Difference between revisions of "Preparedness/CalFire2018Grants/CalFire2018GrantElements"

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(Grant Conditions)
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## The project is removing dead and dying trees that pose a threat to public health,safety, or located in Tier 2 high hazard zones, and
 
## The project is removing dead and dying trees that pose a threat to public health,safety, or located in Tier 2 high hazard zones, and
 
## The removal of dead and dying trees will comply with the Tree Mortality Task Force (TMTF) Guidelines for removal of dead and dying trees dated March 1, 2016, see Appendix A – CEQA Compliance.
 
## The removal of dead and dying trees will comply with the Tree Mortality Task Force (TMTF) Guidelines for removal of dead and dying trees dated March 1, 2016, see Appendix A – CEQA Compliance.
#
+
# Projects proposed on a “forested landscape” will require an RPF to design and oversee any fuel hazard reduction Vegetation removal as defined in Public Resource (PRC) Code §753 and 754, copied below.  The RPF will conduct at least one site visit during active project operations to ensure vegetation removal is being conducted according to the prescriptionAn RPF is not required to provide the general project information required in the Scope of Work during the grant application phase, but the applicant must demonstrate how CEQA/NEPA compliance will be met, including RPF involvement, in Item E4 of the Project Scope of Work and include this cost in the budget if applicable.
 
+
## PRC §753 - “Forestry,” as used in this article, refers to the science and practice of managing forested landscapes and the treatment of the forest cover in general, and includes, among other things, the application of  
 
+
scientific knowledge and forestry principles in the fields of fuels management and forest protection, timber growing and utilization, forest inventories, forest economics, forest valuation and finance, and the evaluation and mitigation of impacts from forestry activities on watershed and scenic values, to achieve the purposes of this article. The practice of forestry applies only to those activities undertaken on forested landscapes. The professions specified in Section 772 are not practicing forestry when mitigating or recommending mitigation of impacts from previous forestry activities on related watershed or ecological values within their area of professional expertise or when recommending those mitigations for proposed timber operations. However, public and private foresters are required to be licensed pursuant to this article when making evaluations and determinations of the appropriate overall combination of mitigations of impacts from forestry activities necessary to protect all forest resources.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
.
 
Costs already funded or budgeted through another source (i.e. supplanting).
 
 
Income, fees, revenues, or wages lost or voluntarily waived by a local agency.
 
 
Activities or costs associ
 
ated with permanent work such the construction of a
 
biomass facility.
 
Examples of
 
non
 
-
 
qualifying
 
project types and activities:
 
 
Purchase of capital equipment greater than $100,000.
 
 
Installation, creation, upgrade, or maintenance of fire protection feature
 
s,
 
such as roads, bridges, structures or water storage facilities.
 
 
Any project submitted by a for
 
-
 
profit company or corporation.
 
 
Projects or activities utilizing CAL FIRE staff without corresponding
 
reimbursements or requests seeking funding for services a
 
lready provided by
 
CAL FIRE.
 
 
Removal of dead and dying trees that do not pose a threat to public health
 
and safety
 
, and, are not located in Tier 2 high hazard zones
 
.
 
**
 
Grants must be completed by March 15,
 
2022. **
 
Conditions
 
1.
 
Grants can be made only to
 
 
eligible”
 
applicants
 
.
 
2.
 
Projects must in
 
clude or
 
provide benefits to habitable structures in the
 
State
 
Responsibility Area
 
(SRA). Non
 
-
 
SRA lands may be included within project
 
boundaries but project activities must provide a benefit to SRA.
 
3.
 
Fire Prevention
 
q
 
ualifying projects and a
 
ctivities
 
are limited to those where the
 
proposed
 
project or
 
activity addresses the risk or potential impact of wildfire to
 
communities and forested landscapes.
 
4.
 
Applicants must consider greenhouse gas emissions of project activit
 
ies and plan
 
to reduce emissions as much as possible during project activities.
 
5.
 
Grantees must have the
 
ability to satisfactorily plan,
 
administer
 
, and complete a
 
grant
 
project
 
.
 
6.
 
For some projects, the grantee may be required to prepare a California
 
Envi
 
ronmenta
 
l Quality Act (CEQA)
 
or
 
National Environmental Policy Act (
 
NEPA
 
)
 
document.
 
