Today's Law As Amended


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AB-2285 Natural resources: equitable outdoor access: 30x30 goal: urban nature-based projects.(2023-2024)



As Amends the Law Today


SECTION 1.
 (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
(1) Executive Order No. N-82-20 by Governor Gavin Newsom directs the Natural Resources Agency to combat the biodiversity and climate crises by, among other things, establishing the California Biodiversity Collaborative and conserving at least 30 percent of California’s lands and coastal waters by 2030, known as the 30x30 goal. The executive order directs the Natural Resources Agency to develop strategies to achieve this goal in a manner that, among other things, expands equitable outdoor access and recreation for all Californians.
(2) Hundreds of millions of dollars in General Fund allocations have been directed to the Wildlife Conservation Board, the Department of Conservation, and state conservancies, among others, to meet the 30x30 goal.
(3) Governor Newsom and First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom are championing the Outdoors for All initiative under the Natural Resources Agency that, among other things, seeks to expand parks in communities with little outdoor space and supports and underwrites programs to connect people who lack access to green space, fostering a sense of belonging and stewardship of the state’s outdoors.
(4) Senate Bill 337 (Chapter 392 of the Statutes of 2023) codifies the 30x30 goal.
(5) The County of Los Angeles adopted the 2022 Parks Needs Assessment Plus (PNA+) as its 30x30 plan. PNA+ identifies environmental conservation opportunities in the County of Los Angeles, including both natural lands as well as the restoration of degraded lands, such as brownfields, that would provide increased access to open space in highly urbanized parts of the County of Los Angeles.
(6) PNA+ goes beyond traditional conservation models that involve the acquisition and protection of natural lands and reimagines the 30x30 goal through a more equity- and access-facing lens to direct funding and resources into the healing and conversion of blighted, degraded, and otherwise underutilized urban-based lands into green spaces and microhabitats promoting nature-based opportunities, access, and enhanced community and neighborhood aesthetics.
(7) Through thorough analysis, PNA+ identifies possible green space acquisition and restoration opportunities within the county and reveals a sharp contrast among regions in the county.
(8) PNA+ discovered that most of the available land for acquisition pursuant to the 30x30 goal was in the northern part of the County of Los Angeles, an area already rich in park and open-space resources as compared to the southern part of the County of Los Angeles, an area richer in diversity and more challenged economically, wherein the opportunities for 30x30 projects are confined to degraded and underutilized lands.
(b) It is the intent of the Legislature, in order to promote equity in the allocation of resources and investments in nature-based solutions, particularly in California’s marginalized and historically underserved communities, that the Legislature, the Governor, and state agencies and departments charged with the distribution of state and federal funds creatively strive to reintroduce nature through land restoration and land healing interventions for the greening of California’s most nature-deficient communities.

SEC. 2.

 Section 1004 is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:

