State California PRC Sec 6201-6225 POWERS AND DUTIES GENERALLY (PUBLIC LANDS) PUBLIC RESOURCES CODE SECTION 6201-6225 6201. The commission may from time-to-time classify any or all state land for its different possible uses, and, when it is deemed advisable, may require the Department of Parks and Recreation, the Department of Conservation, the Director of Agriculture, or any other officer, organization, agency or institution of the state government to make such classification. It is the duty of any such officer, organization, agency, or institution to make such classification and to submit a report thereon upon the application of the commission. 6201.5. The commission shall prepare a master plan for all school and lieu lands under its jurisdiction. Such plan shall include a recreational element which requires, to the extent possible, that lands be maintained in a natural state, and shall incorporate a multiple use concept for land use planning. Such plan shall also include provision for beneficial uses of state school and lieu lands. Such beneficial uses include, but are not limited to, reforestation, timber stand improvement, alternative fuels management, range conservation, access acquisition, hazard removal and control, environmental rehabilitation, the development and maintenance of recreational trails, including foot trails and trails for motorized vehicles, the development and maintenance of water oriented recreational facilities, the identification and maintenance of primitive campsites, programs for encouraging environmentally sound mineral exploration and extraction, and the rehabilitation of lands impacted by mineral exploration or extraction. The plan shall also provide that any alterations to or development of state school or lieu lands should attempt to maintain the lands as nearly as possible in the condition existing prior to alteration or development. The commission shall annually revise such plan to include new lands under its jurisdiction. The master plan shall, to the extent possible, be prepared from funds otherwise available to the commission. 6202. The commission may make surveys and subdivisions of lands belonging to the state to be sold, leased, or to have the boundary established, and the county recorder shall file maps thereof, made by the commission, without cost to the state. Such maps shall be the official maps of the surveys and subdivisions, and all patents, leases, or boundary line agreements issued for the lands shall refer to the maps so filed. Such maps of state lands shall be legibly drawn, printed or reproduced by a process guaranteeing a permanent record in black on tracing cloth or polyester base film. If ink is used on a polyester base film, the ink surface shall be coated with a suitable substance to insure permanent legibility. The size of each sheet shall be 18 by 26 inches. A marginal line shall be drawn completely around each sheet, leaving an entire blank margin of one inch. The scale of the map shall be large enough to show all details clearly and enough sheets shall be used to accomplish this end. The particular number of the sheets and the total number of sheets comprising the map shall be stated on each of the sheets and its relationship to each adjoining sheet shall be clearly shown. 6203. On or before the first Monday in March in each year, the commission shall make out and transmit to the assessor of each county where lands or lots lie that have been sold by the State, for which certificates of purchase, patents, or deeds have issued, during the year preceding, certified lists of such lands or lots, giving a description of the lands or lots, the names of the purchasers, and the amount of principal unpaid, if any, on the first Monday in March. 6204. The commission shall, when required, survey and mark the boundary lines of counties and cities. 6205. The commission shall, after the survey of any township by the United States, obtain from the United States Land Office a statement, showing whether or not the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections therein belong to the State. 6206. The commission shall provide the necessary record books and cause all lists or patents for lands from the United States to be recorded therein. 6206.5. The commission is hereby empowered to apply to the United States Department of the Interior for patents to the numbered school sections in place, which have not been patented by the State, and to accept patents, in accordance with an act of Congress approved June 21, 1934 (Public No. 440-73d Congress), entitled "An Act Authorizing the Secretary of the Interior to issue patents to the numbered school sections in place, granted to the States by the act approved February 22, 1889, by the act approved January 25, 1927 (44 Stat. 1026), and by any other act of Congress." 6207. The commission shall keep separate accounts and records in relation to each class of lands to which the State is entitled, which shall show: (a) The number of the survey or location, and the date of the approval. (b) The name of the locator, the description of the lands by legal subdivisions, the price per acre at which they are sold, the amount paid, the date of payment, and the number and date of the certificate of purchase. (c) The date of the patent, when it has been issued. 