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Item 18 - Resolution, Agreement, and Appropriation Adjustment Accepting the FY 2024 Emergency Management Performance Grant
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Item 18 - Resolution, Agreement, and Appropriation Adjustment Accepting the FY 2024 Emergency Management Performance Grant
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6/11/2025 4:26:19 PM
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Agenda Packet
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Police
Item #
18
Date
6/17/2025
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<br />Preparedness Grants Manual <br />.The 0.2% annual chance flood elevation. Where 0.2% annual chance flood elevations are not <br />available, such actions must be elevated to at least two feet above the 1% annual chance flood <br />elevation. <br />All FEMA-funded critical actions in 1% annual chance floodplains or 0.2% annual chance floodplains <br />(also known as 500-year floodplains) that involve new construction or substantial improvement of <br />structures must be elevated, at a minimum, to the higher of: <br />. <br />. <br />Three feet above the 1% annual chance flood elevation (also consistent with the FVA); or <br />The 0.2% annual chance flood elevation. Where 0.2% annual chance flood elevations are not <br />available, such actions must be elevated to at least three feet above the 1% annual chance flood <br />elevation. <br />See EO 11988, Floodplain Management, as amended by EO 13690, Establishing a Federal Flood <br />Risk Management Standard and a Process for Further Soliciting and Considering Stakeholder Input. <br />For additional information, see the Guidelines for Implementing EO 11988 and EO 13690. <br />4.5.2. ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE <br />EO 14096, Revitalizing our Nation's Commitment to Environmental Justice for All and EO 14008, <br />Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad rearticulate and strengthen the environmental <br />justice framework articulated in 1994 in EO 12898, Federal Actions to Address Environmental <br />Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations. Specifically, Section 1 of EO <br />14096states that: “To fulfill our Nation’s promises of justice, liberty, and equality, every person must <br />have clean air to breathe; clean water to drink; safe and healthy foods to eat; and an environment <br />that is healthy, sustainable, climate-resilient, and free from harmful pollution and chemical exposure. <br />Restoring and protecting a healthy environment—wherever people live, play, work, learn, grow, and <br />worship—is a matter of justice and a fundamental duty that the Federal Government must uphold on <br />behalf of all people.” <br />Some projects funded by FEMA’s grant programs could have environmental justice impacts. New <br />construction (including communication towers), renovation, demolition, and relocation of buildings <br />and other structures may have disproportionately high and adverse effects on minority and low- <br />income populations. FEMA acknowledges the important role that FEMA recipients and subrecipients <br />play in advancing and achieving environmental justice by identifying low-income and minority <br />populations within a proposed project’s affected area as early as possible, assessing a project's <br />impact on existing environmental and human health burdens to account for cumulative effects, and <br />taking steps to mitigate any harmful impacts. <br />FEMA will review and evaluate potential projects for environmental justice concerns. If FEMA <br />determines that a proposed project would have a disproportionately high and adverse effect on <br />minority or low-income populations, FEMA will consult with recipients and subrecipients to discuss <br />the feasibility of revising the scope of work to avoid these adverse impacts, or otherwise applying <br />mitigation measures to alleviate these effects. In addition, FEMA may work with other recipients and <br />subrecipients to solicit public input on the proposed projects for a more informed decision-making <br />process. To learn more about how FEMA environmental justice responsibilities might affect your <br />project, go to the EO 12898: Environmental Justice page on FEMA.gov. <br />22
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