Culver City Parks Task 8.1 Final Plan - Flipbook - Page 35
Multi-Jurisdictional
Hazard Mitigation
Plan
City of Culver City and
Culver City Unified
School District
March 2024
Draft Submittal to Cal OES
March 8, 2024
August 2020
1
STORMWATER QUALITY
MASTER PLAN
HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN
Figure 24. The stormwater capture area of Fox Hills Park extends
to the northeast of the park. Source: City of Culver City, Culver City
Stormwater Quality Master Plan, Page 136, 2021.
Figure 25. Community participation was used to help assess
the city’s mitigation readiness. Source: City of Culver City, MultiJurisdictional Hazard Mitigation Plan, Page 506. 2023.
Title: Stormwater Quality Master Plan
Date: 2021
Prepared by: City of Culver City
Title: Multi-Jurisdictional Hazard Mitigation Plan
Date: 2024
Prepared by: City of Culver City and the Culver
City Unified School District
Summary: The Stormwater Quality Master Plan
(SWQMP) identifies stormwater capture projects
and helps to achieve compliance through capital
stormwater project implementation. There were
three categories of projects evaluated in the
SWQMP: regional projects, larger, centralized
facilities for managing water, such as basins and
underground vaults, green street projects, such as
bioretention planters along roads, and Low-Impact
Development (LID) projects, such as rain gardens
and permeable pavement.
Some regional stormwater projects are proposed
within city parks and impact decisions around
redevelopment of parks as part of the proposed
Parks Plan, including six parks sites with high
potential for stormwater project implementation.
The SWQMP includes concept designs and
considerations for the proposed stormwater
projects.
Summary: The Hazard Mitigation Plan (MJHMP) is
part of an effort to reduce future losses to human life
and property resulting from natural disasters and
human-caused hazards. Some applicable hazards
identified in the MJHMP include, drought, flood,
landslide/mudflow, and more, as well as climate
change, which has the potential to exacerbate
hazards.
The MJHMP also identified a number of parks
as critical facilities for the safety and security
community lifeline during post-disaster stabilization
efforts. Redevelopment of parks and associated
new assets and infrastructure at these critical
facilities should not negatively impact community
lifelines. Additionally, the hazard vulnerability and
risk analysis performed in the MJHMP provides
useful items to consider when redesigning critical
parks based on the applicable hazards and help
predict the extent of loss to park assets as a result
of those hazards.
CULVER CITY PARKS PLAN 35