6208. The commission shall also keep plats of such lands, upon which all approved locations and surveys shall be designated by their numbers. 6209. When certificates of purchase or patents are issued, the fact shall be noted on the plats. 6210. The commission shall represent the State in all contests between it and the United States in relation to public lands. 6210.1. When the commission desires to take testimony under the provisions of the act of Congress to quiet land titles in California, passed July 23, 1866, or any act amendatory or supplementary thereof, it shall request the United States Supervisor of Surveys to fix a place, convenient of access by the witnesses, and the time for taking such testimony. It may require the Attorney General to attend and represent the State at the taking of such testimony. Not more than one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500) shall be allowed in any one year for traveling expenses pursuant to this section. 6210.2. The commission may withdraw from sale any of the public lands belonging to the State and may restore any or all public lands so withdrawn, or other public lands, for sale. 6210.3. The commission may grant easements and rights-of-way to the Department of Transportation to or over any of the public lands of the state for the purposes of rights-of-way for highways and for use in protecting highways from damage or destruction by natural forces. 6210.4. No lands owned by the State which lands front upon or are near to any lake, navigable stream or other body of navigable water, convenient access to which is not provided by public road or roads, or otherwise, shall ever be sold, leased or rented, without reserving to the people of the State an easement across the lands for convenient access to such waters. 6210.4a. All conveyances by the State of the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections, or lands acquired in lieu thereof, or of swamp and overflowed lands shall be made subject to any existing easements or rights-of-way issued by the State prior to the time of conveyance. 6210.5. No lands owned by the State, which lands provide the only convenient means of access to other lands owned by the State, shall ever be sold, leased or rented without reserving therefrom to the State and its successors in interest in the other lands, an easement for convenient access to the other lands. 6210.7. The commission may amend or terminate any lease, easement, or contract under its jurisdiction, with the consent of the other party thereto. 6210.8. Whenever a navigable river or slough becomes abandoned and is no longer useful for navigation, the commission may sell, for cash, or exchange for lands having equal or greater value, such abandoned river or slough channel to the abutting property owners or to anyone having an equitable interest therein. A patent for the land sold shall be issued in the name of the applicant. The commission shall send the patent to the Governor, together with a certificate stating that the laws in relation thereto have been complied with, that payment in full has been made, and that the person named in the prepared patent is entitled to it. The patent so issued shall inure to the benefit of the assigns, grantees, or successors in interest of said original applicant. 6210.9. If the commission has public land, including school land, tide or submerged lands, and lands subject to the public trust for commerce, navigation, and fisheries, to which there is no access available, it may, in the name of the state, acquire by purchase, lease, gift, exchange, or, if all negotiations fail, by condemnation, a right-of-way or easement across privately owned land or other land that it deems necessary to provide access to such public land. 6211. (a) Whenever a parcel of timbered land under the jurisdiction of the commission is totally surrounded by, or is contiguous to, a national forest or a state forest, the commission may, if it is in the best interests of the state to do so, and after 10 days' prior notice to the Secretary of the Resources Agency for the receipt of comments, provide for the harvesting of timber from that land at the same time as the orderly harvesting of the surrounding or adjacent federal-owned or state-owned timber is conducted. In carrying out this section, the commission may enter into agreements with the United States or the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection for the inclusion of timbered lands under the jurisdiction of the commission within a total parcel to be offered for timber harvesting contracts. (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, timber from lands under the jurisdiction of the commission shall not be sold to any California division of a primary manufacturer, or to any person for resale to a primary manufacturer, who does either of the following: (1) Uses that timber at any plant not located within the United States, unless it is sawn on four sides to dimensions not greater than 4 inches by 12 inches. (2) Within one year prior to the bid date and one year after the termination of the contract, sells unprocessed timber which is harvested from private timberlands and is exported into foreign commerce. For the purposes of this section, "unprocessed timber" has the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (d) of Section 4650.1. (c) Any purchaser of timber from lands under the jurisdiction of the commission who makes use of the timber in violation of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) is prohibited from making any further purchases of timber from any such lands for a period of five years. (d) The commission may adopt appropriate regulations to prevent the substitution of timber from lands under its jurisdiction for timber exported from private timberlands. 