SECTION 1.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California’s recent natural disasters have been unprecedented and catastrophic. In 2019, over 6,872 fires were recorded with an estimated 253,321 acres of burned land, destruction of 732 structures, and three fatalities. That number was exceeded in 2020, with 9,279 fires burning 4,197,628 acres. This includes the SCU Lightning Complex Fires, the LNU Lightning Complex Fires, the CZU Lightning Complex Fires, the Valley Fire, the Creek Fire, the North Complex Fire, the Bobcat Fire, the Glass Fire, the El Dorado Fire, the Red Salmon Complex Fire, the Slater/Devil Fires, the August Complex Fire, and the Zogg Fire.
(b) The wildfires of 2017 and 2018 destroyed 28,000 homes in the Counties of Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lake, Mendocino, Napa, Santa Barbara, Shasta, Sonoma, Trinity, and Ventura. The $500,000,000,000 in economic losses resulting from the wildfires was more than the combined losses of Hurricanes Harvey, Katrina, and Sandy.
(c) The deadly Camp Fire alone destroyed the entire town of Paradise, killed 85 people, resulted in $16,500,000 in losses, and was the deadliest fire in California history and the most expensive natural disaster in the world in 2018.
(d) The deadly fires of 2020 damaged or destroyed 10,488 structures and caused 31 fatalities. Neither northern California nor southern California were spared.
(e) Fires are becoming the new normal and disproportionately affect low-income people, including
seniors, disabled persons, and people of color, with Native Americans being six times more vulnerable, and African Americans and Hispanics being 50 percent more vulnerable.
(f) By far, most of the structures destroyed in recent disasters have been people’s homes. Low-income people of color have been disproportionately affected and will have the longest recovery times.
(g) All federal disaster funding, traditionally the major source of financial support for natural disasters, is insufficient and takes years to obtain. This includes Federal Emergency Management Agency and Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery funding. The $124,000,000 in Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery funds allocated to California in fiscal year 2018 for the 2017 disasters were received by the Department of Housing and Community Development in the first quarter of 2020 and will not
be committed for another six months. As a result, recovery is slow and those most in need of assistance do not get assistance until long after they need it.
(h) The experience of the California wildfires points to significant federal underfunding, long funding delays, and the critical need for state funds to respond quickly and impactfully to accelerate housing recovery efforts immediately after disasters occur and years before federal funds are deployed into California’s communities.
(i) The Golden State Acquisition Fund is an LLC with seven originating community development financial institutions that was seeded with $23,000,000 from the Affordable Housing Innovation Fund authorized by voters in 2006 in Proposition 1C. These funds were leveraged with additional capital from each community development financial institution to create a $93,000,000 fund that has successfully
produced and preserved 18 projects with 1,490 affordable units.
(j) The State of New Jersey currently operates the Disaster Relief Emergency Financing Program, created after Hurricane Sandy, that provides short-term or temporary loans to local government entities, public water utilities, and private persons, which are paid back following state receipt of Federal Emergency Management Agency and Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery funds.