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RIVERSIDE URBAN AREA SECURITY INITIATIVE <br />REGION CONTRACT FOR SERVICE';'S — <br />VULNERABLE LOCATION DATA, SURVEY, <br />BENCHMARKING, AND GIS DATA <br />]'his agreement dated June 22, 2011, is made By and Between the City of Riverside, acting on the behave <br />of the Riverside Urban Area (RUASI), whose address is 3900 Main St, Riverside, Ca. referred to as <br />"City/RUASI" and MLC & Associates, Inc (MLQ, whose address is 3525 Hyland Avenue, Suite 265, <br />Costa Mesa, CA 92626, referred to as "Consultant." <br />1. Consultation Services. <br />The City/RUASI hereby continues to employ the Consultant to perform the following services in <br />accordance with the tenris and conditions set forth in the Statement of Work in this agreement. <br />STATE'MEN OF WORK <br />A. Vulnerable Location Data, Survey, Berichmarking, and GIS Data Activities and Deliverables-, <br />MLC and its business partner, USC GIS Research Laboratory, will: <br />Identify the vulnerability of people, property, the environment, and critical facilities to each hazard <br />within each local jurisdiction (as identified in the 2010 RUASI Risk and Gap Analysis) and provide a <br />methodology for determining the hazards to which each jurisdiction and the region are most <br />vulnerable (methodology for ranking hazards by vulnerability). Vulnerabilities will be tracked and an <br />inventory will be developed that will enable a means for prioritization and cross group comparison. <br />The region's existing Critical Infi and Key Resources inventory will be used as the primary <br />source for location identification; additional locations will be added as needed. <br />• Review and integrate available maps and geographic information systems (GIS) to identify hazard- <br />prone areas or infrastructure that do not appear on existing inaps. If map data for a specific hazard is <br />not available, a list of hazards/locations will be compiled for inclusion in future hazard maps (tile list <br />will include key concerns and potential issues). <br />Use existing historical records and maps to support and define areas of vulnerability, such as: Future <br />Land Use Maps (FLUMs), Storm Tide Atlas, Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRM), any available <br />LID (Light Detection and Ranging), critical infrastructure protection data, and other sources. <br />Utilize existing inventories or develop an inventory of cultural, historical, and environmental <br />resources within the region, such as those identified by federal, state:, and local partners as key <br />regional assets. Include resources such as those listed by the National Park Service as National <br />Monuments, structures included in the National Historic Registry, National Parks, State Parks, and <br />other resources that may be identified in the review process to be compiled and evaluated for regional <br />concerns. <br />Integrate baseline data to use in predictive models for current and future vulnerability with respect to <br />changing natural and community conditions. Provide methodology for updating vulnerability <br />information and for integrating real-time threat information with existing data. Utilize or provide an <br />integrated vulnerability mapping and modeling software too] or system to include both natural and <br />human- caused hazards. Tile system will include features, infrastructure,, population data, and other <br />information as determined by appropriate regional stakeholders. The integrated system may be one <br />system or a mechanism for integrating data in existing vulnerability analysis tools e.g., (I IAZUS), <br />CARVER Model (Criticality, Accessibility, Recoverability, Vulnerability, Effect oil Population, <br />Recognizability) from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS), <br />Page 1 <br />39-3 <br />