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HomeEducation CodeCh. 1Art. 1§ 17212 School Site Selection Requirements

§ 17212 School Site Selection Requirements

Education Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 17212 School Site Selection Requirements

Key Takeaways

  • •Schools must check the land carefully before building a new school. They can't just pick the cheapest land.
  • •If the land is in a risky area (like where earthquakes happen), they must do extra checks to make sure it's safe.
  • •They must look at things like how many kids live nearby, if roads are safe, and if there’s clean water.
  • •If the land is too dangerous or too expensive to fix, they can’t build the school there.

Example

A school district wants to build a new school on a cheap piece of land near a fault line (where earthquakes happen).

Before buying the land, they must hire experts to check if it’s safe. If the experts say the land could collapse in an earthquake or fixing it would cost too much, the school can’t be built there. They also have to check if kids can get to the school safely and if there’s enough water.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 17212 School Site Selection Requirements

The governing board of a school district, prior to acquiring any site on which it proposes to construct any school building as defined in Section 17283 shall have the site, or sites, under consideration investigated by competent personnel to ensure that the final site selection is determined by an evaluation of all factors affecting the public interest and is not limited to selection on the basis of raw land cost only. If the prospective schoolsite is located within the boundaries of any special studies zone or within an area designated as geologically hazardous in the safety element of the local general plan as provided in subdivision (g) of Section 65302 of the Government Code, the investigation shall include any geological and soil engineering studies by competent personnel needed to provide an assessment of the nature of the site and potential for earthquake or other geologic hazard damage. The geological and soil engineering studies of the site shall be of such a nature as will preclude siting of a school in any location where the geological and site characteristics are such that the construction effort required to make the school building safe for occupancy is economically unfeasible. No studies are required to be made if the site or sites under consideration have been the subject of adequate prior studies. The evaluation shall also include location of the site with respect to population, transportation, water supply, waste disposal facilities, utilities, traffic hazards, surface drainage conditions, and other factors affecting the operating costs, as well as the initial costs, of the total project. For the purposes of this article, a special studies zone is an area which is identified as a special studies zone on any map, or maps, compiled by the State Geologist pursuant to Chapter 7.5 (commencing with Section 2621) of Division 2 of the Public Resources Code. (Added by Stats. 1996, Ch. 277, Sec. 3. Effective January 1, 1997. Operative January 1, 1998.)

Last verified: January 23, 2026

Key Terms

considerationschoolhazardousdisposaltrafficportwastefine

Related Statutes

  • § 81033 Community College Site Selection
  • § 14022.5 School District Enrollment Definition
  • § 44014 School Employee Assault Reporting
  • § 76002 High School College Enrollment
  • § 48910 Teacher Classroom Suspension Rules

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Education Code. Section 17212.
View Official Source