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Local Guidelines for Implementing the <br />California Environmental Quality Act (2023) ACTIVITIES EXEMPT FROM CEQA <br /> <br /> <br />2023 City of Santa Ana Local Guidelines 3-4 ©Best Best & Krieger LLP <br />3.06 PROJECTS WITH NO POSSIBILITY OF SIGNIFICANT EFFECT. <br />Where it can be seen with absolute certainty that there is no possibility that the activity in <br />question may have a significant effect on the environment, the activity is exempt from CEQA. <br />3.07 EMERGENCY PROJECTS. <br />The following types of emergency projects are exempt from CEQA (the term “emergency” <br />is defined in Local Guidelines Section 11.20): <br />(a) Work in a disaster-stricken area in which a state of emergency has been proclaimed by the <br />Governor pursuant to Section 8550 of the Government Code. This includes projects that <br />will remove, destroy, or significantly alter a historical resource when that resource <br />represents an imminent threat to the public of bodily harm or of damage to adjacent <br />property or when the project has received a determination by the State Office of Historic <br />Preservation pursuant to Section 5028(b) of the Public Resources Code. <br />(b) Emergency repairs to publicly or privately owned service facilities necessary to maintain <br />service essential to the public health, safety, or welfare. Emergency repairs include those <br />that require a reasonable amount of planning to address an anticipated emergency. <br />(c) Projects necessary to prevent or mitigate an emergency. This does not include long-term <br />projects undertaken for the purpose of preventing or mitigating a situation that has a low <br />probability of occurrence in the short-term, but this exclusion does not apply (i) if the <br />anticipated period of time to conduct an environmental review of such a long-term project <br />would create a risk to public health, safety, or welfare, or (ii) if activities (such as fire or <br />catastrophic risk mitigation or modifications to improve facility integrity) are proposed for <br />existing facilities in response to an emergency at a similar existing facility. <br />(d) Projects undertaken, carried out, or approved by a public agency to maintain, repair, or <br />restore an existing highway damaged by fire, flood, storm, earthquake, land subsidence, <br />gradual earth movement, or landslide, provided that the project is within the existing right <br />of way of that highway and is initiated within one year of the damage occurring. Highway <br />shall have the same meaning as defined in Section 360 of the Vehicle Code. This <br />exemption does not apply to highways designated as official state scenic highways, nor to <br />any project undertaken, carried out, or approved by a public agency to expand or widen a <br />highway damaged by fire, flood, storm, earthquake, land subsidence, gradual earth <br />movement, or landslide. <br />(e) Seismic work on highways and bridges pursuant to Streets and Highways Code section <br />180.2. <br />(Reference: State CEQA Guidelines, § 15269.) <br />3.08 FEASIBILITY AND PLANNING STUDIES. <br />A project that involves only feasibility or planning studies for possible future actions which <br />the City has not yet approved, adopted or funded is exempt from CEQA. <br />(Reference: State CEQA Guidelines, § 15262.)