SEC. 3.
Subject to the findings and terms described in Section 4 of this act, the State Lands Commission shall accept any and all title and interest of the Port of San Francisco, as trustee pursuant to the Burton Act, in the property, and thereafter shall convey the property by patent to the city, free of the public trust and the Burton Act Trust and any trust requirement or condition that the property be used for street or railway purposes, all of the right, title, and interest held by the State of California by virtue of its sovereignty in the property, but reserving all minerals and all mineral rights in the lands of every kind and character now known to exist or hereafter discovered, including, but not limited to, oil and gas and rights thereto, together with the sole, exclusive, and perpetual right to
explore for, remove, and dispose of those minerals by any means or methods suitable to the state or to its successors and assignees, except that, notwithstanding the grant or Section 6401 of the Public Resources Code, any reservation shall not include the right of the state or its successors or assignees in connection with any mineral exploration, removal, or disposal activity, to enter upon, use, or damage the surface of the lands or interfere with the use of the surface by the city or by the city’s successors or assigns or conduct mining activities of any nature whatsoever above a plane located 500 feet below the surface of the lands without the prior written permission of the city or the city’s successors or assigns, described as follows:(a) The Railway Remnant Parcel: Real property located in the City of San Francisco, County of San Francisco, State of California, described as follows:
That
certain portion of that certain railroad right-of-way as shown on Board of Tideland Commissioners Block Map No. 9, filed in Map Book W, pages 50 to 52 in the Office of the Recorder of the City and County of San Francisco, within the area bounded on the north by the ordinary high tide line of 1869 as said line is described in the official field notebook of the Board of Tideland Commissioners pages 17 to 22 on file in the office of the State Lands Commission and the southerly line of the South San Francisco Homestead and Railroad Association grant Chapter 325, Statutes 1863, described as follows:
Portion of the right-of-way for the Southern Pacific and Western Pacific railroad companies, 200 feet wide, as fixed and designated by the Board of Tide Land Commissioners under the act of March 30, 1868, as said right of way is shown on Block Map No. 9 exhibiting the dimensions of lots and blocks as subdivided and shown on the map prepared by the Board of Tide Land
Commissioners in accordance with the provisions of Section 4 of said act, a copy of which is filed in Map Book W, pages 50 to 52, document x45805 in the Office of the Recorder of the City and County of San Francisco which portions of said right of way are within tide land block 488, and is waterward of ordinary high tide line of 1869 shown but not labeled on said map.
And further excepting therefrom all subsurface mineral deposits, including oil and gas deposits, together with the right of ingress and egress on said land for exploration, drilling and extraction of such mineral, oil and gas deposits, as excepted and reserved by the State of California in that certain act of the Legislature (“the Burton Act”) set forth in Chapter 1333 of the Statutes of 1968 and amendments thereto, and upon terms and provisions set forth therein.
APN: Lot 001, Block 4852
(b) Bancroft Avenue Paper Street: That certain parcel of land situate in the City and County of San Francisco, State of California being portions of the streets and avenues described in that certain document recorded May 14, 1976, in Book C 169, pages 573 to 664, described as follows:
Those portions of the following described streets and avenues as shown on the Board of Tide Land Commissioners map titled “Map of the Salt Marsh and Tide Lands and Lands Lying Under Water South of Second Street and Situate in the City and County of San Francisco” approved by the Board of Tide Land Commissioners March 30, 1868, a copy of which is filed in Map Book W, pages 46 and 47, document #x45805 in the Office of the Recorder of the City and County of San Francisco within the area bounded on the north by the south basin canal, 200 feet wide, as described in the official field notebook of the Board of Tide Lands Commissioners page 18 on file in the office of the State
Lands Commission, bounded on the east by the southeasterly line of Fitch Street, formerly “F” Street, bounded on the south by the northeasterly line of Carroll Street, formerly Twenty-Seventh Avenue, and bounded on the west by the ordinary high tide line of 1868-1869 as described in the official field notebook of the Board of Tide Lands Commissioners pages 17 to 22 on file in the office of the State Lands Commission being more particularly described as follows:
Bancroft Avenue, 80 feet wide, formerly Twenty-Sixth Avenue, bounded on the east by the northwesterly line of Griffith Street, 64 feet wide, and on the west by the ordinary high tide line, courses 430 and 431.
Being a portion of Bancroft Avenue as it currently exists.
(c) Griffith Street Paper Street: That certain parcel of land situate in the City and County of San Francisco, State of California being
portions of the streets and avenues described in that certain document recorded May 14, 1976, in Book C 169, pages 573 to 664, described as follows:
Those portions of the following described streets and avenues as shown on the Board of Tide Land Commissioners map titled “Map of the Salt Marsh and Tide Lands and Lands Lying Under Water South of Second Street and Situate in the City and County of San Francisco” approved by the Board of Tide Land Commissioners March 30, 1868, a copy of which is filed in Map Book W, pages 46 and 47, document #x45805 in the Office of the Recorder of the City and County of San Francisco within the area bounded on the north by the south basin canal, 200 feet wide, as described in the official field notebook of the Board of Tide Lands Commissioners page 18 on file in the office of the State Lands Commission, bounded on the east by the southeasterly line of Fitch Street, formerly “F” Street, bounded on the south by the northeasterly line of
Carroll Street, formerly Twenty-Seventh Avenue, and bounded on the west by the ordinary high tide line of 1868-1869 as described in the official field notebook of the Board of Tide Lands Commissioners pages 17 to 22 on file in the office of the State Lands Commission being more particularly described as follows:
Griffith Street, 64 feet wide, formerly “G” Street, bounded on the south by the ordinary high tide line, course 437 and on the north by the southwesterly line of Armstrong Avenue;
Being a portion of Griffith Street as it currently exists.