposed truck routing to and from the facility to designated truck routes that, to the greatest extent possible, avoid passing sensitive receptors. The truck routing plan shall include measures, such as signage and pavement markings, queuing analysis, and enforcement, for preventing truck queuing, circling, stopping, and parking on public streets. The facility operator shall be responsible for enforcement of the truck routing plan. A revised truck routing plan shall be submitted to the planning director or equivalent position prior to a business license being issued by the city, county, or city and county for any new tenant of the property. The planning director or equivalent position shall have discretion to determine if changes to the truck routing plan are necessary, including, but not limited to, any additional measures to alleviate truck routing and parking issues that may arise during the life of the facility.65098.5. (a) A city, county, or city and county shall not approve development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in this chapter.(b) This section shall not be construed to restrict the existing authority of a city, county, or city and county to deny a logistics use facility altogether.65098.6. A city, county, or city and county shall condition approval of a logistics use on the following:(a) Two-to-one replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years, unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, pursuant to Section 17920.3 of the Health and Safety Code, prior to purchase by the developer. For each housing unit demolished, regardless of market value of the unit, two units of affordable housing for persons and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code, that are deed-restricted shall be built within the jurisdiction. Funds from any fee imposed for the replacement of demolished housing units shall be placed in a housing-specific set-aside account and shall be used for housing within three years of collection.(b) If residential dwellings are affected through purchase, the developer shall be required to provide any displaced tenant with an amount equivalent to 12 months rent at the current rate.65098.7. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to supersede mitigation measures required by the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).65098.8. The Legislature finds and declares that the movement and storage of freight and the impact of this activity on public health and communities across the state as set forth in this chapter is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, this chapter applies to all cities, including charter cities.65098.9. The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to a logistics use development if it meets both of the following:(a) The logistics use development is a mixed-use development that may create sensitive receptors on the site of the new logistics use development.(b) There are no existing sensitive receptors within 900 feet of the loading bay.SEC. 2. Section 65302.02 is added to the Government Code, to read:65302.02. By January 1, 2028, except as provided for in subdivision (h), a county or city shall update its circulation element, as required by subdivision (b) of Section 65302, to do all of the following:(a) Identify and establish specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and sensitive receptors, as defined by Section 65098.(b) Maximize the use of interstate or state divided highways as preferred routes for truck routes. The county or city shall also maximize use of arterial roads, major thoroughfares, and predominantly commercially oriented local streets when state or interstate highways are not utilized. Truck routes shall comply with the following:(1) Major or minor collector streets and roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses shall be used for truck routes only when strictly necessary to reach existing industrial zones.(2) Trucks shall be routed via transportation arteries that minimize exposure to sensitive receptors.(3) On and after January 1, 2028, all proposed development of a logistics use development, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 65098, shall be accessible via arterial roads, major thoroughfares, or roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses.(A) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use developments to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(B) For purposes of this section, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designated for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) The county or city may consult with the Department of Transportation and the California Freight Advisory Committee for technical assistance.(d) The county or city shall provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations.(e) The county or city shall make truck routes publicly available in geographic information system (GIS) format and share GIS maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers.(f) The city or county shall provide opportunities for the involvement of citizens, California Native American Indian tribes, public agencies, public utility companies, and civic, educational, and other community groups through public hearings and any other means the planning agency deems appropriate, consistent with Section 65351.(g) The city or county shall make a diligent effort to achieve public participation of all economic segments of the community in the development of the changes required pursuant to this section.(h) The warehouse concentration region, as defined in Section 65098, shall implement the provisions of this section by January 1, 2026.(i) The Attorney General may enforce this section.(1) The Attorney General may impose a fine against a jurisdiction that is in violation of this section of up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) every six months if the required updates have not been made.(2) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, any fines collected shall be distributed by the Attorney General and returned to the local air quality management district in which the fine was imposed and be used for the districts efforts to improve air quality.SEC. 3. Section 40458.5 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:40458.5. (a) Subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, the south coast district shall, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments.(b) The south coast district shall use the data collected pursuant to subdivision (a) to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors.(c) The south coast district shall submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. On or before January 1, 2028, the south coast district shall submit an interim report to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors. This report shall be used to assess the effectiveness of setbacks on public health.(d) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed pursuant to subdivision (c) is inoperative on January 1, 2040, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (c) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 4. Section 40522.7 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:40522.7. The south coast district shall establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violations of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent. The south coast district shall ensure a wide range of community groups are included in the process and that groups represent the geographic areas where there are high numbers of warehouse facilities.SEC. 5. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code.
5060
5161 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5262
5363 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5464
5565 SECTION 1. Chapter 2.8 (commencing with Section 65098) is added to Division 1 of Title 7 of the Government Code, to read: CHAPTER 2.8. Warehouse Design and Build Standards65098. As used in this chapter:(a) 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least 1 percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(4) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(5) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2030, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(6) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(b) Expansion of an existing logistics use means the expansion of an existing logistics use by 20 percent or more of the existing square footage. Office space shall not be included as part of the existing square footage or in the square footage for the 20-percent expansion threshold.(c) Heavy-duty truck means a class 7 or class 8 truck. As used in this subdivision:(1) Class 7 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of 26,001 to 33,000 pounds.(2) Class 8 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of greater than 33,000 pounds.(d) Logistics use means a building in which cargo, goods, or products are moved or stored for later distribution to business or retail customers, or both, that does not predominantly serve retail customers for onsite purchases, and heavy-duty trucks are primarily involved in the movement of the cargo, goods, or products. Logistics use does not include any of the following:(1) Facilities where food or household goods are sold directly to consumers and are accessible to the public.(2) A building primarily served by rail to move cargo goods or product.(3) (A) A Strategic Intermodal Facility.(B) For purposes of this subdivision, Strategic Intermodal Facility means a project that satisfies all of the following requirements:(i) Logistics facilities, including warehousing and transloading facilities, served by rail.(ii) Intermodal freight transport services.(iii) All facility structures and related rail operations are located within a single site footprint.(e) Sensitive receptor means one or more of the following:(1) A residence, including, but not limited to, a private home, apartment, condominium unit, group home, dormitory unit, or retirement home.(2) A school, including, but not limited to, a preschool, prekindergarten, or school maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(3) A daycare facility, including, but not limited to, in-home daycare.(4) Publicly owned parks, playgrounds, and recreational areas or facilities primarily used by children, unless the development of the park and recreation areas are included as a condition of approval for the development of a logistics use.(5) Nursing homes, long-term care facilities, hospices, convalescent facilities, or similar live-in housing.(6) Hospitals, as defined in Section 128700 of the Health and Safety Code.(f) Small off-road engines means spark-ignition engines rated at or below 19 kilowatts.(g) Tier 1 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) (i) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(ii) For purposes of the photovoltaic system installation requirement in clause (i), all warehouse square footage should be considered conditioned space.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least one percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Has a microgrid-ready switchgear system capable of supporting distributed energy resources.(4) Is advanced smart metering ready.(5) Has a minimum of 50 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces preinstalled with conduit and all necessary physical infrastructure to support future charging of electric vehicles.(6) Has a minimum of 10 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces installed with electric vehicle charging stations.(7) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(8) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(9) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2028, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(10) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(h) Warehouse concentration region includes the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino and the Cities of Chino, Colton, Fontana, Jurupa Valley, Moreno Valley, Ontario, Perris, Rancho Cucamonga, Redlands, Rialto, Riverside, and San Bernardino.65098.1. (a) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development 250,000 square feet or more where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 300 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(b) Commencing January 1, 2026, except as provided for in subdivision (c), any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(c) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, and is located in the warehouse concentration region, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(d) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development less than 250,000 square feet where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(2) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(3) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(4) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(5) Provides conduits at loading bays equal to one truck per every loading bay serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(6) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(7) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), on or before January 1, 2028, a city, county, or city and county shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.(2) On or before January 1, 2026, all cities and counties in the warehouse concentration region shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.65098.1.5. (a) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any existing logistics use development in existence as of September 30, 2024, shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a new sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a proposed expansion of a logistics use development is in a local entitlement process, then the proposed expansion shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a property is currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, then the proposed logistics use development shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(b) (1) Any new logistics use developments that require the rezoning of land and must undergo a municipal entitlement process shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if the start of the entitlement process for the logistics use began before any sensitive receptor started its own entitlement or permitting process, unless the proposed sensitive receptor was an existing allowable use according to local zoning regulations.