Today's Law As Amended


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AB-1922 Greenway Development and Sustainment Act.(2013-2014)



As Amends the Law Today


SECTION 1.
 (a) The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:
(1) Open-space land is necessary not only for the maintenance of the economy of the state, but for, among other purposes, the enjoyment of scenic beauty, recreation, and the use and preservation of natural resources. Moreover, the growing population of the state makes it important that existing open-space resources be preserved and well maintained, and that access to those resources be ensured for the health benefits and well-being of the state’s population. The preservation of open-space land is especially critical in urban areas where the amount of usable open-space land is limited.
(2) Open-space land provides relief from the effects of urban congestion and opportunities for relaxation, exercise, community interaction, and the observation and appreciation of wildlife, which helps to combat both physical and psychological stress. Trees located on open-space land also provide shade and help reduce ambient temperatures and restore oxygen to the atmosphere.
(3) Greenways are public infrastructure located along natural landscape features such as urban watercourses, which, because of their linear structure, help to physically and psychologically connect various neighborhoods with one another while providing a means of habitat connectivity.
(4) Greenways can directly improve the quality of life in communities by providing important recreational, open-space land, wildlife, flood management, water quality, air quality, transportation, emergency response, and urban waterfront revitalization benefits to those communities.
(5) Greenways can foster livable communities by utilizing public lands for multiple, complementary purposes, such as placemaking, connecting diverse communities, reducing dependence on automobiles, expanding nonmotorized transportation networks with safer routes to jobs, homes, and schools, encouraging more transit-oriented development, and facilitating healthier behaviors by providing opportunities for exercise and the maintenance of a healthy, active lifestyle.
(6) Greenways can complement and enhance public amenities and public-serving retail services that provide additional access to historically underserved communities by attracting residents and visitors to these areas. Greenways can increase public safety and foster improved civic vigilance. Greenways in cities throughout the world have demonstrated the effectiveness and benefits of sustainable and successful public-private partnerships.
(7) Greenways encourage healthier residential communities by facilitating development that allows people to live closer to job centers and use public transportation alternatives.
(8) Greenways reduce the amount of parking necessary for small businesses because of reduced automobile traffic, encourage the development of affordable housing in urban areas, and promote walking and cycling and increased community interaction.
(9) Greenways encourage economic investment and community revitalization by connecting people in new ways.
(b) The Legislature finds and declares the following with regard to the development of a greenway along the Los Angeles River and its tributaries:
(1) The area along the Los Angeles River and its tributaries is particularly suited for the development of a greenway. A Los Angeles River greenway that focuses on public-private partnerships aimed at establishing a continuous pedestrian bikeway along the Los Angeles River and its tributaries would foster job creation, economic development, and community revitalization.
(2) A Los Angeles River greenway that establishes a continuous pedestrian bikeway along the Los Angeles River and its tributaries would encourage community revitalization by investing in an efficient cycling and walking recreational transit route following the 51-mile Los Angeles River corridor. The greenway would also connect existing communities along the Los Angeles River to a network of parks and multiuse public trails.
(3) A Los Angeles River greenway would build upon a long history of support for a multiuse greenway network along the most significant river in the nation’s second largest city. Since the 1980s, residents of the Los Angeles area have been advocating for the development of a trail network along the Los Angeles River. The County of Los Angeles’ Los Angeles River Master Plan in 1996, the City of Los Angeles’ Los Angeles River Revitalization Master Plan in 2007, the City of Los Angeles Bicycle Plan in 2010, the County of Los Angeles Bicycle Plan in 2012, and President Obama’s prioritization of the Los Angeles River trail system in the President’s America’s Great Outdoors Initiative in 2012 all promote the development of a river trail system along the Los Angeles River.
(4) A Los Angeles River greenway would build upon a long history of investment by the state in the development of parks and trails along the Los Angeles River, including Rio de Los Angeles State Park and Los Angeles State Historic Park. Moreover, a Los Angeles River greenway would complement the work of key state entities, including the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy and various other state rivers and mountains conservancies.
(5) Because of its ability to leverage private investments to match commitments of public funds, the development of a Los Angeles River greenway by the City of Los Angeles, working with other local governments, would allow the state to concentrate and streamline investments it has already made in communities adjacent to the Los Angeles River and its tributaries, and would provide a funding model for types of investments funding greenways that may be replicated in other priority urban waterways in the future.
(6) By developing a greenway that promotes sustainability and acts as a transportation corridor, a city, county, or city and county may apply for alternative fuels funding, greenhouse gas reduction funds, and other land use funds, as appropriate.
(7) Given the current fiscal constraints facing public agencies, it is time for the state to acknowledge and take advantage of the ability of private sector investments to sustain public infrastructure at all levels. Efforts to promote investment in the Los Angeles River trail system should be encouraged to prevent partial, disjointed, and inefficient development of the trail system.
(8) A Los Angeles River greenway would provide a social and natural resource amenity that would be complete and accessible to the public in the next seven years, and would be a resource that could be utilized and enjoyed by children in the Los Angeles area during their childhood years.
(9) A Los Angeles River greenway would improve the conditions of daily life in Los Angeles’ urban communities and would increase the value of the state’s investments while providing critically needed, tangible urban waterway revitalization in the Los Angeles area.
(10) A greenway should be established in the area encompassing the Los Angeles River from its headwaters in the Community of Canoga Park to a point of discharge into the Pacific Ocean at San Pedro Bay in the City of Long Beach, with a width of one-quarter to one mile on both banks and at least one mile upstream along both banks of its tributaries, as feasible. Within the City of Los Angeles, the greenway could be coterminous with the area included in the Los Angeles River Improvement Overlay district.
(11) The County of Los Angeles’ Los Angeles River Master Plan and the City of Los Angeles’ Los Angeles River Revitalization Master Plan call for the development of a greenway along the Los Angeles River.
(c) It is therefore the intent of the Legislature in enacting Chapter 10.5 (commencing with Section 5845) of Division 5 of the Public Resources Code to promote the development of greenways along urban rivers in the state through public and private partnership, including the development of a greenway along the Los Angeles River and its tributaries.