6212.2. The commission may, under such rules and regulations as it may prescribe, issue permits for the taking of cores or other samples by means of drilling operations or other methods on or under any lands under the jurisdiction of the commission for the purpose of obtaining geological information to be used in assessing the nature and extent of any mineral interest reserved to the state, preparing environmental documents, locating nuclear or other energy-related plant sites, making soil surveys, conducting foundation exploration and oceanographic research, and making studies of geological hazards, flood control, harbor works, and other similar matters not involving an activity of commercial exploration or exploitation. 6213. Whenever it appears by final decree of any court of competent jurisdiction that title to any land subject to sale by the State was obtained, or sought to be obtained, by fraudulent means, or in any manner contrary to the laws of this State relating to the acquisition of its public domain, all payments made in the interest of the fraudulent title shall revert to the State without suit. The commission shall thereupon cancel all evidence of title to any such land and shall restore the land to public entry. 6214. Fees shall be charged and collected by the commission pursuant to its rules and regulations for the following: (a) Certificates of purchase or duplicates thereof, (b) Patents and certified copies of records thereof, (c) For certifying a contested case to superior court, (d) For certifying copies of papers, (e) Such other fees as are allowed by law. 6215. As to lands heretofore sold by this State with a reservation to the State of a one-sixteenth interest in the oil and gas or other minerals therein, pursuant to Chapter 303 of the Statutes of 1921, and where it appears that there are or may be deposits of oil and gas in such lands the commission may enter into agreements with respect thereto in the manner provided by Section 6815 of this code with respect to lands owned by the State, or the commission may consent to the inclusion of such lands with the lands of other persons under a cooperative or unit plan of development or operation of a pool or field if it appears that the purpose of such plan is the conserving of the natural resources of any single oil or gas pool or field and if it is determined by the commission to be necessary or advisable in the public interest. 6216. This section is enacted for the purpose of declaring the scope and extent of the powers, duties, purposes, responsibilities and jurisdiction of the State Lands Commission, but nothing herein shall be construed as limiting any power, duty, purpose, responsibility or jurisdiction heretofore or by this code vested in or conferred upon the commission. (a) Upon the enacting of the State Lands Act of 1938 the Legislature intended to and did vest in the commission all those powers, duties, purposes, responsibilities and jurisdiction of the Department of Finance as set forth in Section 6102 of this code, and of the Chief of the Division of State Lands, and the Division of State Lands, including the full authority, as provided by law, to administer, sell, lease or dispose of the public lands owned by this state or under its control, including not only school lands but tidelands, submerged lands, swamp and overflowed lands, and beds of navigable rivers and lakes. The commission was further authorized to provide for the extraction of minerals and oil and gas from any or all of such lands, but its authority and jurisdiction over such lands was not and is not now limited thereto. (b) The provisions of Section 48 of the State Lands Act of 1938, added thereto by Chapter 646 of the Statutes of 1939, as codified in Section 6301 of this code, shall hereafter supersede and control over any other provisions of law, whether general or special, relating to any tidelands or submerged lands or the beds of navigable rivers, streams, lakes, bays, estuaries, inlets or straits, without regard to whether any of such lands contain or may contain oil, gas or other minerals, and any such other provisions of law in conflict therewith are repealed. (c) Any and all acts of the State Lands Commission heretofore performed by it in pursuance of Section 48 of the State Lands Act of 1938 are hereby confirmed, ratified and validated, without regard to whether the lands affected thereby contain or might contain oil, gas or other minerals. 6216.1. The commission may remove or cause to be removed any manmade structures or obstructions from ungranted lands under its jurisdiction if the commission determines that such removal is appropriate and the Attorney General advises that there is no legal recourse to compel other responsible parties to effect such removal. 6216.5. The commission may prescribe such rules and regulations for the noncommercial hobby collection of minerals from state lands as are in the best interests of the state. Nothing in this section shall prevent other state agencies from setting more definitive limits on hobby collecting on lands over which they have a proprietary interest. 