(2) During a logistics use developments entitlement process for a new or expanded logistics use, if a new sensitive receptor is proposed or established within the distances required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, then those distance requirements shall not apply to the logistics use development so long as the logistics use development was not already subject to those requirements prior to the new sensitive receptor being proposed or established.(c) This chapter shall not apply to any logistics projects that were subject to a commenced local entitlement process prior to September 30, 2024.(d) The protection afforded by this section shall remain in effect from the time of the initial application submission through the completion of the entitlement process, including any necessary rezoning actions and through the development period. If no development activity occurs within five years of entitlement approvals, the protections shall be waived.(e) This chapter shall not apply to a logistics project that received an approval by a local agency prior to the effective date of this chapter. For purposes of this subdivision, approval shall have the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 15352 of Chapter 3 of Division 6 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations.65098.2. (a) Any new logistics use facility within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor shall have a buffer as follows:(1) If the logistics use development is subject to the requirements of subdivision (a) or (d) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 50 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(2) If the logistics use development is subject to either subdivision (b) or subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 100 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(b) Buffer areas shall include a solid decorative wall, landscaped berm and wall, or landscaped berm 10 feet or more in height, drought tolerant natural ground landscaping with proper irrigation, and solid-screen buffering trees as described in subdivision (c).(c) Trees shall be used as part of a solid-screen buffering treatment and planted in two rows along the length of the property line adjacent to the sensitive receptor. Trees used for this purpose shall be evergreen, drought tolerant, to the extent feasible, composed of species with low biogenic emissions, of a minimum 36-inch box size at planting, and spaced at no greater distance than 40 feet on center. Palm trees shall not be utilized.65098.2.5. The entry gates into the loading truck court for a new or expanded logistics use facility shall be positioned after a minimum of 50 feet of total available stacking depth inside the property line. The stacking depth shall be increased by 70 feet for every 20 loading bays beyond 50 loading bays, to the extent feasible.65098.2.7. (a) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments, beginning January 1, 2026, are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use development to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(b) (1) Any new logistics use development shall be sited on roadways that meet the following classifications:(A) Arterial roads.(B) Collector roads.(C) Major thoroughfares.(D) Local roads that predominantly serve commercial uses.(2) For purposes of this chapter, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designed for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) A waiver may be granted where siting on the designated roadways pursuant to subdivision (b) is impractical due to unique geographic, economic, or infrastructure-related reasons. The waiver shall be approved by the city, county, or city and county, provided that the applicant demonstrates all of the following:(1) There is no feasible alternative site that exists within the designated roadways.(2) A traffic analysis has been completed and submitted to the local approving authority.(3) The site is an existing industrial zone.(4) The proposed site will incorporate mitigations to minimize traffic and environmental impacts on residential areas to the greatest extent feasible.65098.3. (a) Anti-idling signs indicating a three-minute heavy-duty truck engine idling restriction shall be posted at logistics use developments along entrances to the site and at the truck loading bays.(b) Signs shall be installed at all heavy-duty truck exit driveways directing truck drivers to the truck route as indicated in the truck routing plan, as described in Section 65098.4, and in the state highway system.65098.4. Prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, a facility operator shall establish and submit for approval to the planning director or equivalent position for the city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county. The truck routing plan shall describe the operational characteristics of the use of the facility operator, including, but not limited to, hours of operation, types of items to be stored within the building, and proposed truck routing to and from the facility to designated truck routes that, to the greatest extent possible, avoid passing sensitive receptors. The truck routing plan shall include measures, such as signage and pavement markings, queuing analysis, and enforcement, for preventing truck queuing, circling, stopping, and parking on public streets. The facility operator shall be responsible for enforcement of the truck routing plan. A revised truck routing plan shall be submitted to the planning director or equivalent position prior to a business license being issued by the city, county, or city and county for any new tenant of the property. The planning director or equivalent position shall have discretion to determine if changes to the truck routing plan are necessary, including, but not limited to, any additional measures to alleviate truck routing and parking issues that may arise during the life of the facility.65098.5. (a) A city, county, or city and county shall not approve development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in this chapter.(b) This section shall not be construed to restrict the existing authority of a city, county, or city and county to deny a logistics use facility altogether.65098.6. A city, county, or city and county shall condition approval of a logistics use on the following:(a) Two-to-one replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years, unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, pursuant to Section 17920.3 of the Health and Safety Code, prior to purchase by the developer. For each housing unit demolished, regardless of market value of the unit, two units of affordable housing for persons and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code, that are deed-restricted shall be built within the jurisdiction. Funds from any fee imposed for the replacement of demolished housing units shall be placed in a housing-specific set-aside account and shall be used for housing within three years of collection.(b) If residential dwellings are affected through purchase, the developer shall be required to provide any displaced tenant with an amount equivalent to 12 months rent at the current rate.65098.7. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to supersede mitigation measures required by the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).65098.8. The Legislature finds and declares that the movement and storage of freight and the impact of this activity on public health and communities across the state as set forth in this chapter is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, this chapter applies to all cities, including charter cities.65098.9. The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to a logistics use development if it meets both of the following:(a) The logistics use development is a mixed-use development that may create sensitive receptors on the site of the new logistics use development.(b) There are no existing sensitive receptors within 900 feet of the loading bay.
5666
5767 SECTION 1. Chapter 2.8 (commencing with Section 65098) is added to Division 1 of Title 7 of the Government Code, to read:
5868
5969 ### SECTION 1.
6070
6171 CHAPTER 2.8. Warehouse Design and Build Standards65098. As used in this chapter:(a) 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least 1 percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(4) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(5) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2030, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(6) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(b) Expansion of an existing logistics use means the expansion of an existing logistics use by 20 percent or more of the existing square footage. Office space shall not be included as part of the existing square footage or in the square footage for the 20-percent expansion threshold.(c) Heavy-duty truck means a class 7 or class 8 truck. As used in this subdivision:(1) Class 7 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of 26,001 to 33,000 pounds.(2) Class 8 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of greater than 33,000 pounds.(d) Logistics use means a building in which cargo, goods, or products are moved or stored for later distribution to business or retail customers, or both, that does not predominantly serve retail customers for onsite purchases, and heavy-duty trucks are primarily involved in the movement of the cargo, goods, or products. Logistics use does not include any of the following:(1) Facilities where food or household goods are sold directly to consumers and are accessible to the public.(2) A building primarily served by rail to move cargo goods or product.(3) (A) A Strategic Intermodal Facility.(B) For purposes of this subdivision, Strategic Intermodal Facility means a project that satisfies all of the following requirements:(i) Logistics facilities, including warehousing and transloading facilities, served by rail.(ii) Intermodal freight transport services.(iii) All facility structures and related rail operations are located within a single site footprint.(e) Sensitive receptor means one or more of the following:(1) A residence, including, but not limited to, a private home, apartment, condominium unit, group home, dormitory unit, or retirement home.(2) A school, including, but not limited to, a preschool, prekindergarten, or school maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(3) A daycare facility, including, but not limited to, in-home daycare.(4) Publicly owned parks, playgrounds, and recreational areas or facilities primarily used by children, unless the development of the park and recreation areas are included as a condition of approval for the development of a logistics use.(5) Nursing homes, long-term care facilities, hospices, convalescent facilities, or similar live-in housing.(6) Hospitals, as defined in Section 128700 of the Health and Safety Code.(f) Small off-road engines means spark-ignition engines rated at or below 19 kilowatts.(g) Tier 1 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) (i) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(ii) For purposes of the photovoltaic system installation requirement in clause (i), all warehouse square footage should be considered conditioned space.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least one percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Has a microgrid-ready switchgear system capable of supporting distributed energy resources.(4) Is advanced smart metering ready.(5) Has a minimum of 50 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces preinstalled with conduit and all necessary physical infrastructure to support future charging of electric vehicles.(6) Has a minimum of 10 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces installed with electric vehicle charging stations.(7) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(8) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(9) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2028, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(10) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(h) Warehouse concentration region includes the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino and the Cities of Chino, Colton, Fontana, Jurupa Valley, Moreno Valley, Ontario, Perris, Rancho Cucamonga, Redlands, Rialto, Riverside, and San Bernardino.65098.1. (a) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development 250,000 square feet or more where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 300 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(b) Commencing January 1, 2026, except as provided for in subdivision (c), any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(c) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, and is located in the warehouse concentration region, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(d) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development less than 250,000 square feet where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(2) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(3) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(4) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(5) Provides conduits at loading bays equal to one truck per every loading bay serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(6) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(7) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), on or before January 1, 2028, a city, county, or city and county shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.(2) On or before January 1, 2026, all cities and counties in the warehouse concentration region shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.65098.1.5. (a) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any existing logistics use development in existence as of September 30, 2024, shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a new sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a proposed expansion of a logistics use development is in a local entitlement process, then the proposed expansion shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a property is currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, then the proposed logistics use development shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(b) (1) Any new logistics use developments that require the rezoning of land and must undergo a municipal entitlement process shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if the start of the entitlement process for the logistics use began before any sensitive receptor started its own entitlement or permitting process, unless the proposed sensitive receptor was an existing allowable use according to local zoning regulations.