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San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District Page 5 of 8 <br /> District Reference No:20221504 <br /> November 30,2022 <br /> When a project; is expected to have a significant Impact, the District recommends the <br /> environmental review also include a discussion on the feasibility of implementing a <br /> Voluntary Emission Reduction Agreement (VERA) for this Project. <br /> A VERA is a mitigation measure by which the project proponent provides pound-for- <br /> pound mitigation of emissions increases through a process that develops, funds, and <br /> implements emission reduction projects, with the District serving a role of <br /> administrator of the emissions reduction projects and verifier of the successful <br /> mitigation effort. To implement a VERA, the project proponent and the District enter <br /> into a contractual agreement in which the project proponent agrees to mitigate <br /> project specific emissions by providing funds for the District's incentives programs. <br /> The funds are disbursed by the District in the form of grants for projects that achieve <br /> emission reductions. Titus, project-related impacts on air quality can be mitigated. <br /> Types of emission reduction projects that have been funded in the past include <br /> electrification of stationary internal combustion engines (such as agricultural <br /> irrigation pumps), replacing old heavy-duty trucks with new, cleaner, more efficient <br /> heavy-duty trucks, and replacement of old farm tractors. <br /> In implementing a VERA, the District verifies the actual emission reductions that <br /> have been achieved as a result of completed grant contracts, monitors the emission <br /> reduction projects, and ensures the enforceability of achieved reductions. After the <br /> project is mitigated, the District certifies to the Lead Agency that the mitigation is <br /> completed, providing the Lead Agency with an enforceable mitigation measure <br /> demonstrating that project-related emissions have been mitigated_ To assist the <br /> Lead Agency and project proponent in ensuring that the environmental document is <br /> compliant with CEQA, the District recommends the environmental document <br /> includes an assessment of the feasibility of implementing a VERA. <br /> 5) District Rules and Regulations <br /> The District issues permits for many types of air pollution sources, and regulates <br /> some activities that do not require permits, A project subject to District rules and <br /> regulations would reduce its impacts on air quality through compliance with the <br /> District's regulatory framework. In general, a regulation is a collection of individual <br /> rules, each of which deals with a specific topic. As an example; Regulation II <br /> (Permits) includes District Rule 2010 (Permits Required), Rule 2201 (New and <br /> Modified Stationary Source Review), Rule 2520 (Federally Mandated Operating <br /> Permits), and several other rules pertaining to District permitting requirements and <br /> processes. <br /> The list of rules below is neither exhaustive nor exclusive. Current District rules can <br /> be found online at: www.valleyair.oralrulesfl ruleslist.htm. To identify other District <br /> rules or regulations that apply to future projects, or to obtain information about <br /> District permit requirements, the project proponents are strongly encouraged to <br /> contact the District's Small Business Assistance (SBA) Office at (209) 557-6446. <br />