Publication Date

All

Current year

Past 5 years

 


 

Subject Area
Resources (5)
See all

Results in Resources


5 results

Sort by date / relevance

How CalFire is Spending Recent Forest Health Funds

Nov 15, 2018 - For forest health, however, the department gave larger amounts of funding to fewer grantees (17 grants with an average size of $4.6  million), compared to fuel reduction for which it awarded smaller grants to a larger number of recipients (114 grants with an average size of $700,000).
https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/3902

Frequently Asked Questions About Wildfires in California

Jan 28, 2025 - Summary of Recent State Wildfire  and Forest Resilience Funding a 2020 ‑21 Through 2028 ‑29 (In Millions) Program TBD forest health and fire prevention activities TBD Stewardship of state ‑owned land Various Prescribed fire and hand crews CalFire CalFire unit fire prevention projects CalFire Forestry Corps and residential centers CCC Regional Forest and Fire Capacity Program DOC Transportation
https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/4952

Assessing California’s Climate Policies—Agriculture

Dec 15, 2021 - The program has provided $67  million from GGRF to 114 projects. (We note that the 2021 ‑22 budget provided an additional $80  million from the General Fund over two years for both DDRDP and AMMP —with budget bill language providing funding priority to AMMP.)
https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/4483

Assessing California’s Climate Policies—Transportation

Dec 21, 2018 - Recent budget actions increased that amount to $114  million in 2018 ‑19. Has funded about 7,000 electric charging and hydrogen refueling stations funded to date, and increased spending could result in more than an additional 10,000.
https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/report/3912

The 2019-20 Budget: Natural Resources and Environmental Protection

Feb 14, 2019 - In 2017, State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) found 133 p ublic water systems out of compliance for arsenic standards and 114 p ublic water systems out of compliance for nitrate standards. High concentrations of nitrate in groundwater are primarily caused by human activities including fertilizer application (synthetic and manure), animal operations such as dairies, industrial sources (wastewater treatment and food processing facilities), and septic systems.
https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/3933