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Reso 2020-119 1388 Bancroft Apartments MND MMRP
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Reso 2020-119 1388 Bancroft Apartments MND MMRP
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10/8/2020 4:10:56 PM
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CM City Clerk-City Council
CM City Clerk-City Council - Document Type
Resolution
Document Date (6)
9/21/2020
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5A Public Hearings 2020 0921
(Approved by)
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\City Clerk\City Council\Agenda Packets\2020\Packet 2020 0921
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3.0 ENVIRONMENTAL CHECKLIST <br />The shallow geology underlying some of San Leandro consists of Holocene alluvium with fluvial <br />deposits associated with distributary streams such as San Leandro and San Lorenzo creeks (San <br />Leandro 2016b). These sediments are frequently composed of medium dense to dense, gravelly <br />sand or sandy gravel that often grade upward to sandy or silty clay. <br />SOILS <br />The soils in San Leandro are dominated by very deep, poorly drained, fine-grained soils such as <br />clays and silty clay loams, with lesser areas of deep, well -drained silty loam in the northeast part <br />of the city and very deep, very poorly drained clays in the tidelands that flank the west edge of <br />San Leandro near San Francisco Bay. The soils beneath the project site are identified as Clear Lake <br />clay (drained) with slopes ranging from 0 to 2 percent (San Leandro 2016b). <br />EARTHQUAKES <br />The San Francisco Bay Area is one of the most seismically active in the country and contains <br />numerous active faults. The eastern portion of San Leandro is crossed by the Hayward fault, which <br />has created serious and widespread damage in the city in the past. The major earthquake <br />hazards in San Leandro are ground shaking, ground failure, and liquefaction. These hazards tend <br />to be amplified on artificial fill and deep alluvial soils (San Leandro 2016b). A 2008 study of <br />earthquake probabilities by the USGS estimated that there is a 63 percent chance that a <br />magnitude 6.7 of greater earthquake will strike the Bay Area in the next 30 years. A major <br />earthquake could occur on the Hayward fault, as well as on the San Andreas fault that runs <br />15 miles west of San Leandro. An earthquake of this magnitude could topple buildings, disrupt <br />infrastructure, impact transportation systems, and trigger landslides throughout the San Leandro <br />Hills (San Leandro 2016b). <br />LIQUEFACTION <br />Liquefaction is a phenomenon where loose, saturated, non -cohesive soils such as silts, sands, and <br />gravels undergo a sudden loss of strength during earthquake shaking. Under certain <br />circumstances, seismic ground shaking can temporarily transform an otherwise solid, granular <br />material to a fluid state. Liquefaction is a serious hazard because buildings in areas that <br />experience liquefaction may suddenly subside and suffer major structural damage. Liquefaction <br />is most often triggered by seismic shaking, but it can also be caused by improper grading, <br />landslides, or other factors. In dry soils, seismic shaking may cause soil to consolidate rather than <br />flow, a process known as densification (San Leandro 2016b). <br />CHECKLIST DISCUSSION <br />a) i) No Impact. The project site is not within an Earthquake Fault Zone, as defined by the <br />Alquist-Priolo Earthquake Fault Zoning Act of 1972. According to the geotechnical <br />investigation, no known surface expression of fault traces is thought to cross the site; <br />therefore, fault rupture hazard is not a significant geologic hazard at the site (Cornerstone <br />2016). No impact would occur. <br />ii) Less Than Significant Impact with Mitigation Incorporated. The San Francisco Bay Area is <br />one of the most seismically active in the country and contains numerous active faults. As <br />noted above, the project site is not located within a Alquist-Priolo Earthquake Fault Zone <br />for known active faults. State -considered active faults proximate to the project site include <br />the following: <br />City of San Leandro 1388 Bancroft Avenue Project <br />November 2018 Initial Study/Mitigated Negative Declaration <br />3.0-31 <br />
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