SEC. 2.

 Section 815.3 of the Civil Code is amended to read:

815.3.
 Only the following entities or organizations may acquire and hold conservation easements:
(a) A tax-exempt nonprofit organization qualified under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and qualified to do business in this state which that  has as its primary purpose the preservation, protection, or enhancement of land in its natural, scenic, historical, agricultural, forested, or open-space condition or use. use, or the development of a greenway, as defined in Section 5846 of the Public Resources Code. 
(b) The state or any city, county, city and county, district, or other state or local governmental entity, if otherwise authorized to acquire and hold title to real property and if the conservation easement is voluntarily conveyed. No A  local governmental entity may  shall not  condition the issuance of an entitlement for use on the applicant’s granting of a conservation easement pursuant to this chapter.
(c) A federally recognized California Native American tribe or a nonfederally recognized California Native American tribe that is on the contact list maintained by the Native American Heritage Commission to protect a California Native American prehistoric, archaeological, cultural, spiritual, or ceremonial place, if the conservation easement is voluntarily conveyed.

SEC. 3.

 Section 65560 of the Government Code is amended to read:

65560.
 For purposes of this chapter:
(a) “Amount of land converted to agricultural use” means those lands that were brought into agricultural use or reestablished in agricultural use and were not shown as agricultural land on Important Farmland Series maps maintained by the department in the most recent biennial report.
(b) “Amount of land converted from agricultural use” means those lands that were permanently converted or committed to urban or other nonagricultural uses and were shown as agricultural land on Important Farmland Series maps maintained by the department and in the most recent biennial report.
(c) “Category of agricultural land” means prime farmland, farmland of statewide importance, unique farmland, and farmland of local importance, as defined pursuant to the United States Department of Agriculture’s land inventory and monitoring criteria, as modified for California, and grazing land. “Grazing land” means land on which the existing vegetation, whether grown naturally or through management, is suitable for grazing or browsing of livestock.
(d) “Department” means the Department of Conservation.
(e) “Interim Farmland maps” means those maps prepared by the department for areas that do not have the current soil survey information needed to compile Important Farmland Series maps. The Interim Farmland maps shall indicate areas of irrigated agriculture, dry-farmed agriculture, grazing lands, urban and built-up lands, and any areas committed to urban or other nonagricultural uses.
(f) “Important Farmland Series maps” means those maps compiled by the United States Soil Conservation Service and updated and modified by the department’s Farmland Mapping and Monitoring Program pursuant to Section 65570.
(g) (a)  “Local open-space plan” means is  the open-space element of a county or city general plan adopted by the board or council, either as the local open-space plan or as the interim local open-space plan adopted pursuant to Section 65563.
(h) (b)  “Open-space land” means is  any parcel or area of land or water that is essentially unimproved and  devoted to an open-space use as defined in this section, and that is designated on a local, regional, or state open-space plan as any of the following:
(1) Open space for the preservation of natural resources, resources  including, but not limited to, areas required for the preservation of plant and animal life, including habitat for fish and wildlife species; areas required for ecologic and other scientific study purposes; rivers, streams, bays, and estuaries; and coastal beaches, lakeshores, banks of rivers and streams, greenways,  and watershed lands.
(2) Open space used for the managed production of resources, including, but not limited to, forest lands, rangeland, agricultural lands, and areas of economic importance for the production of food or fiber; areas required for recharge of groundwater basins; bays, estuaries, marshes, rivers, and streams that are important for the management of commercial fisheries; and areas containing major mineral deposits, including those in short supply.
