Rooney 2 Preserve
Summary
SCH Number
2023060301
Public Agency
Sacramento County
Document Title
Rooney 2 Preserve
Document Type
NOE - Notice of Exemption
Received
Posted
6/9/2023
Document Description
The project includes a request for a grading permit to support a vernal pool restoration project which will result in the creation of 117 vernal pools and swales totaling approximately 10.7 acres within the 107 acre Rooney 2 Preserve. The project area will ultimately become a preserve with a recorded conservation easement managed by the South Sacramento Conservation Agency (SSCA) designed to protect and preserve South Sacramento Habitat Conservation Plan (SSHCP) covered habitat and species. The project site contains 1.698 acres of wetland habitat in its existing condition and the preserve will contain approximately 12.4 acres of wetland
habitat in total upon completion. The layout of the new aquatic features has been designed to avoid the existing features so that impacts to existing habitat is minimized. The proposed preserve is located within the Mather Core Recovery Area (MCRA) of the Southeastern Sacramento Valley of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service’s Vernal Pool Recovery Plan. The project area will be preserved in perpetuity funded by a management endowment and managed in accordance with a management plan approved by the SSCA.
Contact Information
Name
Joelle Inman
Agency Name
Sacramento County Planning
Job Title
ENVIRONMENTAL COORDINATOR
Contact Types
Lead/Public Agency
Phone
Email
Location
Cities
Sacramento
Counties
Sacramento
Regions
Countywide
Parcel #
126-0060-059
Notice of Exemption
Exempt Status
Statutory Exemption
Type, Section or Code
Public Resources Code section 21080.56
Reasons for Exemption
Public Resources Code section 21080.56 as detailed below.
Section 21080.56(a). The project is exclusively one or both of the following: (1) a project to conserve, restore, protect, or enhance, and assist in the recovery of California native fish and wildlife, and the habitat upon which they depend, or (2) a project to restore or provide habitat
for California native fish and wildlife.
? As lead agency, Sacramento County has determined the project is exclusively a project to conserve, restore, protect, or enhance, and assist in the recovery of California native fish and wildlife, and the habitat upon which they depend and a project to restore or provide habitat for California native fish and wildlife. The project is exclusively a project to protect and establish vernal pools within the South Sacramento Habitat Conservation Plan area. A benefit of the project is that it will also yield a net increase in vernal pool habitat available for the threatened and endangered vernal pool invertebrates and plants within the Mather Core Recovery Area of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service’s Vernal Pool Recovery Plan.
Section 21080.56(b). An eligible project may have incidental public health benefits, such as public access and recreation.
? As lead agency, Sacramento County has determined the project may have incidental
public benefits. Although no new recreational facilities will be constructed, healthy
biodiverse wetlands, including vernal pools, will enhance beneficial biodiversity to the
region. Further, a management goal of the long term management plan associated with
the project is “to allow compatible uses such as recreation and education while
minimizing effects to biological resources within the Preserve.” Non-profit entities such
as "Splash” have been working to provide children in the Sacramento area with a better
understanding of the value of our natural world. This includes field trips to other wildlife
preserve areas such as vernal pools around Mather Field. It is reasonable to assume
this type of educational activity may also occur on-site in the future and would provide
incidental public benefits.
Section 21080.56(c). The project does both of the following: (1) results in long-term net benefits
to climate resiliency, biodiversity, and sensitive species recovery; and (2) Includes procedures
and ongoing management for the protection of the environment.
? As lead agency, Sacramento County has determined that the proposed project will result
in long-term benefits to climate resiliency by restoring crucial wetland habitat. Wetland
restoration has been identified as key aspect in mitigating climate change, specifically
by reducing emissions and sequestering carbon.
