(1) Existing law authorizes the Director of Parks and Recreation to award a concession contract authorizing occupancy of any portion of the state park system for a period of more than 2 years to the best responsible person or entity submitting a proposal, as defined, for a concession contract if the director determines that it is in the best interest of the state, subject to certain requirements and procedures.
This bill would instead authorize the director to award those concession contracts for a period of more than 3 years.
(2) Existing law vests with the State Lands Commission control over specified lands in the state, including certain tidelands and submerged lands, and prescribes the functions and duties of the commission with regard to the protection,
preservation, enhancement, and maintenance of those lands. Existing law requires the commission, whenever it enters into any agreement for the compromise or settlement of claims, pursuant to the authority granted to it by law, to submit the agreement to the Governor and, if the agreement is approved by the Governor, specifies that it shall be binding upon the state and any other party to the agreement.
This bill would revise the above provision to specify that it applies to any agreement for the compromise or settlement of title or boundary claims.
(3) Existing law requires the State Lands Commission, whenever a person becomes entitled to a patent, upon the surrender of the full-paid certificate of purchase or the submission of an affidavit by a person having an interest in the land that the certificate of purchase is lost, destroyed, or beyond the control of the owner or owners of the land, to prepare
a patent for the land. Existing law further requires that such a patent be signed by the Governor, attested by the Secretary of State, sealed with the Great Seal of the state, and countersigned by the commission.
This bill would also require that a deed be signed by the Governor, attested by the Secretary of State, sealed with the Great Seal of the state, and countersigned by the commission.
(4) The California Coastal Act of 1976 requires a land use plan of a proposed local coastal program to be submitted to the California Coastal Commission for certification. The act requires a local government to submit to the commission the zoning ordinances, zoning district maps, and, where necessary, other implementing actions that are required under the act. The act establishes various time deadlines for the commission to act in regard to the submitted land use plan, zoning ordinances, zoning district maps, and
other implementing actions.
This bill would specify that those deadlines are expressed in working days.
(5) Existing law creates the Coachella Valley Mountains Conservancy in the Natural Resources Agency and, among other things, authorizes the conservancy to acquire and hold specified lands in the Coachella Valley and the surrounding mountains for certain open-space, wildlife protection, and recreational uses. Existing law provides that the governing board of the conservancy consists of 23 voting members, as specified.
This bill would reduce to 20 the membership of the governing board of the conservancy, as provided.
(6) Existing law, the Marine Invasive Species Act, requires the State Lands Commission to implement and administer laws regulating the uptake or discharge of
ballast water from vessels that impact marine species in the state’s waterways. The act, among other things, requires the master, owner, operator, or person in charge of a vessel carrying, or capable of carrying, ballast water, that operates in the waters of the state to take various actions to minimize the uptake and release of nonindigenous species, including, among other things, to clean the ballast tanks regularly in mid-ocean waters, or under controlled arrangements in port or in drydock, to remove fouling organisms and sediments, as specified.
This bill would revise that requirement to require the removal of sediments and biofouling organisms, would make related changes, and would make nonsubstantive changes in certain provisions of the act.
(7) Existing law grants all right, title, and interest of the state in and to all tide and submerged lands within a specified area in trust to the
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California for the purposes of the construction, maintenance, and operation on the tide and submerged lands of a plant for the production of fresh water employing a nuclear powered sea water desalting process or a plant for the production of electric energy using nuclear means, or both, and any other facilities, equipment, or plants necessary or desirable in connection with the production and delivery of fresh water, electricity, and any byproducts incident to the production and delivery of fresh water and electricity. Existing law imposes on the grant certain conditions and reservations, including, among other things, the conditions that the district is prohibited from granting, conveying, or alienating the lands to any individual, firm, or corporation for any purpose, but is allowed to grant easements, licenses, and leases for any of the purposes of the grant, as specified. Existing law reserves, among others, the rights of navigation and fishing in the waters
surrounding the facilities to be constructed in the people and, in the state, all deposits of minerals in the lands granted.
Existing law authorizes the district to reclaim, fill, and raise portions of the tide and submerged lands to levels that may be necessary or convenient to create an island and a causeway to connect the island with the mainland, as specified. Existing law grants to the district an easement across certain state beach lands for the construction of the causeway and terminates the easement unless a payment is made to the Department of Parks and Recreation, as specified.
Existing law directs the State Lands Commission, upon completion of the reclamation, filling and raising of the lands to create the island, and upon completion of the causeway, or when any extensions or additions are constructed, to execute and record appropriate instruments describing the lands comprising the island and causeway, as
specified. Upon the recording of those instruments, existing law frees those lands from public use and trust for commerce, navigation, and fisheries and existing law sets forth findings that the freeing of those lands is promotive of the public interest and in aid of the construction, maintenance, and operation of the plant described above.
This bill would repeal these provisions.
(8) This bill would make legislative findings and declarations as to the necessity of a special statute due to the unique circumstances involving a grant of tidelands and submerged lands to the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.