(2) During a logistics use developments entitlement process for a new or expanded logistics use, if a new sensitive receptor is proposed or established within the distances required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, then those distance requirements shall not apply to the logistics use development so long as the logistics use development was not already subject to those requirements prior to the new sensitive receptor being proposed or established.(c) This chapter shall not apply to any logistics projects that were subject to a commenced local entitlement process prior to September 30, 2024.(d) The protection afforded by this section shall remain in effect from the time of the initial application submission through the completion of the entitlement process, including any necessary rezoning actions and through the development period. If no development activity occurs within five years of entitlement approvals, the protections shall be waived.(e) This chapter shall not apply to a logistics project that received an approval by a local agency prior to the effective date of this chapter. For purposes of this subdivision, approval shall have the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 15352 of Chapter 3 of Division 6 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations.65098.2. (a) Any new logistics use facility within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor shall have a buffer as follows:(1) If the logistics use development is subject to the requirements of subdivision (a) or (d) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 50 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(2) If the logistics use development is subject to either subdivision (b) or subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 100 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(b) Buffer areas shall include a solid decorative wall, landscaped berm and wall, or landscaped berm 10 feet or more in height, drought tolerant natural ground landscaping with proper irrigation, and solid-screen buffering trees as described in subdivision (c).(c) Trees shall be used as part of a solid-screen buffering treatment and planted in two rows along the length of the property line adjacent to the sensitive receptor. Trees used for this purpose shall be evergreen, drought tolerant, to the extent feasible, composed of species with low biogenic emissions, of a minimum 36-inch box size at planting, and spaced at no greater distance than 40 feet on center. Palm trees shall not be utilized.65098.2.5. The entry gates into the loading truck court for a new or expanded logistics use facility shall be positioned after a minimum of 50 feet of total available stacking depth inside the property line. The stacking depth shall be increased by 70 feet for every 20 loading bays beyond 50 loading bays, to the extent feasible.65098.2.7. (a) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments, beginning January 1, 2026, are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use development to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(b) (1) Any new logistics use development shall be sited on roadways that meet the following classifications:(A) Arterial roads.(B) Collector roads.(C) Major thoroughfares.(D) Local roads that predominantly serve commercial uses.(2) For purposes of this chapter, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designed for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) A waiver may be granted where siting on the designated roadways pursuant to subdivision (b) is impractical due to unique geographic, economic, or infrastructure-related reasons. The waiver shall be approved by the city, county, or city and county, provided that the applicant demonstrates all of the following:(1) There is no feasible alternative site that exists within the designated roadways.(2) A traffic analysis has been completed and submitted to the local approving authority.(3) The site is an existing industrial zone.(4) The proposed site will incorporate mitigations to minimize traffic and environmental impacts on residential areas to the greatest extent feasible.65098.3. (a) Anti-idling signs indicating a three-minute heavy-duty truck engine idling restriction shall be posted at logistics use developments along entrances to the site and at the truck loading bays.(b) Signs shall be installed at all heavy-duty truck exit driveways directing truck drivers to the truck route as indicated in the truck routing plan, as described in Section 65098.4, and in the state highway system.65098.4. Prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, a facility operator shall establish and submit for approval to the planning director or equivalent position for the city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county. The truck routing plan shall describe the operational characteristics of the use of the facility operator, including, but not limited to, hours of operation, types of items to be stored within the building, and proposed truck routing to and from the facility to designated truck routes that, to the greatest extent possible, avoid passing sensitive receptors. The truck routing plan shall include measures, such as signage and pavement markings, queuing analysis, and enforcement, for preventing truck queuing, circling, stopping, and parking on public streets. The facility operator shall be responsible for enforcement of the truck routing plan. A revised truck routing plan shall be submitted to the planning director or equivalent position prior to a business license being issued by the city, county, or city and county for any new tenant of the property. The planning director or equivalent position shall have discretion to determine if changes to the truck routing plan are necessary, including, but not limited to, any additional measures to alleviate truck routing and parking issues that may arise during the life of the facility.65098.5. (a) A city, county, or city and county shall not approve development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in this chapter.(b) This section shall not be construed to restrict the existing authority of a city, county, or city and county to deny a logistics use facility altogether.65098.6. A city, county, or city and county shall condition approval of a logistics use on the following:(a) Two-to-one replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years, unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, pursuant to Section 17920.3 of the Health and Safety Code, prior to purchase by the developer. For each housing unit demolished, regardless of market value of the unit, two units of affordable housing for persons and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code, that are deed-restricted shall be built within the jurisdiction. Funds from any fee imposed for the replacement of demolished housing units shall be placed in a housing-specific set-aside account and shall be used for housing within three years of collection.(b) If residential dwellings are affected through purchase, the developer shall be required to provide any displaced tenant with an amount equivalent to 12 months rent at the current rate.65098.7. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to supersede mitigation measures required by the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).65098.8. The Legislature finds and declares that the movement and storage of freight and the impact of this activity on public health and communities across the state as set forth in this chapter is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, this chapter applies to all cities, including charter cities.65098.9. The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to a logistics use development if it meets both of the following:(a) The logistics use development is a mixed-use development that may create sensitive receptors on the site of the new logistics use development.(b) There are no existing sensitive receptors within 900 feet of the loading bay.
6272
6373 CHAPTER 2.8. Warehouse Design and Build Standards65098. As used in this chapter:(a) 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least 1 percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(4) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(5) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2030, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(6) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(b) Expansion of an existing logistics use means the expansion of an existing logistics use by 20 percent or more of the existing square footage. Office space shall not be included as part of the existing square footage or in the square footage for the 20-percent expansion threshold.(c) Heavy-duty truck means a class 7 or class 8 truck. As used in this subdivision:(1) Class 7 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of 26,001 to 33,000 pounds.(2) Class 8 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of greater than 33,000 pounds.(d) Logistics use means a building in which cargo, goods, or products are moved or stored for later distribution to business or retail customers, or both, that does not predominantly serve retail customers for onsite purchases, and heavy-duty trucks are primarily involved in the movement of the cargo, goods, or products. Logistics use does not include any of the following:(1) Facilities where food or household goods are sold directly to consumers and are accessible to the public.(2) A building primarily served by rail to move cargo goods or product.(3) (A) A Strategic Intermodal Facility.(B) For purposes of this subdivision, Strategic Intermodal Facility means a project that satisfies all of the following requirements:(i) Logistics facilities, including warehousing and transloading facilities, served by rail.(ii) Intermodal freight transport services.(iii) All facility structures and related rail operations are located within a single site footprint.(e) Sensitive receptor means one or more of the following:(1) A residence, including, but not limited to, a private home, apartment, condominium unit, group home, dormitory unit, or retirement home.(2) A school, including, but not limited to, a preschool, prekindergarten, or school maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(3) A daycare facility, including, but not limited to, in-home daycare.(4) Publicly owned parks, playgrounds, and recreational areas or facilities primarily used by children, unless the development of the park and recreation areas are included as a condition of approval for the development of a logistics use.(5) Nursing homes, long-term care facilities, hospices, convalescent facilities, or similar live-in housing.(6) Hospitals, as defined in Section 128700 of the Health and Safety Code.(f) Small off-road engines means spark-ignition engines rated at or below 19 kilowatts.(g) Tier 1 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) (i) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(ii) For purposes of the photovoltaic system installation requirement in clause (i), all warehouse square footage should be considered conditioned space.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least one percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Has a microgrid-ready switchgear system capable of supporting distributed energy resources.(4) Is advanced smart metering ready.(5) Has a minimum of 50 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces preinstalled with conduit and all necessary physical infrastructure to support future charging of electric vehicles.(6) Has a minimum of 10 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces installed with electric vehicle charging stations.(7) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(8) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(9) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2028, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(10) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(h) Warehouse concentration region includes the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino and the Cities of Chino, Colton, Fontana, Jurupa Valley, Moreno Valley, Ontario, Perris, Rancho Cucamonga, Redlands, Rialto, Riverside, and San Bernardino.65098.1. (a) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development 250,000 square feet or more where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 300 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(b) Commencing January 1, 2026, except as provided for in subdivision (c), any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(c) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, and is located in the warehouse concentration region, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(d) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development less than 250,000 square feet where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(2) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(3) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(4) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(5) Provides conduits at loading bays equal to one truck per every loading bay serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(6) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(7) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), on or before January 1, 2028, a city, county, or city and county shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.(2) On or before January 1, 2026, all cities and counties in the warehouse concentration region shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.65098.1.5. (a) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any existing logistics use development in existence as of September 30, 2024, shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a new sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a proposed expansion of a logistics use development is in a local entitlement process, then the proposed expansion shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a property is currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, then the proposed logistics use development shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(b) (1) Any new logistics use developments that require the rezoning of land and must undergo a municipal entitlement process shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if the start of the entitlement process for the logistics use began before any sensitive receptor started its own entitlement or permitting process, unless the proposed sensitive receptor was an existing allowable use according to local zoning regulations.