Article 2. Salton Sea Restoration of California Fish And Game Code >> Division 3. >> Chapter 13. >> Article 2.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
(a) The Salton Sea is California's largest inland water body with
beneficial uses that include fisheries and wildlife habitat and
preservation of endangered species, and is a repository for
agricultural drainage.
(b) The Salton Sea ecosystem is a critical link on the
international Pacific Flyway and supports over 400 species of birds.
(c) The Salton Sea is threatened by increasing salinity and
reduced inflows. These changes increasingly threaten the unparalleled
wildlife resources at the sea, as well as air quality in the region.
(d) In cooperation with local governments, nonprofit
organizations, private businesses, and the public, the Salton Sea
Authority can help protect wildlife habitats and endangered species,
improve water and air quality, and enhance recreational opportunities
in the region.
(e) In restoring the Salton Sea, it is the intent of the
Legislature to do all of the following:
(1) Protect and provide long-term conservation of fish and
wildlife that are dependent on the Salton Sea ecosystem.
(2) Restore the long-term stable aquatic and shoreline habitat for
fish and wildlife that depend on the Salton Sea.
(3) Mitigate air quality impacts from restoration projects using
the best available technology or best available control measures, as
determined by the South Coast Air Quality Management District and the
Imperial County Air Pollution Control District.
(4) Protect water quality.
(5) Maintain the Salton Sea as a vital link along the Pacific
Flyway.
(6) Preserve local tribal heritage and cultural values associated
with the Salton Sea.
(7) Minimize noxious odors and other water and air quality
problems.
(8) Coordinate with local, state, and federal agencies that are
responsible for air quality, endangered species, and other
environmental mitigation implementation requirements of the
Quantification Settlement Agreement.
(9) Enhance economic development opportunities that will provide
sustainable financial improvements benefiting the local environment
and the economic quality of life for communities around the Salton
Sea.
Unless the context requires otherwise, the definitions set
forth in this section govern the construction of this article.
(a) "Agency" means the Natural Resources Agency.
(b) "Habitat mosaics" means two or more proximate habitat types,
such as saltwater shoreline abutting riverine deltas and irrigated
farmland.
(c) "Quantification Settlement Agreement" has the same meaning as
defined in subdivision (a) of Section 1 of Chapter 617 of the
Statutes of 2002.
(d) "Salton Sea Authority" or "authority" means the joint powers
authority comprised of the County of Imperial, the County of
Riverside, the Imperial Irrigation District, the Coachella Valley
Water District, and the Torres Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indian Tribe.
(e) "Secretary" means the Secretary of the Natural Resources
Agency.
(f) "Vector management" means services that eliminate or reduce
the risk of illness caused by any organism transporting a pathogen.
(a) (1) The secretary, in consultation and coordination with
the authority, shall lead the Salton Sea restoration efforts that
shall include all of the following:
(A) Early start habitat demonstration projects.
(B) Biological investigations relating to the restoration of the
Salton Sea.
(C) Investigations of water quality, sedimentation, and inflows
relating to the restoration of the Salton Sea.
(D) Air quality investigations, in consultation and coordination
with local and regional air quality agencies, relating to the
restoration of the Salton Sea.
(E) Geotechnical investigations relating to the restoration of the
Salton Sea.
(F) Financial assistance grant programs to support restoration
activities of local stakeholders.
(2) Nothing in this article shall alter any state responsibility
under the Quantification Settlement Agreement or the state's
authority to carry out any responsibility under the Quantification
Settlement Agreement.
(3) (A) To the extent that funding is appropriated to the
department for Salton Sea restoration activities, the Department of
Water Resources, in coordination and under agreement with the
department, may undertake restoration efforts identified in this
subdivision.
(B) The department and the Department of Water Resources shall do
all of the following for the Salton Sea Species Conservation Habitat
Project:
(i) Immediately make available relevant information relating to
the factors that influence the cost and size of the alternatives
discussed in the environmental impact report or environmental impact
statement for the species habitat conservation program.
(ii) Release all available detail on a final project design
immediately, or upon final determination of a least environmentally
damaging preferred alternative by the United States Army Corps of
Engineers. Details of a final project design shall include location,
configuration, size, and cost.
(iii) Immediately make available project evaluation protocols that
include the following principles of adaptive management:
(I) Goals and objectives of the project.
(II) The project design and an operations plan.
(III) A monitoring plan that will include metrics that identify
benefits to the species.
(IV) A performance evaluation based on species population
identified through monitoring.
(V) A decisionmaking framework to evaluate project performance and
guide operations and management changes.
(b) (1) The authority may lead a feasibility study, in
coordination and under contract with the secretary, to do the
following:
(A) Investigate access and utility agreements that may contribute
to the future funding of restoration activities at the Salton Sea.
(B) Analyze all feasible funding sources for restoration program
components and activities.
(C) Analyze economic development opportunities, including, but not
limited to, renewable energy, biofuels, mineral development, and
algae production for the purposes of identifying new revenue sources
for the Salton Sea restoration efforts.
(D) Identify state procurement and royalty sharing opportunities.
(E) Review existing long-term plans for restoration of the Salton
Sea and recommend to the secretary changes to existing restoration
plans. In any review pursuant to this subparagraph, the authority
shall consider the impacts of the restoration plan on air quality,
fish and wildlife habitat, water quality, and the technical and
financial feasibility of the restoration plan and shall consider the
impacts on other agencies responsible for air quality, endangered
species, and other environmental mitigation requirements for
implementation of the Quantification Settlement Agreement.
(2) No evaluation, study, review, or other activity pursuant to
this article shall delay the planning and implementation of ongoing
and planned restoration or mitigation projects, including, but not
limited to, the Salton Sea Species Conservation Habitat Project or
other measures pursuant to existing state and federal programs and
agreements.
For the purposes of considering local, publicly derived input
concerning habitat objectives and actions, types and levels of
public access, and integration of air quality management and habitat
restoration, the secretary shall seek input from the authority with
regard to the following components of restoration of the Salton Sea:
(a) Design opportunities and constraints, including the
integration of the habitat, public access, and air quality management
objectives.
(b) Public access and recreational components.
(c) Opportunities for economic development.
(d) Habitat mosaics and location.
(e) Vector management and predator control.
(f) Feasible financial resources to fund all recommended
restoration program components.
(a) Nothing in this article interferes with or prevents the
exercise of authority by a public agency to carry out its programs,
projects, or responsibilities.
(b) Nothing in this article affects requirements imposed under any
other provision of law.