SCH Number,Lead Agency Name,Lead Agency Title,Lead Agency Acronym,Document Title,Document Type,Received,Posted,Document Description,Document Portal URL,Project Title,Contact Full Name,Contact Authority,Contact Job Title,Contact Email Address,Contact Address 1,Contact Address 2,Contact City,Contact State,Contact Zip Code,Contact Phone Number,Location Coordinates,Cities,Counties,County Clerks,Location Cross Streets,Location Zip Code,Location Total Acres,Location Parcel Number,Location State Highways,Location Waterways,Location Airports,NOC Has Non Late Comment,NOC State Review Start Date,NOC State Review End Date,NOC Development Type,NOC Local Action,NOC Project Issues,NOC Local Review Start Date,NOC Local Review End Date,NOE Exempt Status,NOE Exempt Citation,NOE Reasons for Exemption,NOD Agency,NOD Approved By Lead Agency,NOD Approved Date,NOD Significant Environmental Impact,NOD Environmental Impact Report Prepared,NOD Negative Declaration Prepared,NOD Other Document Type,NOD Mitigation Measures,NOD Mitigation Reporting Or Monitoring Plan,NOD Statement Of Overriding Considerations Adopted,NOD Findings Made Pursuant,NOD Final EIR Available Location 2003052028,"Pacifica, City of",City of Pacifica,,Capistrano Bridge Fish Passage;,NOD,7/21/2005,7/21/2005,"The City of Pacifica (City) is located along the Pacific Coast in northwest San Mateo County, three miles south of the City of San Francisco. The City is situated among three isolated valleys and open hillsides, as well as beaches and rocky bluffs. It is surrounded on three sides by the Santa Cruz Mountains and by the Pacific Ocean on the west. San Pedro Creek is a perennial (year-round) steelhead stream in the southern portion of the City, with a 7.99 square mile watershed. San Pedro Creek is considered by many to be unique biological resource in the greater San Francisco Bay region (Titus et al. 1997), because it is one of only four Central California Coastal streams that still support a viable anadromous fishery. San Pedro Creek is, in fact, the only stream with a steelhead population along a 25-mile reach of coast between the Golden Gate Bridge and the City of Half Moon to the south (LCLA 2002). The fishery still exists within the watershed in large part because the cool springs in the headwaters of San Pedro Creek are protected within the Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA). The project site is located along San Pedro Creek, in the middle Linda Mar residential district of the City (37° 34.030' N latitude and 122° 29.030' W longitude). The creek has a narrow riparian corridor in the area of the Capistrano Bridge as the back yards of houses line the creek on both sides both above and below the bridge. This project is sponsored jointly by the City of Pacifica and is funded by multiple state agencies. The primary objectives of the project are to: (1) Repair the Capistrano Avenue fish ladder at San Pedro Creek, thereby restoring the integrity and stability of the structure, (2) Provide a permanent solution to allow for the passage of the federally protected steelhead throughout this reach of San Pedro Creek, and (3) Restore the stream/wetland ecosystem functions to San Pedro Creek in and adjacent to the Capistrano Avenue Bridge crossing of San Pedro Creek.",https://ceqanet.opr.ca.gov/2003052028/5,Capistrano Bridge Fish Passage Project,Scott Holmes,City of Pacifica,N/A,,170 Santa Maria Avenue,,Pacifica,CA,94044,6507384662,,Pacifica,San Mateo,,Capistrano Avenue,,,,,San Pedro Creek,,,,,,,,,,,,,City of Pacifica ,Yes,2/16/2005,,No,Yes,,Yes,,,,"City of Pacifica Department of Public Works 170 Santa Maria Avenue Pacifica, CA 94044"