(2) During a logistics use developments entitlement process for a new or expanded logistics use, if a new sensitive receptor is proposed or established within the distances required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, then those distance requirements shall not apply to the logistics use development so long as the logistics use development was not already subject to those requirements prior to the new sensitive receptor being proposed or established.(c) This chapter shall not apply to any logistics projects that were subject to a commenced local entitlement process prior to September 30, 2024.(d) The protection afforded by this section shall remain in effect from the time of the initial application submission through the completion of the entitlement process, including any necessary rezoning actions and through the development period. If no development activity occurs within five years of entitlement approvals, the protections shall be waived.(e) This chapter shall not apply to a logistics project that received an approval by a local agency prior to the effective date of this chapter. For purposes of this subdivision, approval shall have the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 15352 of Chapter 3 of Division 6 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations.65098.2. (a) Any new logistics use facility within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor shall have a buffer as follows:(1) If the logistics use development is subject to the requirements of subdivision (a) or (d) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 50 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(2) If the logistics use development is subject to either subdivision (b) or subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 100 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(b) Buffer areas shall include a solid decorative wall, landscaped berm and wall, or landscaped berm 10 feet or more in height, drought tolerant natural ground landscaping with proper irrigation, and solid-screen buffering trees as described in subdivision (c).(c) Trees shall be used as part of a solid-screen buffering treatment and planted in two rows along the length of the property line adjacent to the sensitive receptor. Trees used for this purpose shall be evergreen, drought tolerant, to the extent feasible, composed of species with low biogenic emissions, of a minimum 36-inch box size at planting, and spaced at no greater distance than 40 feet on center. Palm trees shall not be utilized.65098.2.5. The entry gates into the loading truck court for a new or expanded logistics use facility shall be positioned after a minimum of 50 feet of total available stacking depth inside the property line. The stacking depth shall be increased by 70 feet for every 20 loading bays beyond 50 loading bays, to the extent feasible.65098.2.7. (a) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments, beginning January 1, 2026, are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use development to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(b) (1) Any new logistics use development shall be sited on roadways that meet the following classifications:(A) Arterial roads.(B) Collector roads.(C) Major thoroughfares.(D) Local roads that predominantly serve commercial uses.(2) For purposes of this chapter, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designed for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) A waiver may be granted where siting on the designated roadways pursuant to subdivision (b) is impractical due to unique geographic, economic, or infrastructure-related reasons. The waiver shall be approved by the city, county, or city and county, provided that the applicant demonstrates all of the following:(1) There is no feasible alternative site that exists within the designated roadways.(2) A traffic analysis has been completed and submitted to the local approving authority.(3) The site is an existing industrial zone.(4) The proposed site will incorporate mitigations to minimize traffic and environmental impacts on residential areas to the greatest extent feasible.65098.3. (a) Anti-idling signs indicating a three-minute heavy-duty truck engine idling restriction shall be posted at logistics use developments along entrances to the site and at the truck loading bays.(b) Signs shall be installed at all heavy-duty truck exit driveways directing truck drivers to the truck route as indicated in the truck routing plan, as described in Section 65098.4, and in the state highway system.65098.4. Prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, a facility operator shall establish and submit for approval to the planning director or equivalent position for the city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county. The truck routing plan shall describe the operational characteristics of the use of the facility operator, including, but not limited to, hours of operation, types of items to be stored within the building, and proposed truck routing to and from the facility to designated truck routes that, to the greatest extent possible, avoid passing sensitive receptors. The truck routing plan shall include measures, such as signage and pavement markings, queuing analysis, and enforcement, for preventing truck queuing, circling, stopping, and parking on public streets. The facility operator shall be responsible for enforcement of the truck routing plan. A revised truck routing plan shall be submitted to the planning director or equivalent position prior to a business license being issued by the city, county, or city and county for any new tenant of the property. The planning director or equivalent position shall have discretion to determine if changes to the truck routing plan are necessary, including, but not limited to, any additional measures to alleviate truck routing and parking issues that may arise during the life of the facility.65098.5. (a) A city, county, or city and county shall not approve development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in this chapter.(b) This section shall not be construed to restrict the existing authority of a city, county, or city and county to deny a logistics use facility altogether.65098.6. A city, county, or city and county shall condition approval of a logistics use on the following:(a) Two-to-one replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years, unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, pursuant to Section 17920.3 of the Health and Safety Code, prior to purchase by the developer. For each housing unit demolished, regardless of market value of the unit, two units of affordable housing for persons and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code, that are deed-restricted shall be built within the jurisdiction. Funds from any fee imposed for the replacement of demolished housing units shall be placed in a housing-specific set-aside account and shall be used for housing within three years of collection.(b) If residential dwellings are affected through purchase, the developer shall be required to provide any displaced tenant with an amount equivalent to 12 months rent at the current rate.65098.7. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to supersede mitigation measures required by the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).65098.8. The Legislature finds and declares that the movement and storage of freight and the impact of this activity on public health and communities across the state as set forth in this chapter is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, this chapter applies to all cities, including charter cities.65098.9. The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to a logistics use development if it meets both of the following:(a) The logistics use development is a mixed-use development that may create sensitive receptors on the site of the new logistics use development.(b) There are no existing sensitive receptors within 900 feet of the loading bay.
6474
6575 CHAPTER 2.8. Warehouse Design and Build Standards
6676
6777 CHAPTER 2.8. Warehouse Design and Build Standards
6878
6979 65098. As used in this chapter:(a) 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least 1 percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(4) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(5) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2030, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(6) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(b) Expansion of an existing logistics use means the expansion of an existing logistics use by 20 percent or more of the existing square footage. Office space shall not be included as part of the existing square footage or in the square footage for the 20-percent expansion threshold.(c) Heavy-duty truck means a class 7 or class 8 truck. As used in this subdivision:(1) Class 7 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of 26,001 to 33,000 pounds.(2) Class 8 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of greater than 33,000 pounds.(d) Logistics use means a building in which cargo, goods, or products are moved or stored for later distribution to business or retail customers, or both, that does not predominantly serve retail customers for onsite purchases, and heavy-duty trucks are primarily involved in the movement of the cargo, goods, or products. Logistics use does not include any of the following:(1) Facilities where food or household goods are sold directly to consumers and are accessible to the public.(2) A building primarily served by rail to move cargo goods or product.(3) (A) A Strategic Intermodal Facility.(B) For purposes of this subdivision, Strategic Intermodal Facility means a project that satisfies all of the following requirements:(i) Logistics facilities, including warehousing and transloading facilities, served by rail.(ii) Intermodal freight transport services.(iii) All facility structures and related rail operations are located within a single site footprint.(e) Sensitive receptor means one or more of the following:(1) A residence, including, but not limited to, a private home, apartment, condominium unit, group home, dormitory unit, or retirement home.(2) A school, including, but not limited to, a preschool, prekindergarten, or school maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(3) A daycare facility, including, but not limited to, in-home daycare.(4) Publicly owned parks, playgrounds, and recreational areas or facilities primarily used by children, unless the development of the park and recreation areas are included as a condition of approval for the development of a logistics use.(5) Nursing homes, long-term care facilities, hospices, convalescent facilities, or similar live-in housing.(6) Hospitals, as defined in Section 128700 of the Health and Safety Code.(f) Small off-road engines means spark-ignition engines rated at or below 19 kilowatts.(g) Tier 1 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:(1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) (i) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(ii) For purposes of the photovoltaic system installation requirement in clause (i), all warehouse square footage should be considered conditioned space.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(2) Has skylights in at least one percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.(3) Has a microgrid-ready switchgear system capable of supporting distributed energy resources.(4) Is advanced smart metering ready.(5) Has a minimum of 50 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces preinstalled with conduit and all necessary physical infrastructure to support future charging of electric vehicles.(6) Has a minimum of 10 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces installed with electric vehicle charging stations.(7) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(8) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(9) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2028, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(10) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.(B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.(ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.(C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.(h) Warehouse concentration region includes the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino and the Cities of Chino, Colton, Fontana, Jurupa Valley, Moreno Valley, Ontario, Perris, Rancho Cucamonga, Redlands, Rialto, Riverside, and San Bernardino.
7080
7181
7282
7383 65098. As used in this chapter:
7484
7585 (a) 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:
7686
7787 (1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:
7888
7989 (A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.
8090
8191 (B) Cool roofing.
8292
8393 (C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.
8494
8595 (D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.
8696
8797 (2) Has skylights in at least 1 percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.
8898
8999 (3) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.
90100
91101 (4) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.
92102
93103 (5) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2030, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.
94104
95105 (B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.
96106
97107 (ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.
98108
99109 (6) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.
100110
101111 (B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.
102112
103113 (ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.
104114
105115 (C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.
106116
107117 (b) Expansion of an existing logistics use means the expansion of an existing logistics use by 20 percent or more of the existing square footage. Office space shall not be included as part of the existing square footage or in the square footage for the 20-percent expansion threshold.
108118
109119 (c) Heavy-duty truck means a class 7 or class 8 truck. As used in this subdivision:
110120
111121 (1) Class 7 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of 26,001 to 33,000 pounds.
