8586.10.
(a) (1) The Office of Emergency Services and the Department of Water Resources shall jointly establish and lead the Extreme Weather Forecast and Threat Intelligence Integration Center.(2) The center’s primary mission shall be to collect, assess, and analyze extreme weather data, atmospheric conditions, and other threat indicators that could lead to catastrophic floods, mudslides, tsunamis, or extreme heat and to reduce the likelihood and severity of extreme weather incidents that could endanger the safety of persons, property, and the environment by developing and sharing intelligence products related to extreme weather for government decision makers, local emergency managers, and public safety officials.
(3) For the purposes of this section, “center” means the Extreme Weather Forecast and Threat Intelligence Integration Center established pursuant to this section.
(b) (1) The center shall be composed of representatives from the following organizations:
(A) The Office of Emergency Services.
(B) The Department of Water Resources.
(C) The Public Utilities Commission.
(D) The Military Department.
(E) The California State University.
(F) The California Utilities Emergency
Association.
(G) At least one representative of investor-owned utility companies, appointed by the President of the Public Utilities Commission.
(H) At least one representative of publicly owned utilities, appointed jointly by the Director of Emergency Services and the Director of Water Resources.
(I) Other members as designated jointly by the Director of Emergency Services and the Director of Water Resources.
(2) The Office of Emergency Services and the Department of Water Resources may invite the following organizations to designate representatives to the center:
(A) The National Weather Service.
(B) The United States Army
Corps of Engineers.
(C) The University of California.
(c) The center shall share intelligence and data relevant to extreme weather threat, forecasting, detection, and prevention activities received from utility weather and emergency operations centers, partner academic institutions, private companies, and other sources in coordination with all of the following:
(1) The Flood Operations Center within the Department of Water Resources.
(2) The National Weather Service.
(3) The State Operations Center within the Office of Emergency Services.
(4) The California State Warning Center within the Office of Emergency Services.
(d) The center shall develop and disseminate timely and actionable intelligence products that may be used by emergency managers, public safety officials, and local public and private sector entities engaged in emergency preparedness efforts.
(e) The center shall develop a statewide extreme weather forecast and threat intelligence strategy that may be used by agencies to improve how extreme weather threats are identified, understood, and shared in order to reduce threats to California government, businesses, and consumers. The goal of the strategy shall be to strengthen emergency preparedness and response, standardize the implementation of environmental monitoring and assessment, enhance forecasting and detection capabilities, maximize the use of science and technology, and expand public knowledge and awareness of extreme weather risks.
(f) Information sharing by the center shall be conducted in a manner that protects and safeguards sensitive information, preserves business confidentiality, and enables public officials to detect, investigate, respond to, prevent, and recover from catastrophic weather incidents that threaten public health and safety and economic stability.