26451.
(a) The council shall develop and implement a grant program pursuant to this division for local governments to develop community energy resilience plans.(b) (1) The council shall establish funding procedures and guidelines for developing a community energy resilience plan and for overall plan structure and content, including development of a formula for allocating planning funds in amounts commensurate with the population served. The council shall provide grants to local governments for the development of a plan described in this section.
(2) The council shall establish a stakeholder review board as a public steering committee to provide statewide oversight for purposes of the grant program. The stakeholder review board shall include representatives from across the state from relevant nongovernmental organizations, including environmental justice organizations, and local governments.
(c) All of the following are guiding principles for plan development:
(1) Equitable collaboration between public utilities, local governments, and state agencies to yield plans that not only help achieve local energy resilience objectives, but also decarbonization and grid stability goals.
(2) Integration of available mobile storage resources that will become available through transportation electrification.
(3) Equitable access to reliable energy, with highest priority for receipt of planning funds granted to critical facilities in low-income or disadvantaged communities in high fire threat districts that are most likely to experience future electrical grid deenergization events, followed in priority by all other critical facilities statewide.
(4) Integration of community energy resilience plans with other existing local government planning documents, including general plans and climate action plans, with an assumption that upon completion, a community energy resilience plan would be incorporated by the local government into the existing general plan.
(d) The council’s role in the plan development process shall include, but is not limited to, all of the following activities:
(1) Identifying and coordinating with appropriate local government staff and outside consultants capable of drafting the plan. A local government may hire a resilience manager to manage the plan development process and the implementation of any specific projects identified in the plan.
(2) Convening one or more community workshops enlisting local stakeholders, including, but not limited to, community members, local government staff in departments relating to emergency services, planning, and public works, disability rights advocates, and representatives from special districts, load-serving entities, school districts, environmental justice communities, communities of color, and other marginalized groups, to ensure that a diversity of perspectives and input is incorporated into the plan.
(3) Soliciting input from public utility operational and technical subject matter experts, including relevant data to enable local governments to design their plans to make efficient use of existing distribution infrastructure and support grid operation.
(4) Providing guidance and support to each local government receiving plan funds for the local government to designate a diverse plan steering committee to ensure robust and meaningful public participation.
(e) A plan for which a local government receives grant funding shall do all of the following:
(1) Identify critical facilities and ensure that a reliable electricity supply is maintained at critical facilities.
(2) Identify areas most likely to experience a loss of electrical service based on public utility determinations of remote or hazardous areas likely to be subject to a planned deenergization of the electrical grid.
(3) Include a feasibility analysis of expected costs and benefits for anticipated projects within the local jurisdiction. A proposed plan shall also include an analysis of multiple project options for each location, including distribution segmentation and microgrids.
(f) The council shall adopt proposed final statewide plan guidelines following a public engagement process, during which the council shall publish proposed draft guidelines on its internet website and hold a publicly noticed meeting allowing time for public comment. The council shall provide written public notice of a meeting at least 15 days before a meeting.
(g) Grant funding awarded to a local government pursuant to this division shall not affect the entity’s eligibility to receive other incentives available from federal, state, or other local governments, public utilities, or any other source, or to leverage the grant funding awarded pursuant to this division with any other incentive.