112122
113123 (2) Class 8 truck means a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating of greater than 33,000 pounds.
114124
115125 (d) Logistics use means a building in which cargo, goods, or products are moved or stored for later distribution to business or retail customers, or both, that does not predominantly serve retail customers for onsite purchases, and heavy-duty trucks are primarily involved in the movement of the cargo, goods, or products. Logistics use does not include any of the following:
116126
117127 (1) Facilities where food or household goods are sold directly to consumers and are accessible to the public.
118128
119129 (2) A building primarily served by rail to move cargo goods or product.
120130
121131 (3) (A) A Strategic Intermodal Facility.
122132
123133 (B) For purposes of this subdivision, Strategic Intermodal Facility means a project that satisfies all of the following requirements:
124134
125135 (i) Logistics facilities, including warehousing and transloading facilities, served by rail.
126136
127137 (ii) Intermodal freight transport services.
128138
129139 (iii) All facility structures and related rail operations are located within a single site footprint.
130140
131141 (e) Sensitive receptor means one or more of the following:
132142
133143 (1) A residence, including, but not limited to, a private home, apartment, condominium unit, group home, dormitory unit, or retirement home.
134144
135145 (2) A school, including, but not limited to, a preschool, prekindergarten, or school maintaining kindergarten or any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive.
136146
137147 (3) A daycare facility, including, but not limited to, in-home daycare.
138148
139149 (4) Publicly owned parks, playgrounds, and recreational areas or facilities primarily used by children, unless the development of the park and recreation areas are included as a condition of approval for the development of a logistics use.
140150
141151 (5) Nursing homes, long-term care facilities, hospices, convalescent facilities, or similar live-in housing.
142152
143153 (6) Hospitals, as defined in Section 128700 of the Health and Safety Code.
144154
145155 (f) Small off-road engines means spark-ignition engines rated at or below 19 kilowatts.
146156
147157 (g) Tier 1 21st century warehouse means a logistics use that meets all of the following:
148158
149159 (1) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:
150160
151161 (A) (i) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.
152162
153163 (ii) For purposes of the photovoltaic system installation requirement in clause (i), all warehouse square footage should be considered conditioned space.
154164
155165 (B) Cool roofing.
156166
157167 (C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.
158168
159169 (D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.
160170
161171 (2) Has skylights in at least one percent of the roof area, or equivalent LED efficient lighting.
162172
163173 (3) Has a microgrid-ready switchgear system capable of supporting distributed energy resources.
164174
165175 (4) Is advanced smart metering ready.
166176
167177 (5) Has a minimum of 50 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces preinstalled with conduit and all necessary physical infrastructure to support future charging of electric vehicles.
168178
169179 (6) Has a minimum of 10 percent of all passenger vehicle parking spaces installed with electric vehicle charging stations.
170180
171181 (7) Provides conduits and electrical hookups at all loading bays serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.
172182
173183 (8) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.
174184
175185 (9) (A) Ensures that all classes of forklifts used on site, pursuant to State Air Resources Boards Zero-Emission Forklifts regulation, as drafted, shall be zero-emission by January 1, 2028, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.
176186
177187 (B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.
178188
179189 (ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.
180190
181191 (10) (A) Ensures that equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines shall be zero-emission, to the extent operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, and adequate power available on site.
182192
183193 (B) (i) If not operationally feasible, commercially off-the shelf available, or if there is inadequate power available on site, the cleanest technology commercially available shall be used.
184194
185195 (ii) Cost shall not be a factor in determining operational feasibility pursuant to this subparagraph.
186196
187197 (C) Should any equipment used on site utilizing small off-road engines be contracted out, the logistics use facility shall preferentially contract for services utilizing zero-emission small off-road engines.
188198
189199 (h) Warehouse concentration region includes the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino and the Cities of Chino, Colton, Fontana, Jurupa Valley, Moreno Valley, Ontario, Perris, Rancho Cucamonga, Redlands, Rialto, Riverside, and San Bernardino.
190200
191201 65098.1. (a) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development 250,000 square feet or more where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 300 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(b) Commencing January 1, 2026, except as provided for in subdivision (c), any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(c) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, and is located in the warehouse concentration region, shall comply with all of the following:(1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.(2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.(4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(d) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development less than 250,000 square feet where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:(1) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.(2) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.(3) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.(4) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:(A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.(B) Cool roofing.(C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.(D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.(5) Provides conduits at loading bays equal to one truck per every loading bay serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.(6) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.(7) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), on or before January 1, 2028, a city, county, or city and county shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.(2) On or before January 1, 2026, all cities and counties in the warehouse concentration region shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.
192202
193203
194204
195205 65098.1. (a) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development 250,000 square feet or more where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:
196206
197207 (1) Include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098.
198208
199209 (2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.
200210
201211 (3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 300 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.
202212
203213 (4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.
204214
205215 (5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.
206216
207217 (6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.
208218
209219 (b) Commencing January 1, 2026, except as provided for in subdivision (c), any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor, shall comply with all of the following:
210220
211221 (1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.
212222
213223 (2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.
214224
215225 (3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.
216226
217227 (4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.
218228
219229 (5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.
220230
221231 (6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.
222232
223233 (c) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development that is on land that is not zoned industrial, whether developed or undeveloped, or land that needs to be rezoned, and is located in the warehouse concentration region, shall comply with all of the following:
224234
225235 (1) If the logistics use development is 250,000 square feet or more it shall include all Tier 1 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (g) of Section 65098. If the logistics use development is less than 250,000 square feet it shall include all 21st century warehouse design elements described in subdivision (a) of Section 65098.
226236
227237 (2) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.
228238
229239 (3) Locate truck loading bays a minimum of 500 feet from the property line of the nearest sensitive receptor to the nearest truck loading bay opening using a direct straight-line method.
230240
231241 (4) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.
232242
233243 (5) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.
234244
235245 (6) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.
236246
237247 (d) Commencing January 1, 2026, any proposed new or expanded logistics use development less than 250,000 square feet where the loading bay is within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor that is utilizing a site zoned for industrial use or any site where an application was submitted to the jurisdiction by September 30, 2024, to rezone as industrial and the rezone to industrial was ultimately approved shall comply with all of the following:
238248
239249 (1) Orient truck loading bays on the opposite side of the logistics use development away from sensitive receptors, to the extent feasible.
240250
241251 (2) Locate truck entry, exit, and internal circulation away from sensitive receptors. Heavy-duty diesel truck drive aisles shall be prohibited from being used on sides of the building that are directly adjacent to a sensitive receptor property line.
242252
243253 (3) Include buffering and screening to mitigate for light and noise, as described in Section 65098.2.
244254
245255 (4) Complies with or exceeds all requirements of the most current building energy efficiency standards specified in Part 6 (commencing with Section 100) of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations and the California Green Building Standards Code (Part 11 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations), including, but not limited to, the following requirements related to:
246256
247257 (A) Photovoltaic system installation and associated battery storage.
248258
249259 (B) Cool roofing.
250260
251261 (C) Medium- and heavy-duty vehicle charging readiness.
252262
253263 (D) Light-duty electric vehicle charging readiness and installed charging stations.
254264
255265 (5) Provides conduits at loading bays equal to one truck per every loading bay serving cold storage. Idling or use of auxiliary truck engine power to power climate control equipment shall be prohibited if the truck is capable of plugging in at the loading bay.
256266
257267 (6) Ensures that any heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning is high-efficiency.
258268
259269 (7) Have a separate entrance for heavy-duty trucks accessible via a truck route, arterial road, major thoroughfare, or a local road that predominantly serves commercial oriented uses.
260270
261271 (e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), on or before January 1, 2028, a city, county, or city and county shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.
262272
263273 (2) On or before January 1, 2026, all cities and counties in the warehouse concentration region shall update its circulation element to include truck routes, as specified in Section 65302.02.
264274
265275 65098.1.5. (a) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any existing logistics use development in existence as of September 30, 2024, shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a new sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a proposed expansion of a logistics use development is in a local entitlement process, then the proposed expansion shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a property is currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, then the proposed logistics use development shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.(b) (1) Any new logistics use developments that require the rezoning of land and must undergo a municipal entitlement process shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if the start of the entitlement process for the logistics use began before any sensitive receptor started its own entitlement or permitting process, unless the proposed sensitive receptor was an existing allowable use according to local zoning regulations.(2) During a logistics use developments entitlement process for a new or expanded logistics use, if a new sensitive receptor is proposed or established within the distances required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, then those distance requirements shall not apply to the logistics use development so long as the logistics use development was not already subject to those requirements prior to the new sensitive receptor being proposed or established.(c) This chapter shall not apply to any logistics projects that were subject to a commenced local entitlement process prior to September 30, 2024.(d) The protection afforded by this section shall remain in effect from the time of the initial application submission through the completion of the entitlement process, including any necessary rezoning actions and through the development period. If no development activity occurs within five years of entitlement approvals, the protections shall be waived.(e) This chapter shall not apply to a logistics project that received an approval by a local agency prior to the effective date of this chapter. For purposes of this subdivision, approval shall have the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 15352 of Chapter 3 of Division 6 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations.
