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Exhibit A <br />Scope of Services <br />At present, the City of Santa Ana is not in compliance with DMA 2000 and therefore not <br />eligible to complete for Hazard Mitigation Grant Program funds which are made <br />available to jurisdictions within the declared area following a Presidential Disaster <br />Declaration. In order to accomplish eligibility, a FEMA-approved Hazard Mitigation Plan <br />must be developed that accomplishes the following: <br />The intent of DMA 2000 is three -fold: <br />a) To gather hazard, vulnerability, and mitigation information from the local level for use <br />in state -level planning; <br />b) To ensure that state and local hazard mitigation planning is coordinated to the <br />greatest extent practical; and <br />c) To ensure that local jurisdictions are made aware of the hazards and vulnerabilities <br />within their jurisdiction and to develop strategies to reduce those vulnerabilities. <br />In order to meet all of those objectives, FEMA developed a "checklist" for use by the <br />State and Federal reviewers. The Region IX Local Hazard Mitigation Plan Review Tool <br />(FEMA Review Tool) includes the following tasks: <br />➢ Element A: Planning Process <br />➢ Element B: Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment <br />➢ Element C: Mitigation Strategy <br />➢ Element D: Plan Review, Evaluation, and Implementation <br />➢ Element E: Plan Adoption (by City Council) <br />It's important to note that it is especially important to hire a firm with an extensive history <br />of preparing FEMA-approved Hazard Mitigation Plans. Without adequate experience, it <br />would not be unusual to spend as much time in the "Cal OES and FEMA review phase" <br />as in preparing the actual plan. EPC prepares approvable plans and in the event a Cal <br />OES or FEMA reviewer disagrees, knows how to discuss the difference in interpretation <br />to gain approval. Specific strategies for accomplishing Element A-E are discussed <br />below in Methodology and Quality Control. <br />Methodology and Quality Control <br />Preparation of the Hazard Mitigation Plan will incorporate all of the federal requirements <br />relating to local hazard mitigation plans. EPC's hazard mitigation planning approach <br />has been perfected since 2005 when the federal government first required plans for <br />local jurisdictions. Since that time great effort and time has gone into tracking the <br />changes of "interpretations" by the regulatory agencies of the DMA 2000 legislation. <br />Without publishing updates to the originating legislation, FEMA instead has published <br />guidelines (see below) and has amended the FEMA Review Tool used to judge the <br />adequacy of plans. Understanding all the changes in interpretation is critical to writing a <br />plan that can go through the state and FEMA reviewers with only minor revisions. State <br />and FEMA have both made significant staffing changes over the past year resulting in <br />more consistent reviews and fewer unjustified requested changes. Recently, FEMA <br />review staff have worked closely with state review staff to better understand the <br />requirements in order to streamline the review process. With so many FEMA approved <br />#36221v2 3 <br />55A-18 <br />