6217. With the exception of revenue derived from state school lands and from sources described in Sections 6217.6, 6301.5, 6301.6, 6855, and Sections 8551 to 8558, inclusive, and Section 6406 (insofar as the proceeds are from property that has been distributed or escheated to the state in connection with unclaimed estates of deceased persons), the commission shall deposit in the State Treasury all revenue, money, and remittances received by the commission under this division, and under Chapter 138 of the Statutes of 1964, First Extraordinary Session, and those funds shall be applied to the following obligations in the following order of priority: (a) To the General Fund, the revenue necessary to provide in any fiscal year for the following: (1) Payment of refunds, authorized by the commission, out of appropriations made for that purpose by the Legislature. (2) Payment of expenditures of the commission as provided in the annual Budget Act enacted by the Legislature. (3) Payments to cities and counties of the amounts specified in Section 6817 for the purposes specified in that section, and the revenues so deposited are appropriated for that purpose. (4) Payments to cities and counties of the amounts agreed to pursuant to Section 6875. (b) To the California Housing Trust Fund, each fiscal year, the amount of two million dollars ($2,000,000). (c) After meeting the obligations in subdivisions (a) and (b), the Controller shall transfer the balance of all such revenue, money, and remittances received by the commission pursuant to this section in each fiscal year to the Resources Trust Fund. The money in the Resources Trust Fund shall be collected for the purposes of, and held in trust for, preserving and protecting the natural and recreational resources of the state and, for this purpose, the Controller shall annually transfer the following sums from the Resources Trust Fund to the following accounts and funds in the following order of priority: (1) Eight million dollars ($8,000,000) to the Salmon and Steelhead Trout Restoration Account in the Resources Trust Fund. The money in the account shall be appropriated in the annual Budget Act to the Department of Fish and Game for expenditure for the recovery of coho salmon, other species of salmon, and anadromous trout pursuant to Section 6217.1 of this code and Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 2760) of Division 3 of the Fish and Game Code. (2) Two million two hundred thousand dollars ($2,200,000) to the Marine Life and Marine Reserve Management Account, which is hereby created in the Resources Trust Fund. The money in the account shall be appropriated in the annual Budget Act to the Department of Fish and Game for expenditure for marine life management pursuant to Section 6217.2. (3) Ten million dollars ($10,000,000) to the State Parks System Deferred Maintenance Account, which is hereby created in the Resources Trust Fund. The money in the account shall be appropriated in the annual Budget Act to the Department of Parks and Recreation for deferred maintenance expenses. (4) The remainder to the Natural Resources Infrastructure Fund which is an account in the Resources Trust Fund. The money in the Natural Resources Infrastructure Fund shall be available for expenditure, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purposes of preserving and protecting the natural and recreational resources of the state. Priority for the use of the money in the Natural Resources Infrastructure Fund shall be given to the following: (A) For expenditure by the Department of Fish and Game, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for environmental review and monitoring, consultation with lead agencies, recommending mitigation measures, and enforcement related activities pursuant to Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000). (B) For expenditure, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purposes of land acquisition in Orange County and San Diego County pursuant to Chapter 10 (commencing with Section 2800) of Division 3 of the Fish and Game Code. (C) For expenditure to meet the requirements of Section 2796 of the Fish and Game Code that are not met pursuant to Section 2795 of the Fish and Game Code, upon appropriation by the Legislature. (D) For expenditure for nonpoint source pollution control programs of the State Water Resources Control Board and the California Coastal Commission, upon appropriation by the Legislature. The Controller shall transfer any unencumbered balances remaining in the Salmon and Steelhead Trout Restoration Account, the Marine Life and Marine Reserve Management Account, the State Parks Deferred Maintenance Account, and the Natural Resources Infrastructure Fund on June 30 of each year to the General Fund. This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2006, and, as of January 1, 2007, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, which becomes effective on or before January 1, 2007, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed. 6217. (a) With the exception of revenue derived from state school lands and from sources described in Sections 6217.6, 6301.5, 6301.6, 6855, and Sections 8551 to 8558, inclusive, and