3279.
The expenditure plan shall provide for funding for wildfire risk reduction activities as follows:(a) Not less than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) for workforce training and development programs, expanded volunteering opportunities, and career pathways for careers in fire prevention and management, emergency medical technician, watershed and forest restoration, prescribed fire, forest and vegetation management, invasive plant management, and sustainable forest practices industries, among others. Moneys specified in this subdivision shall be provided to entities involved in workforce training and development and the creation of career pathways, including, but not limited to, the state and local conservation corps, the community colleges, state conservancies, joint powers authorities, qualified nonprofits, registered preapprenticeship programs, and public agencies with expertise in workforce training and development, under terms and conditions set forth in the expenditure plan. These investments shall provide comprehensive workforce training and development opportunities, including education, training, certifications, or placement services for jobs and careers in appropriate economic sectors and professions. In allocating funds, the Natural Resource Agency shall prioritize volunteer service and workforce training and development opportunities for low-income individuals with employment barriers, as defined in paragraph (2) of subdivision (j) of Section 14005 of the Unemployment Insurance Code.
(b) Not less than two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000) for a prehazard mitigation grant program developed by the Office of Emergency Services in conjunction with the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection that shall include grants to local agencies, including counties, and others for improvements to detection, warning, and evacuation systems, emergency notification systems, and improvements in fire and disaster response planning, communication, and infrastructure. Grants may also be awarded for structural hardening projects and to create incentives for the installation of microgrids, distributed generation, and storage systems powered by clean energy.
(c) (1) Not less than three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) for the implementation of projects to reduce the risk of wildfire undertaken by the Natural Resources Agency and its departments, boards, and conservancies. The priority shall be on areas that are wildland urban interfaces or in high or very high fire hazard severity zones. Eligible activities include landscape scale restoration, prescribed fire, and science-based vegetation treatment programs that provide long-term reduction of wildfire risk, protect lives and properties, and provide buffers around communities that will reduce the risk of wildfire and structural hardening. Projects shall be durable over time and, when undertaken on forested lands, shall emphasize carbon sequestration benefits, reduce habitat fragmentation, and ensure the maintenance of diverse and natural conditions, including older native forest structure and composition. Projects shall reflect the concurrence of the Department of Fish and Wildlife and the appropriate regional water quality control board, if a project may affect resources under their respective jurisdiction.
(2) Of the funds allocated pursuant to paragraph (1), not less than seventy-five million dollars ($75,000,000) shall be available to the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection for the most urgent fire prevention and training projects.
(3) Of the funds allocated pursuant to paragraph (1), not less than twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000) shall be made available to the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection to be dispersed to a state conservancy that is working on firefighter health and safety research to identify and understand the increasing scale of fires, fire risks, modernized vegetation management, efficacious building materials, and effective partnerships in preparing and responding to fires, and to understand and develop methods to reduce exposure to, and the impacts of, hazardous and other materials that can impair the health and safety of first responders and community members from fires.
(4) Of the funds allocated pursuant to paragraph (1), not less than fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) shall be available to the State Air Resources Board for projects that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases and criteria air pollutants related to forest treatments. Preference shall be given to projects that can provide negative emissions of greenhouse gases as determined by the State Air Resources Board.
(5) Of the funds allocated pursuant to paragraph (1), one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) shall be available for the fire prevention grants program of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
(d) Not less than two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000) to the Wildlife Conservation Board for restoration and protection of forests and wildlands to improve forest and ecosystem health and wildfire resilience.
(e) Not less than two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000) for the development and implementation of community wildfire protection plans through grants to counties, fire safe councils, resource conservation districts, and other qualified entities, including local fire agencies and districts, to develop and implement activities to enhance community wildfire safety, defensible space, home hardening, and other projects to improve fire resilience.
(f) Not less than three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) to reduce the risk of wildfires through coordinated and integrated regional approaches to the restoration of watersheds and reduction in conditions that lead to catastrophic wildfires, through grants to the Regional Fire and Forest Capacity Program of the Natural Resources Agency.
(g) Not less than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) to the Department of Parks and Recreation to reduce the risk of wildfire and restore fire-related damages at appropriate units of the state park system.
(h) Not less than three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) to state conservancies within the service areas of the large electrical corporations to reduce the risk of wildfires and improve forest and ecosystem health, corridor and trail protection and connectivity, and to help with appropriate workforce training and development consistent with the state conservancies’ governing statutes. Priority shall be given to reducing repetitive, catastrophic wildfires in the wildland urban interface.
(i) Not less than three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) to the Strategic Growth Council to establish cooling centers, clean air centers, hydration stations, emergency shelters, and backup solar electrical generation and storage facilities, including those located at the network of county and state-owned fair facilities, to safeguard vulnerable populations from extreme events.
(j) (1) Not less than three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) shall be available for water infrastructure upgrades and improvements that increase water supply reliability for fire fighting and other beneficial uses or that decrease reliance on water supplies from areas impacted by wildfires. Eligible projects include, but are not limited to, any of the following:
(A) Projects that improve water supply reliability for fire fighting in areas at high risk for wildfires.
(B) Projects that improve regional water supply reliability in areas whose water supply is impacted by wildfires.
(C) Projects that decrease reliance on water supplies that are impacted by wildfires.
(2) Of the funds allocated under paragraph (1), fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) shall be available for restoration of the capacity of the Friant–Kern Canal that was lost due to subsidence, consistent with the water management goal under the September 13, 2006, Stipulation of Settlement in the litigation entitled Natural Resources Defense Council, et al v Kirk Rodgers, et al, United States District Court, Eastern District of California, No. CIV S-88-1658 LKK/GGH. A cost share of not less than 50 percent of the total costs of the project shall be required.
(3) Of the funds allocated under paragraph (1), fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) shall be available to implement the restoration goal of the stipulation of settlement described in paragraph (2), including funding for restoration projects identified in paragraph 11 of the Stipulation of Settlement, and funding to support the work of the Restoration Administrator and Technical Advisory Committee.