Additional benefits to climate resiliency would be limiting further development within the
region. The proposed preserve (107 acres in area) will essentially result in an expansion
of the existing 142-acre Rooney 1 Preserve (an existing vernal pool and valley grassland
preserve), creating a large continuous preserve of 249 acres. This relatively large
preserve is located within the SSHCP Urban Development Area (UDA), and therefore
helps contain development, and gives the SSCA increased opportunities for future
expansion of the preserve system in this portion of the SSHCP plan area.
? As lead agency, Sacramento County has determined that the project will result in longterm
benefits to biodiversity as the project will result in the creation of a preserve
consistent with the provisions of the SSHCP and link intact landscapes that include high
quality habitat; maintain or improve physical, chemical, and biological functions of
aquatic resources; preserve, re-establish, and establish natural land covers that provide
habitat for special status species; maintain or improve habitat value of natural land
covers that are preserved; and maintain and expand the existing distribution of each
SSHCP Covered Species.
? As lead agency, Sacramento County has determined that the project will result in longterm
benefits to sensitive species recovery. The establishment of the preserve will result
in the creation of additional vernal pool land cover thereby creating additional high quality
habitat for SSHCP Covered Species. The proposed preserve is located directly east of
(and attached to) an established preserve and is also located in the USFWS MCRA; an
area known for many occurrences of SSHCP Covered Species and high quality vernal
pool grasslands. The proposed preserve would also help create a corridor between the
MCRA and the Cosumnes/Rancho Seco Core Recovery Area and minimizes the
potential fragmentation of the immediately local and intact habitats.
The proposed creation and preservation of SSHCP land cover types within the proposed
preserve will benefit sensitive species recovery by preserving and providing in perpetuity
necessary breeding, foraging and/or sheltering habitat for SSHCP Covered Species as
well as common non-protected species associated with these land cover types. The land
cover types to be protected are the same as those that will be impacted in this and other
portions of the SSHCP Plan Area due to future development (covered activities).
The above-described creation/preservation of SSHCP land cover types within the
proposed preserve will help to ensure that habitat for numerous SSHCP Covered
Species persists within the SSHCP area in perpetuity, and that unoccupied but suitable
habitat for several SSHCP Covered Species is preserved or created to provide for future
SSHCP Covered Species population growth and dispersal. The proposed preserve not
only serves to preserve existing habitat, but also to create aquatic resources that may
serve as habitat for SSHCP Covered Species in the future. Management of the preserve
(as well as assured funding for such management) is an important component of the
preserve proposal, and will help ensure that the proposed preserve is available for use
by SSHCP Covered Species in perpetuity.
? As lead agency, Sacramento County has determined that the project includes
procedures and ongoing management for the protection of the environment. Ongoing
management for the protection of the environment within the preserve would include
interim (10-year) and in perpetuity management of the preserve implemented by the
SSCA pursuant to the Final Wetland Mitigation Monitoring and Reporting Plan proposed
as part of the preserve creation. Interim management will include measures to ensure
performance criteria are met including regular maintenance (weed removal, seed
dispersal, or minor adjustments to site conditions). It is expected that performance
standards for the total acreage of wetland and vernal pool habitat creation will be met
within the initial 10-year period and will perform at or above those levels for three consecutive years. Following the completion of the mitigation monitoring period,
monitoring/maintenance of the preserve will occur in perpetuity in accordance with the
strategies outlined in the Long-term Management Plan for the property. The SSCA will
serve as Preserve Manager. The SSCA is also generating an overarching program-level
long-term management plan, and it is anticipated that the SSCA may decide to cover
the preserve in this larger plan. The determination on how best to manage the preserve
in the long-term will be made by the SSCA and SSHCP Interagency Review Team (IRT).
Section 21080.56(d). The project does not include any construction activities, except for the
construction activities solely related to habitat restoration.
? As lead agency, Sacramento County has determined that the project does not include
any construction activities, except for construction activities solely related to habitat
restoration. This project is exclusively a restoration project for establishing Covered
Species Habitat of the SSHCP.
County Clerk
Sacramento