1004.
 (a) The Legislature finds and declares that the November 2023 report of the Outdoors for All initiative, “Providing Equitable Access to Parks and Nature,” proposes the following priorities to achieve Outdoors for All:
(1) Establish spaces for people and nature to thrive. This priority includes strategies that:
(A) Develop, improve, and maintain local and regional outdoor spaces.
(B) Support tribal ancestral land return as a pathway for outdoor access.
(C) Support the use of cultural easements by California Native American tribes to protect cultural and sacred sites.
(D) Support multibenefit solutions for access and environmental priorities.
(E) Support deferred maintenance projects statewide that seek to expand access to recreation and provide a safe and welcoming experience for visitors.
(F) Coordinate with school districts and regional governments to enhance green schoolyards and explore opportunities for schoolyards to fill gaps outside of school hours.
(G) Support connecting different-sized outdoor spaces, including statewide and regional trail networks, to provide diverse experiences for all skill levels, with the cobenefit of creating wildlife corridors.
(H) Ensure outdoor space development and management is consistent with California’s climate adaptation strategy, climate change scoping plan, and Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy.
(I) Support implementation of antidisplacement measures to ensure access to open space does not lead to gentrification.
(J) Collaborate with private landowners and federal, state, regional, and local governments to explore opportunities to expand recreation access on private lands.
(2) Foster belonging. This priority includes strategies that:
(A) Share culturally diverse, relevant, and relatable stories and images of California’s people and history through the programming, interpretive materials, art, and signage offered at outdoor spaces, cultural and historic places, and museums.
(B) Foster public appreciation of, and connection to, California’s natural and cultural resources.
(C) Support improvements to language access for outdoor programming, educational materials, and staff at open spaces, cultural and historic places, and museums.
(D) Build trust between and among staff and visitors.
(E) Create adult- and youth-centered programming, including intergenerational opportunities, at outdoor spaces to inspire and build confidence across a broad range of recreational users and activities.
(F) Rename offensive and derogatory geographic features and place names across outdoor spaces to address historical wrongs and create safe and inclusive spaces.
(3) Connect people and the outdoors. This priority includes strategies that:
(A) Make information about California’s parks and outdoor spaces easier to find and understand.
(B) Explore opportunities to offer free broadband on state recreation lands and cultural and historic properties, allowing for more accessible information, inclusive signage, programming, and connectivity to address safety concerns.
(C) Enhance and create more green, accessible, safe, active, public, and shared transportation options linking the outdoors and communities.
(D) Explore ways to provide free access to California state parks for low-income communities.
(E) Support tribal members in harvesting culturally significant materials in outdoor spaces.
(F) Explore public-private partnerships to support gear libraries and low-cost outings and classes at outdoor spaces.
(G) Prioritize funding and a streamlined process for building lower cost coastal accommodations.
(H) Prioritize partnerships with nonprofits that provide youth and families from underserved communities and people with disabilities with access to state lands through supervised programming.
(4) Cocreate with communities. This priority includes strategies that:
(A) Conduct early, often, and meaningful tribal consultations with the goal of enhancing tribal partnerships and collaboration.
(B) Invite and embed meaningful tribal consultation and community engagement into grant processes.
(C) Update the grant applications of the Natural Resources Agency and its departments to increase support and reduce barriers for underserved communities, including California Native American tribes, and the organizations that serve them.
(D) Collaborate with other agencies to build best practices for public meetings that are accessible to people with disabilities and increase involvement by underserved communities through language access and greater transparency about state processes.
(E) Collaborate with the Governor’s office to enhance outreach efforts for appointed positions on Natural Resources Agency boards and commissions to increase community representation.
(F) Identify opportunities for tribal governments and community-based organizations to cocreate and comanage parks and outdoor spaces.
(G) Continue to grow the Natural Resources Agency’s capacity to meaningfully engage underserved communities.
(5) Build equitable career pathways and a representative workforce. This priority includes strategies that:
(A) Bridge internship, California Conservation Corps, community conservation corps that have been certified as described in Section 14507.5, and other career development programs to careers with the state.
(B) Enhance strategies and inclusive career outreach and programming through dedicated staff at the Natural Resources Agency’s career center.
(C) Continue coordination of intraagency workgroups and the Department of Human Resources to reassess job classifications, hiring processes, and salary ranges.
(D) Continue coordination efforts of intraagency workgroups to develop career pathways strategies to support aligned efforts in employee retention.
(6) Align funding to achieve Outdoors for All. This priority includes strategies that:
(A) Develop and communicate an inventory of equitable access investments and impacts.
(B) Prioritize resource efficiency and reduce redundancies.
(C) Establish partnerships with philanthropic and for-profit sectors.
(D) Align existing funding sources to create multibenefit projects and programs.
(E) Streamline standards and decisionmaking tools for equitable outdoor access to determine strategic investments for the state.
(b) (1) To advance and promote environmental, conservation, and public access policies and budget actions, the Governor’s office, state agencies, and the Legislature, when distributing resources, shall aspire to recognize the coequal goals and benefits of the 30x30 goal, as defined in Section 71450, and Outdoors for All and, to the extent practical, maximize investment in historically underserved urban communities consistent with those initiatives.
(2) When distributing resources to achieve the goals and benefits of the 30x30 goal and Outdoors for All, decisionmakers are encouraged to consider factors that are unique to urban settings, including, but not limited to, higher land value acquisition and development costs per acre, the use and rehabilitation of degraded lands for conservation projects, the proximity to populations lacking park and greenspace access, the acute health needs of a local population due to historic lack of greenspace access and development externalities, local park needs assessment plans, current or impending loss of parks or greenspace as a result of state or federal infrastructure projects, and the availability of mobility options near a proposed land conservation site.
(c) Regulatory agencies, including, but not limited to, the Department of Toxic Substances Control, are encouraged to work with local communities to restore degraded lands that could contribute to a more equitable strategy for meeting the state’s environmental, conservation, and public access goals.
(d) State funding agencies, including, but not limited to, the conservancies established pursuant to Sections 31100, 32320, 32510, 32555, 32602, 32633, 33200, and 33501 of this code, Section 66906 of the Government Code, and the Wildlife Conservation Board, shall allow, to the extent consistent with the funding source, the funding program’s authorizing statutes, and the state’s goals, for urban nature-based projects on degraded lands to be eligible and competitive for state funds.