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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
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3.0 ENVIRONMENTAL CHECKLIST <br />Legislation <br />Description <br />In general, the California Building Energy Efficiency Standards require the design of building <br />shells and building components to conserve energy. The California Energy Commission <br />adopted changes to the 2016 Building Energy Efficiency Standards contained in the <br />California Code of Regulations, Title 24, Part 6 (also known as the California Energy Code). <br />The 2016 update to the standards focuses on several key areas to improve the energy <br />efficiency of newly constructed buildings and additions and alterations to existing buildings. <br />The most significant efficiency improvements to the residential standards include <br />California Building <br />improvements for attics, walls, water heating, and lighting. New efficiency requirements for <br />Energy Efficiency <br />elevators and direct digital controls are included in the nonresidential standards. The 2016 <br />Standards <br />standards also include changes made throughout all of its sections to improve the clarity, <br />consistency, and readability of the regulatory language. The 2016 Building Energy Efficiency <br />Standards are 28 percent more efficient than previous standards for residential construction <br />and 5 percent better for nonresidential construction. Energy -efficient buildings require less <br />electricity, and increased energy efficiency reduces fossil fuel consumption and decreases <br />GHG emissions. <br />Applicability to the project: The project is new construction that is required to comply with <br />the most current energy standards at the time of construction. <br />The California Green Building Standards Code (California Code of Regulations, Title 24, <br />Part 11), commonly referred to as the CALGreen Code, is a statewide mandatory <br />construction code that was developed and adopted by the California Building Standards <br />Commission and the California Department of Housing and Community Development. The <br />CALGreen standards require new residential and commercial buildings to comply with <br />California Green <br />mandatory measures under the topics of planning and design, energy efficiency, water <br />Building Standards <br />efficiency/conservation, material conservation and resource efficiency, and environmental <br />quality. CALGreen also includes voluntary tiers and measures that local governments may <br />adopt that encourage or require additional measures in the five green building topics. The <br />most recent update to the CALGreen Code went into effect January 1, 2017. <br />Applicability to the project: The project is new construction that is required to comply with <br />the most current CALGreen regulations at the time of construction. <br />Notes: a. Senate Bill 375 is codified at Government Code Sections 65080, 65400, 65583, 65584.01, 65584.02, 65584.04, 65587, 65588, <br />14522.1, 14522.2, and 65080.01, as well as at Public Resources Code Sections 21061.3 and 21159.28 and Chapter 4.2. <br />California Executive Orders <br />In addition to the legislation identified in Table 3.7-2, two Executive Orders —California Executive <br />Order S-03-05 (2005) and California Executive Order B-30-15 (2015)—highlight GHG emissions <br />reduction targets. Specifically, Executive Order S-03-05 seeks to achieve a reduction of GHG <br />emissions of 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050, and Executive Order B-30-15 seeks to achieve <br />a reduction of GHG emissions of 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030. The Executive Orders are <br />not laws but they provide the governor's direction to state agencies in their actions to reinforce <br />existing laws. For instance, as a result of the AB 32 legislation, the State's 2020 reduction target is <br />backed by the adopted first Scoping Plan, which provides a specific regulatory framework of <br />requirements for achieving the 2020 reduction target; and, as a result of the SB 32 legislation, the <br />State's 2030 reduction target is backed by the 2017 Scoping Plan, which provides a specific <br />regulatory framework of requirements for achieving the 2030 reduction target. The State -led GHG <br />reduction measures identified in Table 3.7-2, such as the Low Carbon Fuel Standard and the <br />Renewables Portfolio Standard, are largely driven by the first Scoping Plan. Executive Order S-03-05 <br />does not have any such framework and therefore has no specific emissions reduction mechanisms <br />for the 2050 reduction target. <br />1388 Bancroft Avenue Project City of San Leandro <br />Initial Study/Mitigated Negative Declaration November 2018 <br />3.0-38 <br />
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