266276
267277
268278
269279 65098.1.5. (a) (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any existing logistics use development in existence as of September 30, 2024, shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a new sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.
270280
271281 (2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a proposed expansion of a logistics use development is in a local entitlement process, then the proposed expansion shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.
272282
273283 (3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if, by September 30, 2024, a property is currently in a local entitlement process to become a logistics use, then the proposed logistics use development shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if a sensitive receptor is constructed, established, or permitted after the effective date of this chapter.
274284
275285 (b) (1) Any new logistics use developments that require the rezoning of land and must undergo a municipal entitlement process shall not be subject to the requirements described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, if the start of the entitlement process for the logistics use began before any sensitive receptor started its own entitlement or permitting process, unless the proposed sensitive receptor was an existing allowable use according to local zoning regulations.
276286
277287 (2) During a logistics use developments entitlement process for a new or expanded logistics use, if a new sensitive receptor is proposed or established within the distances required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of, paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of, or paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, as applicable, then those distance requirements shall not apply to the logistics use development so long as the logistics use development was not already subject to those requirements prior to the new sensitive receptor being proposed or established.
278288
279289 (c) This chapter shall not apply to any logistics projects that were subject to a commenced local entitlement process prior to September 30, 2024.
280290
281291 (d) The protection afforded by this section shall remain in effect from the time of the initial application submission through the completion of the entitlement process, including any necessary rezoning actions and through the development period. If no development activity occurs within five years of entitlement approvals, the protections shall be waived.
282292
283293 (e) This chapter shall not apply to a logistics project that received an approval by a local agency prior to the effective date of this chapter. For purposes of this subdivision, approval shall have the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 15352 of Chapter 3 of Division 6 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations.
284294
285295 65098.2. (a) Any new logistics use facility within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor shall have a buffer as follows:(1) If the logistics use development is subject to the requirements of subdivision (a) or (d) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 50 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(2) If the logistics use development is subject to either subdivision (b) or subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 100 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.(b) Buffer areas shall include a solid decorative wall, landscaped berm and wall, or landscaped berm 10 feet or more in height, drought tolerant natural ground landscaping with proper irrigation, and solid-screen buffering trees as described in subdivision (c).(c) Trees shall be used as part of a solid-screen buffering treatment and planted in two rows along the length of the property line adjacent to the sensitive receptor. Trees used for this purpose shall be evergreen, drought tolerant, to the extent feasible, composed of species with low biogenic emissions, of a minimum 36-inch box size at planting, and spaced at no greater distance than 40 feet on center. Palm trees shall not be utilized.
286296
287297
288298
289299 65098.2. (a) Any new logistics use facility within 900 feet of a sensitive receptor shall have a buffer as follows:
290300
291301 (1) If the logistics use development is subject to the requirements of subdivision (a) or (d) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 50 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.
292302
293303 (2) If the logistics use development is subject to either subdivision (b) or subdivision (c) of Section 65098.1, the buffer shall be 100 feet in width measured from the property line of all adjacent sensitive receptors that fully screen the project from the sensitive receptor.
294304
295305 (b) Buffer areas shall include a solid decorative wall, landscaped berm and wall, or landscaped berm 10 feet or more in height, drought tolerant natural ground landscaping with proper irrigation, and solid-screen buffering trees as described in subdivision (c).
296306
297307 (c) Trees shall be used as part of a solid-screen buffering treatment and planted in two rows along the length of the property line adjacent to the sensitive receptor. Trees used for this purpose shall be evergreen, drought tolerant, to the extent feasible, composed of species with low biogenic emissions, of a minimum 36-inch box size at planting, and spaced at no greater distance than 40 feet on center. Palm trees shall not be utilized.
298308
299309 65098.2.5. The entry gates into the loading truck court for a new or expanded logistics use facility shall be positioned after a minimum of 50 feet of total available stacking depth inside the property line. The stacking depth shall be increased by 70 feet for every 20 loading bays beyond 50 loading bays, to the extent feasible.
300310
301311
302312
303313 65098.2.5. The entry gates into the loading truck court for a new or expanded logistics use facility shall be positioned after a minimum of 50 feet of total available stacking depth inside the property line. The stacking depth shall be increased by 70 feet for every 20 loading bays beyond 50 loading bays, to the extent feasible.
304314
305315 65098.2.7. (a) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments, beginning January 1, 2026, are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use development to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(b) (1) Any new logistics use development shall be sited on roadways that meet the following classifications:(A) Arterial roads.(B) Collector roads.(C) Major thoroughfares.(D) Local roads that predominantly serve commercial uses.(2) For purposes of this chapter, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designed for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) A waiver may be granted where siting on the designated roadways pursuant to subdivision (b) is impractical due to unique geographic, economic, or infrastructure-related reasons. The waiver shall be approved by the city, county, or city and county, provided that the applicant demonstrates all of the following:(1) There is no feasible alternative site that exists within the designated roadways.(2) A traffic analysis has been completed and submitted to the local approving authority.(3) The site is an existing industrial zone.(4) The proposed site will incorporate mitigations to minimize traffic and environmental impacts on residential areas to the greatest extent feasible.
306316
307317
308318
309319 65098.2.7. (a) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments, beginning January 1, 2026, are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use development to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.
310320
311321 (b) (1) Any new logistics use development shall be sited on roadways that meet the following classifications:
312322
313323 (A) Arterial roads.
314324
315325 (B) Collector roads.
316326
317327 (C) Major thoroughfares.
318328
319329 (D) Local roads that predominantly serve commercial uses.
320330
321331 (2) For purposes of this chapter, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designed for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.
322332
323333 (c) A waiver may be granted where siting on the designated roadways pursuant to subdivision (b) is impractical due to unique geographic, economic, or infrastructure-related reasons. The waiver shall be approved by the city, county, or city and county, provided that the applicant demonstrates all of the following:
324334
325335 (1) There is no feasible alternative site that exists within the designated roadways.
326336
327337 (2) A traffic analysis has been completed and submitted to the local approving authority.
328338
329339 (3) The site is an existing industrial zone.
330340
331341 (4) The proposed site will incorporate mitigations to minimize traffic and environmental impacts on residential areas to the greatest extent feasible.
332342
333343 65098.3. (a) Anti-idling signs indicating a three-minute heavy-duty truck engine idling restriction shall be posted at logistics use developments along entrances to the site and at the truck loading bays.(b) Signs shall be installed at all heavy-duty truck exit driveways directing truck drivers to the truck route as indicated in the truck routing plan, as described in Section 65098.4, and in the state highway system.
334344
335345
336346
337347 65098.3. (a) Anti-idling signs indicating a three-minute heavy-duty truck engine idling restriction shall be posted at logistics use developments along entrances to the site and at the truck loading bays.
338348
339349 (b) Signs shall be installed at all heavy-duty truck exit driveways directing truck drivers to the truck route as indicated in the truck routing plan, as described in Section 65098.4, and in the state highway system.
340350
341351 65098.4. Prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, a facility operator shall establish and submit for approval to the planning director or equivalent position for the city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county. The truck routing plan shall describe the operational characteristics of the use of the facility operator, including, but not limited to, hours of operation, types of items to be stored within the building, and proposed truck routing to and from the facility to designated truck routes that, to the greatest extent possible, avoid passing sensitive receptors. The truck routing plan shall include measures, such as signage and pavement markings, queuing analysis, and enforcement, for preventing truck queuing, circling, stopping, and parking on public streets. The facility operator shall be responsible for enforcement of the truck routing plan. A revised truck routing plan shall be submitted to the planning director or equivalent position prior to a business license being issued by the city, county, or city and county for any new tenant of the property. The planning director or equivalent position shall have discretion to determine if changes to the truck routing plan are necessary, including, but not limited to, any additional measures to alleviate truck routing and parking issues that may arise during the life of the facility.
342352
343353
344354
345355 65098.4. Prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, a facility operator shall establish and submit for approval to the planning director or equivalent position for the city, county, or city and county a truck routing plan to and from the state highway system based on the latest truck route map of the city, county, or city and county. The truck routing plan shall describe the operational characteristics of the use of the facility operator, including, but not limited to, hours of operation, types of items to be stored within the building, and proposed truck routing to and from the facility to designated truck routes that, to the greatest extent possible, avoid passing sensitive receptors. The truck routing plan shall include measures, such as signage and pavement markings, queuing analysis, and enforcement, for preventing truck queuing, circling, stopping, and parking on public streets. The facility operator shall be responsible for enforcement of the truck routing plan. A revised truck routing plan shall be submitted to the planning director or equivalent position prior to a business license being issued by the city, county, or city and county for any new tenant of the property. The planning director or equivalent position shall have discretion to determine if changes to the truck routing plan are necessary, including, but not limited to, any additional measures to alleviate truck routing and parking issues that may arise during the life of the facility.
