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 2023010074,"Menlo Park, City of",City of Menlo Park,,"Adopting Green Building Amendments, Municipal Code section 12.16 and 12.18 of the City of Menlo Park ordinances",NOE,1/5/2023,1/5/2023,"As the state and the community move toward renewable and clean electricity, the local building standard is securing a GHG free future for new buildings. Solar significantly drives down the cost of electricity for building operations and provides help with grid resilience. Pursuant to Public Resources Code (PRC) Section 25402.1(h)(2) and Section 10-106 of Title 24 of the California Code of Regulations. The City of Menlo Park has applied to the California Energy Commission for a determination that its locally adopted energy efficiency standard, enacted in Local Ordinance 1093 require buildings to be designed to consume no more energy than permitted by the 2022 Building Energy Efficiency Standards, which has been adopted by the Energy Commission. The Energy Commission’s Building Standards are set forth in Title 24, Part 6 of the California Code of Regulations. The City of Menlo Park's reach code ordinance was originally approved by it's City Council on 09/24/2019 for new nonresidential and high-rise residential buildings to be all-electric and produce a minimum amount of on-site solar power based on square footage outlined in 12.16 (California Energy code amendments) of our municipal code. Non residential solar requirements are as follows: Less than 10,000 square feet requires a minimum of three kilowatt photovoltaic system. Greater than or equal to 10,000 square feet requires a minimum of five kilowatt photovoltaic system. The City of Menlo Park is looking to renew this requirement through California Energy Commission so our community can move toward more renewable and clean energy.",https://ceqanet.opr.ca.gov/2023010074,"Adopting Green Building Amendments, Municipal Code section 12.16 and 12.18 of the City of Menlo Park ordinances",Chuck Andrews,City of Menlo Park,"Assistant Community Development Director, Building",chandrews@menlopark.gov,701 Laurel St,,Menlo Park,CA,94025,6503306757,,Menlo Park,San Mateo,San Mateo,Citywide,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Categorical Exemption,Section 15061(b)(3) of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations,"These standards are more protective of the environment than the state standards, and there are no reasonably foreseeable adverse impacts, and so there is no possibility that the activity in question may have a significant effect on the environment. As the lead agency, the City of Menlo Park also stated in its application to the Energy Commission that this activity is exempt from CEQA under Section 15061(b)(3) of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations.",,,,,,,,,,,,