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Item 22 - Resolution Adopting Local CEQA Guidelines Resolution
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Item 22 - Resolution Adopting Local CEQA Guidelines Resolution
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3/5/2024 4:21:46 PM
Creation date
8/9/2023 3:44:33 PM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Agency
Planning & Building
Item #
22
Date
8/1/2023
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Local Guidelines for Implementing the <br />California Environmental Quality Act (2023) INITIAL STUDY <br /> <br /> <br />2023 City of Santa Ana Local Guidelines 5-16 ©Best Best & Krieger LLP <br />Once the amount of a project’s greenhouse gas emissions have been described, estimated, <br />or calculated, the City should consider the following factors, among others, to determine whether <br />those emissions are significant: <br />(1) The extent to which the project may increase or reduce greenhouse gas <br />emissions as compared to the existing environmental setting. Physical <br />environmental conditions in the vicinity of the project, as they exist at the <br />time the Notice of Preparation is published or the time when the <br />environmental analysis is commenced, will normally constitute the <br />baseline. All project phases, including construction and operation, should <br />be considered in determining whether a project will cause emissions to <br />increase or decrease as compared to the baseline; <br />(2) Whether the project emissions exceed a threshold of significance that the <br />Lead Agency determines applies to the project. The Lead Agency may <br />rely on thresholds of significance developed by experts or other agencies, <br />provided that application of the threshold and the significance conclusion <br />is supported with substantial evidence. When relying on thresholds <br />developed by other agencies, the Lead Agency should ensure that the <br />threshold is appropriate for the project and the project’s location; and <br />(3) The extent to which the project complies with regulations or requirements <br />adopted to implement a statewide, regional, or local plan for the reduction <br />or mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions (see, e.g., State CEQA <br />Guidelines section 15183.5(b)). Such requirements must be adopted by <br />the relevant public agency through a public review process and must <br />reduce or mitigate the project’s incremental contribution of greenhouse <br />gas emissions. If there is substantial evidence that the possible effects of <br />a particular project are still cumulatively considerable notwithstanding <br />compliance with the adopted regulations or requirements, an EIR must be <br />prepared for the project. In determining the significance of impacts, the <br />Lead Agency may consider a project's consistency with the State's long- <br />term climate goals or strategies, provided that substantial evidence <br />supports the agency's analysis of how those goals or strategies address the <br />project's incremental contribution to climate change and its conclusion that <br />the project's incremental contribution is not cumulatively considerable. <br />The Lead Agency may use a model or methodology to estimate greenhouse gas emissions <br />resulting from a project. The Lead Agency has discretion to select the model or methodology it <br />considers most appropriate to enable decision makers to intelligently take into account the project's <br />incremental contribution to climate change. The Lead Agency must support its selection of a model <br />or methodology with substantial evidence. The Lead Agency should explain the limitations of the <br />particular model or methodology selected for use.
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