Section 6404 (insofar as the proceeds are from property that has been distributed or escheated to the state in connection with unclaimed estates of deceased persons), the commission shall deposit all revenue, money, and remittances received by the commission under this division, and under Chapter 138 of the Statutes of 1964, First Extraordinary Session, in the General Fund. Out of those funds deposited in the General Fund, sufficient moneys shall be made available each fiscal year for the following purposes: (1) Payment of refunds, authorized by the commission, out of appropriations made for that purpose. (2) Payment of expenditures of the commission as provided in the annual Budget Act. (3) Payments to cities and counties of the amounts specified in Section 6817 for the purposes specified in that section, out of appropriations made for that purpose. (4) Payments to cities and counties of the amounts agreed to pursuant to Section 6875, out of appropriations made for that purpose. (b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2006. 6217.1. (a) This section and the process described in this section governs the expenditure of any funds received by the State of California from the federal government for the purposes of salmon and steelhead trout conservation and restoration, the expenditure of funds authorized for the Coastal Watershed Salmon Habitat Program pursuant to Article 7 (commencing with Section 79104.200) of Chapter 6 of Division 26 of the Water Code, and the expenditure of funds appropriated to the Department of Fish and Game for salmon and steelhead trout conservation and restoration from the California Clean Water, Clean Air, Safe Neighborhood Parks, and Coastal Protection Fund pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 5096.650) of Chapter 1.696 of Division 5 of the Public Resources Code. (b) For purposes of this section, "project" means an activity that improves fish habitat in coastal waters utilized by salmon and anadromous trout species. (c) (1) The Department of Fish and Game shall grant funds from the Salmon and Steelhead Trout Restoration Account in the Resources Trust Fund, as follows: (A) At least 87.5 percent of the funds shall be allocated as project grants through the existing grant program operated by the fisheries management program of the Department of Fish and Game. (B) Not more than 12.5 percent of the funds may also be used for project contract administration activities and biological support staff. (2) (A) A project shall require the consent of a willing landowner, and emphasize the development of coordinated watershed improvement activities. (B) Projects that restore habitat for salmon and anadromous trout species that are eligible for protection as listed or candidate species under state or federal endangered species acts shall be given top funding priority. (C) Projects shall be cost-effective and treat causes and not symptoms of fish habitat degradation. Projects may implement instream, riparian, water quality, water quantity, and watershed prescriptions and shall be designed to restore the structure and function of fish habitat. (3) Any grant funds allocated to a project that exceed the actual cost of completing the project shall be returned to the Salmon and Steelhead Trout Restoration Account. (d) (1) A citizen's advisory committee shall be appointed by the Director of Fish and Game to give advice on the grant program. (2) The advisory committee shall consist of seven representatives recommended by the California Advisory Committee on Salmon and Steelhead Trout, one representative from the agriculture industry, one representative from the timber industry, one representative of public water agency interests, one academic or research scientist with expertise in anadromous fisheries restoration, and three county supervisors from coastal counties in which anadromous trout exist. The county supervisor members shall be recommended by the California State Association of Counties. (3) The advisory committee shall provide oversight of, and recommend priorities for, grant funding under this section. In making funding decisions, the Department of Fish and Game shall consider the project selection priorities established by the advisory committee. (4) Members of any advisory committee established for these purposes shall be reimbursed for travel and incidental expenses related to the performance of their duties under this section. Reimbursement for the advisory committee created pursuant to this section shall be made from the funds designated in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (c). Reimbursement for other Department of Fish and Game salmon and steelhead trout advisory committees shall be funded by appropriate sources. (5) If a member of the advisory committee, or a member of his or her immediate family, is employed by a grant applicant, the employer of a grant applicant, or a consultant or independent contractor employed by a grant applicant, the advisory committee member shall make that disclosure to the other members of the committee, and shall not participate in reviewing or making recommendations on the grant application of that applicant. (e) Except as provided in subdivision (f), the money in the Salmon and Steelhead Trout Restoration Account shall be allocated as follows: (1) Not less than 65 percent of the money shall