Press Release

Assembly Passes Sen. Blakespear’s Legislation to Protect Habitat Conservation Fund

SB 427, which preserves the Habitat Conservation Fund for another 10 years, now goes to the Governor to sign

SACRAMENTO – Legislation by Sen. Catherine S. Blakespear, D-Encinitas, to extend funding to acquire, restore and enhance wildlife habitats across the state on Tuesday passed the Assembly. 

The legislation, already approved by the Senate, now goes to the Governor for consideration. SB 427 pushes the sunset date from July 1, 2030, to July 1, 2035, for the Habitat Conservation Fund (HCF), which was established under Proposition 117, the California Wildlife Protection Act passed by voters in June 1990. 

To date, the fund has protected more than 1.2 million acres of wildlife habitat throughout the state, including valuable territory and projects in San Diego and Orange counties. 

“California is an environmental paradise, full of incredible open spaces, beautiful landscape and wildlife of all kinds,” Sen. Blakespear said. “The Habitat Conservation Fund has been essential in helping the state to preserve and protect its open space and wildlife habitat, and I’m glad to continue it with SB 427.”

The program has funded hundreds of projects. They include the world’s largest wildlife crossing over Highway 101 in Agoura Hills, a new trails gateway into Redwood National and State Parks and an ancestral land-return project in San Bernardino County. 

The Wildlife Conservation Board has allocated $13.9 million in HCF money in Senate District 38 for projects since 1990, including $1.9 million for habitat linkages along Lusardi Creek in San Diego County, $2.2 million for the acquisition of 134 acres along Buena Vista Creek in Carlsbad and Oceanside and $1.3 million for the Trabuco Creek Fish Passage Project in south Orange County. Cities, counties and any regional park or open-space district are eligible to apply for these funds. 

Prop 117 directed $30 million to be transferred annually from the state’s General Fund into the conservation fund until 2020. In 2019, the Legislature and Governor extended the fund until 2030. The money is distributed by the Wildlife Conservation Board. 

In recent years, however, state budgetary pressures have led lawmakers to consider discontinuing the fund. Last year, the Governor initially recommended ending the General Fund transfers to the HCF six years early, but Sen. Blakespear fought the proposal and helped keep the fund intact.    

The legislation is co-sponsored by Audubon California and the National Wildlife Federation, and supported by the Planning and Conservation League and more than 90 other organizations. 

Blakespear represents Senate District 38, which covers northern San Diego County and part of southern Orange County. To learn more about the district and Sen. Blakespear, visit her Senate website.