Those projects requiring CEQA
 
/NEPA
 
review
 
are required to provide
 
documented compliance with
 
in
 
1
 
2
 
months from the
 
grant e
 
xecution.
 
CEQA/NEPA compliance must begin immediatel
 
y a
 
fter grant execution.
 
Documented CEQA
 
/NEPA
 
compliance is required prior to commencing any
 
on
 
-
 
the
 
-
 
ground activity.
 
7.
 
Fire Prevention
 
grant projects are eligible to qualify for CEQA suspension
 
pursuant to
 
the Governor’s
 
10
 
-
 
30
 
-
 
20
 
15 E
 
mergency Proclamation if
 
the applicant
 
certifies the following:
 
6
 
a.
 
The project is located within a High Hazard Zone
 
;
 
and
 
b.
 
The project is removing dead and dying trees that po
 
se a threat to public
 
health,
 
safety
 
,
 
or located in Tier 2 high hazard zones,
 
and
 
c.
 
The removal of dead and dyin
 
g trees will comply with the
 
Tree Mortality
 
Task Force (TMTF)
 
Guidelines for removal of dead and dying trees date
 
d
 
March 1, 2016, see Appendix
 
A
 
 
CEQA Compliance
 
.
 
8.
 
Projects proposed on a “forested landscape” will require  
 
a
 
n
 
R
 
PF
 
to design and  
 
oversee any f
 
uel hazard reduction vegetation removal  
 
as  
 
defined in Public  
 
Resource
 
(PRC)
 
Code  
 
§
 
753
 
and
 
754
 
, copied below
 
.  The RPF will conduct at  
 
least one site visit during active project operations to ensure vegetation removal  
 
is being conducted according to the pre
 
scription.   
 
A
 
n
 
RPF
 
is not required to  
 
provide the general project information required in the Scope of Work during the  
 
grant application phase, but the applicant must demonstrate how CEQA
 
/NEPA
 
compliance  
 
will be met, including RPF involvement, in Item E4 o
 
f the Project  
 
Scope of Work and include this cost in the budget if applicable.  
 
PRC  
 
§
 
753
 
-
 
“Forestry,” as used in this article, refers to the science and  
 
practice of managing forested landscapes and the treatment of the forest  
 
cover in general, and includ
 
es, among other things, the application of  
 
scientific knowledge and forestry principles in the fields of fuels management  
 
and forest protection, timber growing and utilization, forest inventories, forest  
 
economics, forest valuation and finance, and the eva
 
luation and mitigation of  
 
impacts from forestry activities on watershed and scenic values, to achieve  
 
the purposes of this article. The practice of forestry applies only to those  
 
activities undertaken on forested landscapes. The professions specified in  
 
Se
 
ction 772 are not practicing forestry when mitigating or recommending  
 
mitigation of impacts from previous forestry activities on related watershed or  
 
ecological values within their area of professional expertise or when  
 
recommending those mitigations for p
 
roposed timber operations. However,  
 
public and private foresters are required to be licensed pursuant to this article  
 
when making evaluations and determinations of the appropriate overall  
 
combination of mitigations of impacts from forestry activities neces
 
sary to  
 
protect all forest resources.
 
9.
 
Projects outside of a “forested landscape” should consider the use of a
 
professional ecologist, biologist, certified rangeland manager,
 
arborist, RPF
 
,
 
or
 
other professional
 
with knowledge of local ecosystem processes
 
to develop an
 
appropriate fuel haz
 
ard reduction removal project.
 
10.
 
Fuel reduction vegetation treatment prescriptions shall focus on reducing fire
 
hazard, improving tree growth, an
 
d increasing forest resilience.
 
Treatments shall
 
eliminate the vertical and hor
 
izontal continuity of vegetative fuels for the purpose
 
of reducing the rate of fire spread, duration
 
and
 
intensity, fuel ignitability, or
 
ignition of tree crowns.
 
11.
 
Required project deliverables for all hazardous fuel reduction projects to be
 
included in I
 
tem E3 of the Project Scope of Work
 
:
 
7
 
a.
 
Pre
 
-
 
and
 
post
 
-
 
treatment description of site conditions and project results
 
relative to
 
hazardous tree or
 
vegetative conditions
 
,
 
wildfire hazard
 
reduction goal accomplishments
 
, and
 
pre
 
-
 
and
 
post
 
-
 
dead
 
and dying tree
 
counts
 
or measurable metric for evaluation of the project (such as number
 
of acres treated)
 
.
 
b.
 