be used for salmon habitat protection and restoration projects. Of that amount, at least 75 percent shall be used for watershed (upslope) and riparian area protection and restoration activities. These activities may include, but are not limited to, grants to acquire and install fish screens to protect juvenile and adult salmon and steelhead trout from entrapment in water diversions, and grants to remove substandard culverts, stream crossings, and bridges that constitute barriers to spawning of salmon and steelhead trout and passage of fish. These funds may also be used for the acquisition, from willing sellers, of conservation easements for riparian buffer strips along coastal rivers and streams to protect salmon and steelhead trout habitat or for projects that protect and improve water quality and quantity. (2) Up to 35 percent of the money shall be allocated for any of the uses listed in this paragraph. (A) Watershed evaluation, assessment, and planning necessary to develop a site-specific and clearly prioritized plan to implement watershed improvements. (B) Multiyear grants for watershed planning and project monitoring and evaluations. (C) Watershed organization support and assistance. (D) Project maintenance and monitoring after the project implementations are complete. (E) Public school watershed and fishery conservation education projects. (F) Private sector technical training and education project grants, including teaching private landowners about practical means of improving land and water management practices that, if implemented, will contribute to the protection and restoration of salmon stream habitat; scholarship funding for workshops and conferences that teach restoration techniques; operation of nonprofit restoration technical schools; and production of restoration training and education workshops and conferences. (G) Fish and wildlife habitat improvements, as defined by Section 4793, and authorized under the California Forestry Incentive Program (CFIP). (H) The salmon restoration project of the California Conservation Corps. (I) The state's share of the federal Watershed Stewards Program. (J) Monitoring projects that utilize protocols approved by the Department of Fish and Game and the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) to provide baseline or trend data, or both, for anadromous fish populations or the physical and biological factors known to be limiting recovery. (K) Artificial propagation programs designed to restore depleted stocks of salmonids that comply with the directives of the joint Department of Fish and Game and NMFS Hatchery Operations Review Committee. (f) The advisory committee, in any fiscal year, may make a recommendation to the Department of Fish and Game to allocate money from the Salmon and Steelhead Trout Restoration Account for the purposes stated in subdivision (e), but in different percentage requirements than the 65/35 split stated in paragraphs (1) and (2) of that subdivision. Following that recommendation, the Director of Fish and Game may suspend the percentage requirements stated in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (e) for that fiscal year only. 6217.2. Moneys in the Marine Life and Marine Reserve Management Account created in the Resources Trust Fund pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 6217, shall be expended by the Department of Fish and Game for the following purposes: (a) To develop and implement fishery management plans. (b) To fund research on marine life and marine fisheries. (c) To fund peer reviews of research plans and fishery management plans. (d) To fund the evaluation, coordination, and management of marine reserves and other marine managed areas. 6217.2. Notwithstanding Section 16304.1 of the Government Code, a disbursement in liquidation of an encumbrance for a project funded pursuant to the Coastal Watershed Salmon Habitat Program, as identified in Section 6217.1, may be made before or during the four years following the last day an appropriation is available for encumbrance. 6217.5. Except for the revenues distributed pursuant to Section 3826, all net revenues, moneys, and remittances from the use of school lands and lieu lands shall be deposited in the State Treasury to the credit of the Teachers' Retirement Fund and shall be expended pursuant to Section 24702 of the Education Code. 6217.6. All rental income received for surface uses including, but not limited to, surface drilling rights, upon lands under the jurisdiction of the State Lands Commission shall be deposited in the State Treasury to the credit of the General Fund, except income from state school lands as provided for in Section 6217. 5 and royalties received from extraction of minerals on the surface of such lands as provided for in Section 6217. 