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Item 35 - Public Hearing - Short Term Rentals Ordinance
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Item 35 - Public Hearing - Short Term Rentals Ordinance
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11/15/2024 9:00:14 AM
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11/15/2024 8:51:30 AM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Agency
Planning & Building
Item #
35
Date
11/19/2024
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CITY OF SANTA ANA SHORT-TERM RENTAL PROHIBITION ORDINANCE <br />CITY OF SANTA ANA <br />4. Evaluation of Environmental Impacts <br />Page 26 PlaceWorks <br />CUL-4 For projects with ground disturbance—e.g., grading, excavation, trenching, boring, or <br />demolition that extend below the current grade—prior to issuance of any permits required to <br />conduct ground-disturbing activities, the City shall require an Archaeological Resources <br />Assessment be conducted under the supervision of an archaeologist that meets the Secretary <br />of the Interior’s Professionally Qualified Standards in either prehistoric or historic <br />archaeology. <br />Assessments shall include a California Historical Resources Information System records <br />search at the South Central Coastal Information Center and of the Sacred Land Files <br />maintained by the Native American Heritage Commission. The records searches will <br />determine if the proposed project area has been previously surveyed for archaeological <br />resources, identify and characterize the results of previous cultural resource surveys, and <br />disclose any cultural resources that have been recorded and/or evaluated. If unpaved surfaces <br />are present within the project area, and the entire project area has not been previously surveyed <br />within the past 10 years, a Phase I pedestrian survey shall be undertaken in proposed project <br />areas to locate any surface cultural materials that may be present. <br />CUL-5 If potentially significant archaeological resources are identified, and impacts cannot be <br />avoided, a Phase II Testing and Evaluation investigation shall be performed by an <br />archaeologist who meets the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards to determine significance <br />prior to any ground-disturbing activities. If resources are determined significant or unique <br />through Phase II testing, and site avoidance is not possible, appropriate site-specific mitigation <br />measures shall be undertaken. These might include a Phase III data recovery program <br />implemented by a qualified archaeologist and performed in accordance with the Office of <br />Historical Preservation’s “Archaeological Resource Management Reports (ARMR): <br />Recommended Contents and Format” (OHP 1990) and “Guidelines for Archaeological <br />Research Designs” (OHP 1991). <br />CUL-6 If the archaeological assessment did not identify archaeological resources but found the area <br />to be highly sensitive for archaeological resources, and a Native American monitor approved <br />by a California Native American Tribe identified by the Native American Heritage <br />Commission as culturally affiliated with the project area shall monitor all ground-disturbing <br />construction and pre-construction activities in areas of high sensitivity. The archaeologist shall <br />inform all construction personnel prior to construction activities of the proper procedures in <br />the event of an archaeological discovery. The training shall be held in conjunction with the <br />project’s initial on-site safety meeting and shall explain the importance and legal basis for the <br />protection of significant archaeological resources. The Native American monitor shall be <br />invited to participate in this training. In the event that archaeological resources (artifacts or <br />features) are exposed during ground-disturbing activities, construction activities in the <br />immediate vicinity of the discovery shall be halted while the resources are evaluated for <br />significance by an archaeologist who meets the Secretary’s Standards. This will include tribal <br />consultation and coordination with the Native American monitor in the case of a prehistoric <br />archaeological resource or tribal resource. If the discovery proves to be significant, the long- <br />Exhibit 3 - Environmental Analysis
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