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Expands Prop 4 wildfire grants to fund evacuation routes, water storage, mobile tanks, firefighting equipment, and generator/microgrid support to harden critical infrastructure.
Expands Prop 4 wildfire grants to fund evacuation routes, water storage, mobile tanks, firefighting equipment, and generator/microgrid support to harden critical infrastructure.
Status
- Introduced: January 22, 2025
- Status in provided documents: Passed first reading; considered in Senate Governmental Organization, Natural Resources & Water, and Appropriations committees.
- Source authority: Amends the Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness, and Clean Air Bond Act of 2024 (Proposition 4).
Purpose / Intent
- To broaden eligible uses of $135 million (from Prop 4 bond funds) allocated to the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services (OES) for a wildfire mitigation grant program. The amendment adds specific project types aimed at improving evacuation safety and firefighting effectiveness and helps harden critical water infrastructure against power outages.
Key provisions / changes
- Funding source and administration
- Confirms $135,000,000 of Prop 4 bond proceeds shall be available, upon legislative appropriation, to OES for wildfire mitigation grants. OES must coordinate with the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire) in administering funds.
- Grants, loans, rebates, direct assistance and matching funds may be provided; program must prioritize benefit to disadvantaged, severely disadvantaged, and vulnerable populations.
Expanded list of eligible projects (adds to the list already in Prop 4)
Definitions added
Prioritization & assistance
Who is affected
- Eligible recipients: local agencies, state agencies, special districts, joint powers authorities, tribes, resource conservation districts, fire safe councils, nonprofits, and other organizations involved in wildfire resilience and emergency response.
- Beneficiaries: communities in very high/high fire hazard severity zones, disadvantaged and vulnerable populations, rural water systems and reservoirs (through generator grants), and firefighting operations (through water storage/dip tanks and equipment improvements).
Procedural / fiscal notes
- Funds available only upon appropriation by the Legislature (i.e., OES must receive an appropriation to expend the $135M).
- The bill does not itself appropriate additional state general funds; it expands eligible uses of existing Prop 4 bond-authorized funds.
- Fiscal committee review noted; the Digest indicates “MAJORITY” vote key and Fiscal Committee: YES.
Potential impacts
- Operational: Supports faster/more reliable aerial and ground firefighting operations (through dip tanks and prepositioned water storage), improved evacuation route safety, and better resilience of water supply systems during outages (through generators).
- Equity: Explicit focus on technical assistance and project benefits for disadvantaged communities and vulnerable populations.
- Coordination: Requires OES/CalFire coordination with the PUC for certain energy-related grants (generators, microgrids), potentially accelerating resiliency projects for critical water infrastructure.
- Implementation details—grant guidelines, scoring, procurement standards, and local match requirements—will be determined in OES/CalFire implementing program rules and by legislative appropriation.
If you want, I can:
- Produce a one‑page fact sheet for local governments and tribes describing how to apply and what project types to prioritize; or
- Draft a short checklist of documentation and eligibility criteria likely needed for grant applications under the amended program.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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