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MA -65 Hazard Mitigation - 91.210(a)(5), 91.310(a)(3) <br />Describe the jurisdiction's increased natural hazard risks associated with climate change. <br />San Leandro is located on the shoreline of the San Francisco Bay and sits at an average elevation of 56 <br />feet. Located between Oakland and Hayward with a population of about 88,000 people, it is highly <br />urbanized, made up of residential properties with industrial and manufacturing uses in the west, mixed <br />use areas in the southern portions of the city, and the downtown core to the northeast. Due to its <br />geographic span from the Bay into the hills, San Leandro is susceptible to a variety of climate hazards. <br />San Leandro will likely be most affected by the combination of sea level rise, high tides and flooding <br />along the shoreline and throughout the southwest portion of the city, which threaten to limit mobility <br />and damage amenities and industry that are important to San Leandro and the regional economy. <br />However, the most severe impacts will be seen in the long-term, when projected temperature increases <br />and the frequency of very hot days will impact a broader set of the city's assets and population, resulting <br />in greater occurrence of heat related illness. <br />Describe the vulnerability to these risks of housing occupied by low- and moderate -income <br />households based on an analysis of data, findings, and methods. <br />Disease Outbreaks <br />The COVID-19 virus was first identified in Wuhan China in November 2019. First positive cases of the <br />virus in the United States and in California were found in January 2020. As the virus started to spread <br />globally, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared a COVID-19 pandemic on March 11, 2020. At <br />that time, it had been identified in 113 countries. <br />On the date this Substantial Amendment was drafted (May 24, 2020), the State of California reported <br />92,721 confirmed cases of residents who had tested positive for COVID-19, with 3,774 who had died as a <br />result of the virus. Of those, 2,760 Alameda County residents tested positive for COVID-19 with 92 who <br />had lost their lives.1 <br />The COVID-19 virus has had a devastating effect globally. It has caused businesses to close, jobs to be <br />lost, finances to be stretched, and general feelings of anxiety and fear. Given this, the City's seeks to <br />have the option of using the National Objective of "Urgent Need" to allow for the possible support for <br />oversight and services and infrastructure dedicated to COVID-19 response. The City may address these <br />needs when other resources are not available and needed by the Alameda County Department of Public <br />Health. <br />1 California Department of Public Health, COVID-19 Updates, "COVID-19 by the Numbers" website: <br />https://www.cdph.ca.gov/Programs/CID/DCDC/Pages/Immunization/ncov2019.aspx#COVID- <br />19%20by%20the%20Numbers and Johns Hopkins University & Medicine, Coronavirus Resource Center website: <br />https://coronavirus.ohu.edu/us-map. <br />Consolidated Plan SAN LEANDRO 28 <br />OMB Control No: 2506-0117 (exp. 06/30/2018) <br />