(3) Open space for outdoor recreation, including, but not limited to, areas of outstanding scenic, historic, and cultural value; areas particularly suited for park and recreation purposes, including access to lakeshores, beaches, and rivers and streams; and areas that serve as links between major recreation and open-space reservations, including utility easements, banks of rivers and streams, trails, greenways,  and scenic highway corridors.
(4) Open space for public health and safety, including, but not limited to, areas that require special management or regulation because of hazardous or special conditions such as earthquake fault zones, unstable soil areas, flood plains, watersheds, areas presenting high fire risks, areas required for the protection of water quality and water reservoirs, and areas required for the protection and enhancement of air quality.
(5) Open space in support of the mission of military installations that comprises areas adjacent to military installations, military training routes, and underlying restricted airspace that can provide additional buffer zones to military activities and complement the resource values of the military lands.
(6) Open space for the protection of places, features, and objects described in Sections 5097.9 and 5097.997 5097.993  of the Public Resources Code.
(i) “Priority land” means any part, or all of a category of, agricultural or open space lands, identified by a local government in that local government’s agricultural land component of its open-space element or agricultural land element of the general plan, that are prioritized for conservation, taking into consideration the need to balance competing land uses.

SEC. 4.

 Chapter 10.5 (commencing with Section 5845) is added to Division 5 of the Public Resources Code, to read:

CHAPTER  10.5. Greenway Development and Sustainment Act
5845.
 This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the Greenway Development and Sustainment Act.
5846.
 For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:
(a) “Adjacent” means within 400 yards from the property boundary of an existing urban waterway.
(b)  “Greenway” means a pedestrian and bicycle, nonmotorized vehicle transportation, and recreational travel corridor that meets the following requirements:
(1) Includes landscaping that improves rivers and streams, provides flood protection benefits, and incorporates the significance and value of natural, historical, and cultural resources, as documented in the local agency’s applicable planning document, including, but not limited to, a master plan, a general plan, or a specific plan.
(2) Is separated and protected from shared roadways, is adjacent to an urban waterway, and incorporates both ease of access to nearby communities and an array of amenities and services for the users of the corridor and nearby communities.
(3) Is located on public lands or private lands, or a combination of public and private, lands where public access to those lands for greenway purposes has been legally authorized by the fee owner of the land and, if applicable, the operator of any facility or improvement located on the land, through leases, easements, or other agreements entered into by the fee owner and the operator of any affected facility or improvement on the land.
(4) Reflects design standards regarding appropriate widths, clearances, setbacks from obstructions, and centerlines protecting directional travel, and other considerations, as appropriate, that are applicable for each affected local agency, as documented in the local agency’s applicable planning document, including, but not limited to, a master plan, general plan, or specific plan.
(5) May incorporate appropriate lighting, public amenities, art, and other features that are consistent with a local agency’s planning document, including, but not limited to, a general plan, master plan, or specific plan.
(c) “Urban waterway” means a creek, stream, or river that crosses (1) developed residential, commercial, or industrial property or (2) open space where the land use is designated as residential, commercial, or industrial, as referenced in a local agency’s planning document, including, but not limited to, a general plan, master plan, or specific general plan.