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California Natural Resources Agency

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Department of the state government of California
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(March 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

California Natural Resources Agency
Logo of the California Natural Resources Agency
Agency overview
Headquarters715 P Street, 20th FloorSacramento, California, U.S.
Employees19,000 permanent staff
Annual budgetUS$ $8.767 billion (2017–2018)
Agency executives
  • Wade Crowfoot, Secretary
  • Angela Barranco, Undersecretary
Child agencies
Websiteresources.ca.gov

TheCalifornia Natural Resources Agency (CNRA) is a statecabinet-level agency in thegovernment of California. The institution and jurisdiction of the Natural Resources Agency is provided for in California Government Code sections 12800 and 12805, et seq. The agency has six departments, 10 conservancies, 17 boards and commissions, three councils, and one urban park in Los Angeles that consists of two museums, the California Science Center and the California African American museum.[1] Through its 25 departments, conservancies and commissions, the Natural Resources Agency is responsible for protecting prehistory history, natural landscapes and cultural sites, monitoring and stewarding state lands andwaterways, and regulating fish and game use, as well as private lands and the intersection with federal lands and waters.

The current Secretary for Natural Resources is Wade Crowfoot, a member of GovernorGavin Newsom's cabinet.[2]

History

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CNRA headquarters in Sacramento

In 1870, most of the state of California's natural resources were under federal jurisdiction, but as the state's population and needs grew, so did a desire for a closer-to-home approach to protecting the state's wildlands andwildlife. These sentiments led to the creation of the Board of Fish Commissioners in 1870 (the first wildlife conservation agency in the country),[3] theDivision of Forestry in 1881 (housed within the state's Department of Agriculture) and the Board of Forestry in 1885.[1]

During this same period, federal and state leaders began to set aside land for preservation and public access. PresidentAbraham Lincoln signed a federal law in 1864 that grantedYosemite Valley andMariposa Big Tree Grove to create California's firststate park.[4] In 1901, both land grants were returned to the federal government. A year later in 1902, the state purchased 2,500 acres of redwood forests in theSanta Cruz Mountains to createBig Basin Redwoods State Park, California's longest-running state park.

20th century

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At the turn of the 20th century, California's emerged on the forefront of the preservation movement by expanding fish and game laws, establishing a state forester to regulate timber harvest, acquiring historical monuments, and passing the Water Commission Act in 1913 to establish the State Water Commission to oversee rights to use surface water.

In 1927, GovernorClement Calhoun Young restructured many of state boards, commissions, divisions, and departments to create the Department of Natural Resources. This new Department included the Division of Forestry, known today asCAL FIRE (created in 1977), and a Division of Beaches and Parks, known today as the Department of State Parks and Recreation (created in 1967).[1]

In 1961, GovernorEdmund G. “Pat” Brown reorganized the executive branch and established the Resources Agency to consolidate management of the state's diverse resources. The new agency oversaw the Department of Fish and Game (created in 1951), known today as the Department of Fish and Wildlife (renamed in 2012), Department of Water Resources (created in 1954), Department of Conservation (created in 1961). This restructure also placed most of the state's environmental quality programs within the Resources Agency. In 1991, those environmental quality programs, designed to limit environmental pollution, were placed under a new state agency, theCalifornia Environmental Protection Agency.

21st century

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In 2009, the Resources Agency adopted its current name of the California Natural Resources Agency to better reflect its primary mission of protecting the state's natural resources. Today, the California Natural Resources Agency stewards 100 million acres of California's land, hundreds of rivers and lakes, and more than 1,000 miles of coastline.[1]

Organization

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Departments

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The Natural Resources Agency is the parent department to a number of other departments:

Commissions

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Also included within its jurisdiction are a number of study and regulatory commissions, boards and councils:

Conservancies

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Museums

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List of secretaries

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William E. Warne, 1961–1962

Hugo Fisher, 1963–1965

Norman B. Livermore, 1967–1974

Claire T. Dedrick, 1975–1976

Huey D. Johnson, 1977–1982

Gordon K. Van Vleck, 1983–1990

Douglas P. Wheeler, 1991–1999

Mary D. Nichols, 1999–2003

Mike Chrisman, 2003–2010

Lester A. Snow, 2010

John Laird, 2011–2019

Wade Crowfoot, 2019–present[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcde"Our Agency's History".resources.ca.gov. RetrievedOctober 15, 2020.
  2. ^"Secretary Wade Crowfoot".CA.gov. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2024.
  3. ^"Department of Fish and Game celebrates 130 years of serving California".Archived from the original on July 15, 2015.
  4. ^Andrew Glass."June 30, 1864, Lincoln creates Yosemite Park".POLITICO. RetrievedOctober 15, 2020.

External links

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Executivestate agencies, departments and other entities of theState of California
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