346356
347357 65098.5. (a) A city, county, or city and county shall not approve development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in this chapter.(b) This section shall not be construed to restrict the existing authority of a city, county, or city and county to deny a logistics use facility altogether.
348358
349359
350360
351361 65098.5. (a) A city, county, or city and county shall not approve development of a logistics use that does not meet or exceed the standards outlined in this chapter.
352362
353363 (b) This section shall not be construed to restrict the existing authority of a city, county, or city and county to deny a logistics use facility altogether.
354364
355365 65098.6. A city, county, or city and county shall condition approval of a logistics use on the following:(a) Two-to-one replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years, unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, pursuant to Section 17920.3 of the Health and Safety Code, prior to purchase by the developer. For each housing unit demolished, regardless of market value of the unit, two units of affordable housing for persons and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code, that are deed-restricted shall be built within the jurisdiction. Funds from any fee imposed for the replacement of demolished housing units shall be placed in a housing-specific set-aside account and shall be used for housing within three years of collection.(b) If residential dwellings are affected through purchase, the developer shall be required to provide any displaced tenant with an amount equivalent to 12 months rent at the current rate.
356366
357367
358368
359369 65098.6. A city, county, or city and county shall condition approval of a logistics use on the following:
360370
361371 (a) Two-to-one replacement of any demolished housing unit that was occupied within the last 10 years, unless the housing unit was declared substandard by a building official, pursuant to Section 17920.3 of the Health and Safety Code, prior to purchase by the developer. For each housing unit demolished, regardless of market value of the unit, two units of affordable housing for persons and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code, that are deed-restricted shall be built within the jurisdiction. Funds from any fee imposed for the replacement of demolished housing units shall be placed in a housing-specific set-aside account and shall be used for housing within three years of collection.
362372
363373 (b) If residential dwellings are affected through purchase, the developer shall be required to provide any displaced tenant with an amount equivalent to 12 months rent at the current rate.
364374
365375 65098.7. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to supersede mitigation measures required by the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).
366376
367377
368378
369379 65098.7. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to supersede mitigation measures required by the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).
370380
371381 65098.8. The Legislature finds and declares that the movement and storage of freight and the impact of this activity on public health and communities across the state as set forth in this chapter is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, this chapter applies to all cities, including charter cities.
372382
373383
374384
375385 65098.8. The Legislature finds and declares that the movement and storage of freight and the impact of this activity on public health and communities across the state as set forth in this chapter is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, this chapter applies to all cities, including charter cities.
376386
377387 65098.9. The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to a logistics use development if it meets both of the following:(a) The logistics use development is a mixed-use development that may create sensitive receptors on the site of the new logistics use development.(b) There are no existing sensitive receptors within 900 feet of the loading bay.
378388
379389
380390
381391 65098.9. The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to a logistics use development if it meets both of the following:
382392
383393 (a) The logistics use development is a mixed-use development that may create sensitive receptors on the site of the new logistics use development.
384394
385395 (b) There are no existing sensitive receptors within 900 feet of the loading bay.
386396
387397 SEC. 2. Section 65302.02 is added to the Government Code, to read:65302.02. By January 1, 2028, except as provided for in subdivision (h), a county or city shall update its circulation element, as required by subdivision (b) of Section 65302, to do all of the following:(a) Identify and establish specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and sensitive receptors, as defined by Section 65098.(b) Maximize the use of interstate or state divided highways as preferred routes for truck routes. The county or city shall also maximize use of arterial roads, major thoroughfares, and predominantly commercially oriented local streets when state or interstate highways are not utilized. Truck routes shall comply with the following:(1) Major or minor collector streets and roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses shall be used for truck routes only when strictly necessary to reach existing industrial zones.(2) Trucks shall be routed via transportation arteries that minimize exposure to sensitive receptors.(3) On and after January 1, 2028, all proposed development of a logistics use development, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 65098, shall be accessible via arterial roads, major thoroughfares, or roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses.(A) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use developments to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(B) For purposes of this section, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designated for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) The county or city may consult with the Department of Transportation and the California Freight Advisory Committee for technical assistance.(d) The county or city shall provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations.(e) The county or city shall make truck routes publicly available in geographic information system (GIS) format and share GIS maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers.(f) The city or county shall provide opportunities for the involvement of citizens, California Native American Indian tribes, public agencies, public utility companies, and civic, educational, and other community groups through public hearings and any other means the planning agency deems appropriate, consistent with Section 65351.(g) The city or county shall make a diligent effort to achieve public participation of all economic segments of the community in the development of the changes required pursuant to this section.(h) The warehouse concentration region, as defined in Section 65098, shall implement the provisions of this section by January 1, 2026.(i) The Attorney General may enforce this section.(1) The Attorney General may impose a fine against a jurisdiction that is in violation of this section of up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) every six months if the required updates have not been made.(2) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, any fines collected shall be distributed by the Attorney General and returned to the local air quality management district in which the fine was imposed and be used for the districts efforts to improve air quality.
388398
389399 SEC. 2. Section 65302.02 is added to the Government Code, to read:
390400
391401 ### SEC. 2.
392402
393403 65302.02. By January 1, 2028, except as provided for in subdivision (h), a county or city shall update its circulation element, as required by subdivision (b) of Section 65302, to do all of the following:(a) Identify and establish specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and sensitive receptors, as defined by Section 65098.(b) Maximize the use of interstate or state divided highways as preferred routes for truck routes. The county or city shall also maximize use of arterial roads, major thoroughfares, and predominantly commercially oriented local streets when state or interstate highways are not utilized. Truck routes shall comply with the following:(1) Major or minor collector streets and roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses shall be used for truck routes only when strictly necessary to reach existing industrial zones.(2) Trucks shall be routed via transportation arteries that minimize exposure to sensitive receptors.(3) On and after January 1, 2028, all proposed development of a logistics use development, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 65098, shall be accessible via arterial roads, major thoroughfares, or roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses.(A) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use developments to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(B) For purposes of this section, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designated for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) The county or city may consult with the Department of Transportation and the California Freight Advisory Committee for technical assistance.(d) The county or city shall provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations.(e) The county or city shall make truck routes publicly available in geographic information system (GIS) format and share GIS maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers.(f) The city or county shall provide opportunities for the involvement of citizens, California Native American Indian tribes, public agencies, public utility companies, and civic, educational, and other community groups through public hearings and any other means the planning agency deems appropriate, consistent with Section 65351.(g) The city or county shall make a diligent effort to achieve public participation of all economic segments of the community in the development of the changes required pursuant to this section.(h) The warehouse concentration region, as defined in Section 65098, shall implement the provisions of this section by January 1, 2026.(i) The Attorney General may enforce this section.(1) The Attorney General may impose a fine against a jurisdiction that is in violation of this section of up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) every six months if the required updates have not been made.(2) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, any fines collected shall be distributed by the Attorney General and returned to the local air quality management district in which the fine was imposed and be used for the districts efforts to improve air quality.
394404
395405 65302.02. By January 1, 2028, except as provided for in subdivision (h), a county or city shall update its circulation element, as required by subdivision (b) of Section 65302, to do all of the following:(a) Identify and establish specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and sensitive receptors, as defined by Section 65098.(b) Maximize the use of interstate or state divided highways as preferred routes for truck routes. The county or city shall also maximize use of arterial roads, major thoroughfares, and predominantly commercially oriented local streets when state or interstate highways are not utilized. Truck routes shall comply with the following:(1) Major or minor collector streets and roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses shall be used for truck routes only when strictly necessary to reach existing industrial zones.(2) Trucks shall be routed via transportation arteries that minimize exposure to sensitive receptors.(3) On and after January 1, 2028, all proposed development of a logistics use development, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 65098, shall be accessible via arterial roads, major thoroughfares, or roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses.(A) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use developments to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(B) For purposes of this section, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designated for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) The county or city may consult with the Department of Transportation and the California Freight Advisory Committee for technical assistance.(d) The county or city shall provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations.(e) The county or city shall make truck routes publicly available in geographic information system (GIS) format and share GIS maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers.(f) The city or county shall provide opportunities for the involvement of citizens, California Native American Indian tribes, public agencies, public utility companies, and civic, educational, and other community groups through public hearings and any other means the planning agency deems appropriate, consistent with Section 65351.(g) The city or county shall make a diligent effort to achieve public participation of all economic segments of the community in the development of the changes required pursuant to this section.(h) The warehouse concentration region, as defined in Section 65098, shall implement the provisions of this section by January 1, 2026.(i) The Attorney General may enforce this section.(1) The Attorney General may impose a fine against a jurisdiction that is in violation of this section of up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) every six months if the required updates have not been made.(2) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, any fines collected shall be distributed by the Attorney General and returned to the local air quality management district in which the fine was imposed and be used for the districts efforts to improve air quality.