6217.7. All net revenues, moneys, and remittances from the sale of school lands and lieu lands shall be deposited in the State Treasury to the credit of the School Land Bank Fund. 6217.8. (a) For purposes of this section, "fund" means the Oil Trust Fund established pursuant to subdivision (b). (b) The Oil Trust Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury, and the moneys in the fund are hereby appropriated to the commission in accordance with this section. (c) (1) On or before March 1, 2006, the City of Long Beach shall pay to the State Lands Commission all money, including both principal and interest, in the abandonment reserve fund that the city created in 1999 and that was the subject of the litigation in State of California ex rel. California State Lands Commission v. City of Long Beach (2005) 125 Cal.App.4th 767. (2) The Controller shall deposit in the fund any funds paid to the commission pursuant to paragraph (1). (3) Except as provided in paragraph (4), on the last day of each month beginning July 31, 2006, the Controller shall transfer to the fund the amount of two million dollars ($2,000,000) or 50 percent of remaining oil revenue, as described in subdivision (d) of Section 4 of Chapter 138 of the Statutes of 1964, First Extraordinary Session to the Oil Trust Fund, whichever is less. (4) Beginning July 1, 2005, and ending December 31, 2005, any contributions to the fund shall be suspended, except those funds described in paragraphs (1) and (2). During that period the Controller shall transfer four million dollars ($4,000,000) monthly to the General Fund from oil revenues, as described in subdivision (d) of Section 4 of Chapter 138 of the Statutes of 1964, First Extraordinary Session. (5) Beginning January 1, 2006, and ending June 30, 2006, the amount contributed to the fund shall be the amount specified in paragraph (3). During that period the Controller shall also transfer two million dollars ($2,000,000) monthly to the General Fund from oil revenues, as described in subdivision (d) of Section 4 of Chapter 138 of the Statutes of 1964, First Extraordinary Session. (d) (1) The total amount deposited in the fund shall not exceed three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000). From the date the balance in the fund totals three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000), all interest earned thereafter shall be transferred to the General Fund. (2) All interest earned on the money in the abandonment reserve fund specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) shall be transferred to the fund. (3) The commission shall expend the money from the fund solely to finance the costs of well abandonment, pipeline removal, facility removal, remediation, and other costs associated with removal of oil and gas facilities from the Long Beach tidelands that are not the responsibility of other parties. (4) All money remaining in the fund after completion of all activities described in subdivision (3) shall be transferred to the General Fund. (e) The moneys deposited in the fund are hereby appropriated to the commission commencing when all of the following conditions are met: (1) The City of Long Beach adopts a resolution declaring that the oil revenue described in subdivision (d) of Section 4 of Chapter 138 of the Statutes of 1964, First Extraordinary Session, is insufficient to fund the costs of activities described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (d) of this section. (2) The City of Long Beach transmits to the commission a copy of the resolution and all necessary accompanying documentation, including a plan for expenditures for the activities described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (d). (3) The commission reviews the material provided in paragraph (2) and notifies the Controller within 60 calendar days of receiving the material specified in paragraph (2), that expenditure from the fund may be made so that activities described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (d) can begin. The commission shall provide a schedule for expenditures for disbursement of moneys from the fund to the City of Long Beach. The commission shall submit a copy of the schedule to the Department of Finance and to the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature. (f) On or before January 1, 2007, the commission shall report to the Director of Finance and the chairpersons of the appropriate legislative committees on both the following: (1) A forecast of when the tidelands oil fields will be abandoned and require environmental mitigation. (2) An estimate of the likely costs to mitigate the effects of extraction in the tidelands oil fields. 6218. The commission may charge and collect reasonable fees for services performed by it, not exceeding the actual cost to the state of such services. In any case where the commission, either pursuant to law or rule of the commission, requires the publication of advertisements for bids or the publication of any notice in connection with the sale or leasing of state lands, the commission may, by rule, require that the cost of such publication be advanced by any applicant or bidder and be paid by the successful applicant or bidder. 6219. The commission may, if it determines it is in the best interests of the state, accept on behalf of the state any gift, devise, grant, quitclaim, or other conveyance of title to, or interest in, real property. Such land, when acquired, shall be examined for significant environmental values as defined pursuant to Section 6370.1, and classified and administered according to the rules and regulations of the commission. 6220. Whenever authority is not vested in another officer, agency or commission to accept quitclaim deeds on behalf of the State, the authority is vested in the State Lands Commission. 