GIS data files supporting the project map to allow CAL FIRE to accurately
 
document the
 
spatial extent of the project.
 
c.
 
Documented CEQA
 
/NEPA
 
compliance within
 
12
 
months
 
of
 
grant
 
execution.
 
This
 
includes
 
CEQA or demonstration of exemption.
 
d.
 
Documentation of at least one site visit during active project operations to
 
ensure vegetation removal is being conducted according to the
 
prescription.
 
12.
 
Grant
 
applications
 
must
 
describe t
 
he method used to determine
 
the grant amount
 
requested.
 
This m
 
ethodology must include the grant costs
 
less
 
any income from
 
forest product
 
s
 
or other revenues received from the grant implementation.
 
13.
 
All project
 
and activity
 
work related to grants must be co
 
mpleted by
 
March 15, 202
 
2
 
.
 
14.
 
Final invoices for grant
 
-
 
related work must be submitted to CAL FIRE no later
 
than April 30, 2022.
 
15.
 
Projects must demonstrate all efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
 
.
 
Projects most likely to have significant emissions red
 
uctions will be favored
 

Revision as of 12:51, 10 December 2018

Proposal elements

this section is used to gather background info & to break out the formal proposal's writing elements.

Grant Conditions

  1. Grants can be made only to “eligible” applicants.
  2. Projects must include or provide benefits to habitable structures in the State Responsibility Area (SRA). Non-SRA lands may be included within project boundaries but project activities must provide a benefit to SRA.
  3. Fire Prevention qualifying projects and activities are limited to those where the proposed project or activity addresses the risk or potential impact of wildfire to communities and forested landscapes.
  4. Applicants must consider greenhouse gas emissions of project activities and plan to reduce emissions as much as possible during project activities.
  5. Grantees must have the ability to satisfactorily plan, administer, and complete a grantproject
  6. For some projects, the grantee may be required to prepare a California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) or National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) document. Those projects requiring CEQA/NEPA review are required to provide documented compliance with in 12 months from the grant execution.CEQA/NEPA compliance must begin immediately after grant execution. Documented CEQA/NEPA compliance is required prior to commencing any on -the-ground activity.
  7. Fire Prevention grant projects are eligible to qualify for CEQA suspension pursuant to the Governor’s 10-30-2015 Emergency Proclamation if the applicant certifies the following:
    1. The project is located within a High Hazard Zone; and
    2. The project is removing dead and dying trees that pose a threat to public health,safety, or located in Tier 2 high hazard zones, and
    3. The removal of dead and dying trees will comply with the Tree Mortality Task Force (TMTF) Guidelines for removal of dead and dying trees dated March 1, 2016, see Appendix A – CEQA Compliance.
  8. Projects proposed on a “forested landscape” will require an RPF to design and oversee any fuel hazard reduction Vegetation removal as defined in Public Resource (PRC) Code §753 and 754, copied below. The RPF will conduct at least one site visit during active project operations to ensure vegetation removal is being conducted according to the prescription. An RPF is not required to provide the general project information required in the Scope of Work during the grant application phase, but the applicant must demonstrate how CEQA/NEPA compliance will be met, including RPF involvement, in Item E4 of the Project Scope of Work and include this cost in the budget if applicable.
    1. PRC §753 - “Forestry,” as used in this article, refers to the science and practice of managing forested landscapes and the treatment of the forest cover in general, and includes, among other things, the application of

scientific knowledge and forestry principles in the fields of fuels management and forest protection, timber growing and utilization, forest inventories, forest economics, forest valuation and finance, and the evaluation and mitigation of impacts from forestry activities on watershed and scenic values, to achieve the purposes of this article. The practice of forestry applies only to those activities undertaken on forested landscapes. The professions specified in Section 772 are not practicing forestry when mitigating or recommending mitigation of impacts from previous forestry activities on related watershed or ecological values within their area of professional expertise or when recommending those mitigations for proposed timber operations. However, public and private foresters are required to be licensed pursuant to this article when making evaluations and determinations of the appropriate overall combination of mitigations of impacts from forestry activities necessary to protect all forest resources.