396406
397407 65302.02. By January 1, 2028, except as provided for in subdivision (h), a county or city shall update its circulation element, as required by subdivision (b) of Section 65302, to do all of the following:(a) Identify and establish specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and sensitive receptors, as defined by Section 65098.(b) Maximize the use of interstate or state divided highways as preferred routes for truck routes. The county or city shall also maximize use of arterial roads, major thoroughfares, and predominantly commercially oriented local streets when state or interstate highways are not utilized. Truck routes shall comply with the following:(1) Major or minor collector streets and roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses shall be used for truck routes only when strictly necessary to reach existing industrial zones.(2) Trucks shall be routed via transportation arteries that minimize exposure to sensitive receptors.(3) On and after January 1, 2028, all proposed development of a logistics use development, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 65098, shall be accessible via arterial roads, major thoroughfares, or roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses.(A) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use developments to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.(B) For purposes of this section, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designated for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.(c) The county or city may consult with the Department of Transportation and the California Freight Advisory Committee for technical assistance.(d) The county or city shall provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations.(e) The county or city shall make truck routes publicly available in geographic information system (GIS) format and share GIS maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers.(f) The city or county shall provide opportunities for the involvement of citizens, California Native American Indian tribes, public agencies, public utility companies, and civic, educational, and other community groups through public hearings and any other means the planning agency deems appropriate, consistent with Section 65351.(g) The city or county shall make a diligent effort to achieve public participation of all economic segments of the community in the development of the changes required pursuant to this section.(h) The warehouse concentration region, as defined in Section 65098, shall implement the provisions of this section by January 1, 2026.(i) The Attorney General may enforce this section.(1) The Attorney General may impose a fine against a jurisdiction that is in violation of this section of up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) every six months if the required updates have not been made.(2) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, any fines collected shall be distributed by the Attorney General and returned to the local air quality management district in which the fine was imposed and be used for the districts efforts to improve air quality.
398408
399409
400410
401411 65302.02. By January 1, 2028, except as provided for in subdivision (h), a county or city shall update its circulation element, as required by subdivision (b) of Section 65302, to do all of the following:
402412
403413 (a) Identify and establish specific travel routes for the transport of goods, materials, or freight for storage, transfer, or redistribution to safely accommodate additional truck traffic and avoid residential areas and sensitive receptors, as defined by Section 65098.
404414
405415 (b) Maximize the use of interstate or state divided highways as preferred routes for truck routes. The county or city shall also maximize use of arterial roads, major thoroughfares, and predominantly commercially oriented local streets when state or interstate highways are not utilized. Truck routes shall comply with the following:
406416
407417 (1) Major or minor collector streets and roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses shall be used for truck routes only when strictly necessary to reach existing industrial zones.
408418
409419 (2) Trucks shall be routed via transportation arteries that minimize exposure to sensitive receptors.
410420
411421 (3) On and after January 1, 2028, all proposed development of a logistics use development, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 65098, shall be accessible via arterial roads, major thoroughfares, or roads that predominantly serve commercially oriented uses.
412422
413423 (A) The purpose of this section is to ensure that logistics use developments are sited in locations that minimize adverse impacts on residential communities and enhance transportation efficiency. This is achieved by restricting logistics use developments to roadways that are suited to handle the associated traffic and that predominantly serve commercial uses.
414424
415425 (B) For purposes of this section, local roads shall be considered to predominantly serve commercial uses if more than 50 percent of the properties fronting the road within 1000 feet are designated for commercial or industrial use according to the local zoning ordinance.
416426
417427 (c) The county or city may consult with the Department of Transportation and the California Freight Advisory Committee for technical assistance.
418428
419429 (d) The county or city shall provide for posting of conspicuous signage to identify truck routes and additional signage for truck parking and appropriate idling facility locations.
420430
421431 (e) The county or city shall make truck routes publicly available in geographic information system (GIS) format and share GIS maps of the truck routes with warehouse operators, fleet operators, and truck drivers.
422432
423433 (f) The city or county shall provide opportunities for the involvement of citizens, California Native American Indian tribes, public agencies, public utility companies, and civic, educational, and other community groups through public hearings and any other means the planning agency deems appropriate, consistent with Section 65351.
424434
425435 (g) The city or county shall make a diligent effort to achieve public participation of all economic segments of the community in the development of the changes required pursuant to this section.
426436
427437 (h) The warehouse concentration region, as defined in Section 65098, shall implement the provisions of this section by January 1, 2026.
428438
429439 (i) The Attorney General may enforce this section.
430440
431441 (1) The Attorney General may impose a fine against a jurisdiction that is in violation of this section of up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) every six months if the required updates have not been made.
432442
433443 (2) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, any fines collected shall be distributed by the Attorney General and returned to the local air quality management district in which the fine was imposed and be used for the districts efforts to improve air quality.
434444
435445 SEC. 3. Section 40458.5 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:40458.5. (a) Subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, the south coast district shall, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments.(b) The south coast district shall use the data collected pursuant to subdivision (a) to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors.(c) The south coast district shall submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. On or before January 1, 2028, the south coast district shall submit an interim report to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors. This report shall be used to assess the effectiveness of setbacks on public health.(d) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed pursuant to subdivision (c) is inoperative on January 1, 2040, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (c) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
436446
437447 SEC. 3. Section 40458.5 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:
438448
439449 ### SEC. 3.
440450
441451 40458.5. (a) Subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, the south coast district shall, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments.(b) The south coast district shall use the data collected pursuant to subdivision (a) to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors.(c) The south coast district shall submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. On or before January 1, 2028, the south coast district shall submit an interim report to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors. This report shall be used to assess the effectiveness of setbacks on public health.(d) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed pursuant to subdivision (c) is inoperative on January 1, 2040, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (c) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
442452
443453 40458.5. (a) Subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, the south coast district shall, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments.(b) The south coast district shall use the data collected pursuant to subdivision (a) to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors.(c) The south coast district shall submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. On or before January 1, 2028, the south coast district shall submit an interim report to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors. This report shall be used to assess the effectiveness of setbacks on public health.(d) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed pursuant to subdivision (c) is inoperative on January 1, 2040, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (c) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
444454
445455 40458.5. (a) Subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, the south coast district shall, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments.(b) The south coast district shall use the data collected pursuant to subdivision (a) to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors.(c) The south coast district shall submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. On or before January 1, 2028, the south coast district shall submit an interim report to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors. This report shall be used to assess the effectiveness of setbacks on public health.(d) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed pursuant to subdivision (c) is inoperative on January 1, 2040, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (c) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
446456
447457
448458
449459 40458.5. (a) Subject to an appropriation for this express purpose, the south coast district shall, beginning on January 1, 2026, and until January 1, 2032, deploy mobile air monitoring systems within the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino to collect air pollution measurements in communities that are near operational logistics use developments.
450460
451461 (b) The south coast district shall use the data collected pursuant to subdivision (a) to conduct an air modeling analysis to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors.
452462
453463 (c) The south coast district shall submit its findings to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2033. On or before January 1, 2028, the south coast district shall submit an interim report to evaluate the impact of air pollution on sensitive receptors, as defined in Section 65098 of the Government Code, from logistics use development operations in the Counties of Riverside and San Bernardino, including relative pollution concentrations from logistics use developments at varying distances from sensitive receptors. This report shall be used to assess the effectiveness of setbacks on public health.
454464
455465 (d) (1) The requirement for submitting a report imposed pursuant to subdivision (c) is inoperative on January 1, 2040, pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.
456466
457467 (2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (c) shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
458468
459469 SEC. 4. Section 40522.7 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:40522.7. The south coast district shall establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violations of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent. The south coast district shall ensure a wide range of community groups are included in the process and that groups represent the geographic areas where there are high numbers of warehouse facilities.
460470
461471 SEC. 4. Section 40522.7 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:
462472
463473 ### SEC. 4.
464474
465475 40522.7. The south coast district shall establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violations of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent. The south coast district shall ensure a wide range of community groups are included in the process and that groups represent the geographic areas where there are high numbers of warehouse facilities.
466476
467477 40522.7. The south coast district shall establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violations of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent. The south coast district shall ensure a wide range of community groups are included in the process and that groups represent the geographic areas where there are high numbers of warehouse facilities.
468478
469479 40522.7. The south coast district shall establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violations of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent. The south coast district shall ensure a wide range of community groups are included in the process and that groups represent the geographic areas where there are high numbers of warehouse facilities.
470480
471481
472482
473483 40522.7. The south coast district shall establish a process for receiving community input on how any penalties assessed and collected for violations of the Warehouse Indirect Source Rule are spent. The south coast district shall ensure a wide range of community groups are included in the process and that groups represent the geographic areas where there are high numbers of warehouse facilities.
474484
475485 SEC. 5. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code.
476486
477487 SEC. 5. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code.
478488
479489 SEC. 5. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code.
480490
481491 ### SEC. 5.