6221. Any instrumentality, district, agency, or political subdivision of the state occupying or using, pursuant to law, lands owned by the state and under the jurisdiction of the commission shall comply with the provisions of this division, and the commission shall issue a permit for occupancy of such land upon application. The commission shall prescribe, by rule or regulation, a reasonable filing fee which shall accompany the application, but such fee may not exceed the average of the commission's actual costs of receiving applications and making the initial title review for such permits. The application shall include: (a) A description of the state lands involved, giving sufficient details or a survey tied to a record survey or monument in order to locate it accurately. (b) The public use to be made of the land. (c) Completed environmental documents prepared pursuant to the commission's rules and regulations. 6222. No county, city, district, political subdivision, agency or officer of the State shall request or make application to have any lands owned or controlled by the United States withdrawn or reserved from settlement, location, sale, entry or other forms of disposal under federal law until 30 days after written notice of such proposed application or request has been filed with the State Lands Commission. 6223. Applications for purchase, or lease of state lands shall be given the priority of time of filing; except that applications filed by any county, city, or officer of the State shall have priority over all other applications regardless of time of filing. Priorities between cities, counties, or officers of the State shall be established by the time of filing of their respective applications. 6224. The commission may adopt rules and regulations which provide for the payment of either a penalty or interest, or both, by any person who fails to pay the commission any sum when it is due under a lease or agreement. The rules and regulations may provide for the assessment, nonassessment, or waiver by the commission of the penalty or interest, or both. Penalties assessed by the commission shall not exceed 5 percent of the principal sum due and the rate of interest shall not exceed 11/2 percent per month from the date on which the sum became due and payable until the date of payment. Penalties and interest assessed pursuant to this section shall be payable to the commission. 6224.1. Any person who trespasses upon any lands owned or controlled by the state and under the jurisdiction of the commission, including, but not limited to, tidelands, submerged lands, the beds of navigable rivers, streams, lakes, bays, estuaries, inlets, or straits, or any school lands, lieu lands, or swamp and overflowed lands, without lawful authority, is liable to the state for the amount of damages which may be assessed therefor, in any civil action, in any court having jurisdiction. 6224.2. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b), any person who appropriates or converts any mineral deposits reserved to, or owned by, the state and under the jurisdiction of the commission, including, but not limited to, oil and gas, other gases (including, but not limited to, nonhydrocarbon and geothermal gases), oil shale, coal, phosphate, sodium, gold, silver, alumina, silica, uranium, trona, fossils of all geological ages, metals and their compounds, alkali, alkali earth, sand, clay, gravel, salts, mineral waters, or any geothermal resources, without lawful authority, is liable to the state for treble the amount of damages which may be assessed therefor, in any civil action, in any court having jurisdiction. (b) If the appropriation or conversion of any such mineral deposit was involuntary, or if the defendant in any action brought under this section had probable cause to believe that the land on which the appropriation or conversion was committed was his own or the land of the person in whose service or by whose direction such act was done, the measure of damages shall be the sum as would compensate for the actual damages. (c) Damages awarded pursuant to this section shall be limited to those determined to have occurred within the five-year period immediately preceding the date of commencement of the action. 6225. (a) The commission shall conduct research, investigations, and title searches on the real property in this state of the beaches of Lake Tahoe which is dedicated for public use and make a report of its findings which shall be open for public inspection. For the purpose of this section the commission may contract upon such terms and conditions as will be in the best interest of the people of the state with one or more private persons, firms, associations, organizations, partnerships, corporations, companies, or public agencies to conduct such research, investigations, and title searches. (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, whenever it appears by final decree of any court of competent jurisdiction that title to any beach property of Lake Tahoe, for which the commission in cooperation with the county has conducted a title search, is vested in a county, the county shall dedicate such beach property to the state. (c) The state shall be under no obligation to operate and maintain the beach property so dedicated to the state. The county or a public agency in which the beach property is situated may, subject to approval of the commission, operate, maintain, or make improvements on such beach property.