BILL NUMBER: AJR 5 AMENDED BILL TEXT AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY SEPTEMBER 11, 2013 AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY SEPTEMBER 4, 2013 INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Gomez ( Coauthors: Assembly Members Hall, Nazarian, and Rendon ) ( Coauthors: Senators Padilla and Pavley ) JANUARY 17, 2013 Relative to the Los Angeles River. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST AJR 5, as amended, Gomez. Los Angeles River: ARBOR study alternative 20. This measure would urge the United States Army Corps of Engineers to select ARBOR study alternative 20, which would serve to revitalize communities and create a more functional and interconnected watershed that will provide a more diverse regional ecological system and restore the functionality of the Los Angeles River as a critical natural and cultural heritage and community resource. Fiscal committee: no. WHEREAS, The Los Angeles River flows roughly 51 miles from its origin in the San Fernando Valley to the Long Beach Harbor and is 32 miles long within the City of Los Angeles; and WHEREAS, Within the City of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles River flows through three United States congressional districts, eight city council districts for the City of Los Angeles, approximately 20 neighborhood councils, 12 community plan areas, the second largest urban region in the United States, and one of the world's busiest port regions, and flows into the Pacific Ocean, the world's largest body of water; and WHEREAS, The Los Angeles River corridor is home to more than one million people, more than 390,000 housing units, more than 480,000 workers, more than 35,000 businesses, and more than 80 schools; and WHEREAS, The Los Angeles River flows through historically disadvantaged communities and underserved neighborhoods of Los Angeles that lack open-space resources and have high unemployment rates; and WHEREAS, The County of Los Angeles, the State of California, the federal government, and an incredible number of nonprofit groups and organizations have been invaluable partners in the process of developing and now implementing the Los Angeles River Revitalization Master Plan; and WHEREAS, The goals of the Los Angeles River Revitalization Master Plan include improving environmental quality, improving public access to the Los Angeles River, increasing recreation and open spaces, enhancing flood control, encouraging community reinvestment, and increasing awareness and pride in the Los Angeles River; and WHEREAS, In 2006, recognizing the environmental degradation occurring in and along the Los Angeles River within the boundaries of the City of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles City Council authorized the Board of Public Works of the City of Los Angeles to execute an agreement with the United States Army Corps of Engineers for the Los Angeles River Ecosystem Restoration Feasibility Study, also known as the ARBOR study, committing the City of Los Angeles to a50 percent50-percent share of the cost as local sponsor. In 2009, the cost increased when the total ARBOR study cost was raised to $9,710,000; and WHEREAS, The ARBOR study is consistent with the goals of President Obama's America's Great Outdoors Initiative, which includes direction to reconnect Americans, especially children, to America's rivers and waterways and to build upon state, local, private, and tribal priorities for the conservation of land, water, wildlife, and historic and cultural resources, creating corridors and connectivity across these outdoor spaces, and for enhancing neighborhood parks. In the President's America's Great Outdoors Initiative, federal agencies are asked to determine how the federal government can best advance these priorities through public-private partnerships and locally supported conservation strategies; and WHEREAS, The Los Angeles River watershed was selected as one of only seven nationwide first-phase pilots of the Urban Waters Federal Partnership, an implementation piece of President Obama's America's Great Outdoors Initiative, which aims to stimulate regional and local economies, create local jobs, improve quality of life, and protectAmerican'sAmericans ' health by revitalizing urban waterways in underserved communities across the country and the ARBOR study was selected as the top priority of the Urban Waters Federal Partnership in Los Angeles; and WHEREAS, In 2013, the United States Army Corps of Engineers developed a final array of the four best buy alternatives for the ARBOR study and only one of those alternatives includes both significant restoration at the Los Angeles River's confluence with the Verdugo Wash near the City of Los Angeles's border with the City of Glendale and the only substantial western bank connection, providing a profound hydrological link between the Los Angeles State Historic Park (Cornfields site) and the Los Angeles River, leveraging a significant investment made by the State of California toward restoration of the Los Angeles River; and WHEREAS, The City of Los Angeles endorses the ARBOR study alternative 20 that results in the most expansive ecosystem restoration, specifically that which includes the following priorities for the City of Los Angeles: (a) Verdugo Wash Confluence. (b) Taylor Yard/Bowtie. (c) Taylor Yard/G-2. (d) Arroyo Seco Confluence. (e) Cornfields Los Angeles State Historic Park. (f) Piggyback Yard (Union Pacific Railroad); and WHEREAS, Oncecompletecompleted , the ARBOR study will recommend a project that will be cost-shared by the United States Army Corps of Engineers and local sponsors to modify the river's concrete channel significantly for the first time since the river was channelized by the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the early to mid 1900s. The project will be one of the largest examples of urban ecosystem restoration in the nation's second most populous city ; now, therefore, be itResolved, BY THE ASSEMBLY AND THE SENATE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA JOINTLY,That the Legislature urges the United States Army Corps of Engineers to select the ARBOR study alternative 20, which would serve to revitalize communities and create a more functional and interconnected watershed that will provide a more diverse regional ecological system and restore the functionality of the Los Angeles River as a critical natural and cultural heritage and community resource; and be it furtherResolved by the Assembly and the Senate of the State of California, jointly, That the Legislature urges the United States Army Corps of Engineers to select the ARBOR study alternative 20, which would serve to revitalize communities and create a more functional and interconnected watershed that will provide a more diverse regional ecological system and restore the functionality of the Los Angeles River as a critical natural and cultural heritage and community resource; and be it further Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies of this resolution to the President and Vice President of the United States, to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, to the Majority Leader of the Senate, to each Senator and Representative from California in the Congress of the United States, and to the Commanding General and Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers.