Evacuation Impact Assessment Checklist

A sharper way to qualitatively analyze evacuation under CEQA

May 11, 2026 • 1 minute read
Woman lifting bicycle into a train as she boards

Evacuation Impact Assessment Checklist

A sharper way to qualitatively analyze evacuation under CEQA

May 11, 2026 • 1 minute read

When wildfire forces a community to evacuate, decisions made during project review can shape how quickly and safely people can get out. Recent California court decisions have increased scrutiny of how lead agencies address evacuation, and the California State Attorney General’s October 2022 guidance emphasizes evaluating evacuation early, when project design, density, and siting can still change. If you’re scoping a CEQA review today, the expectations are higher than they were a few years ago, and the path to meeting them is not always obvious.

We built the Evacuation Impact Assessment Checklist to help.

The checklist is a qualitative evacuation impact assessment tool that organizes evacuation analysis into three categories: project characteristics that may affect wildfire risk or evacuation capacity, including social vulnerability factors that can affect how people receive and act on warnings; the project and jurisdiction’s emergency access, egress, and evacuation preparedness; and the project’s potential impact on evacuation for the existing community. Questions are drawn from the CEQA statute, the Attorney General’s guidance, and recent court decisions. Wildfire is the primary focus, but the checklist can also be applied to other hazards that affect evacuation routes.

Used early, the checklist provides a clearer structure for documenting evidence, identifying where more information is needed, and determining whether additional analysis may be warranted.

share this article

Connect with our Contributors

Ron Milam

Director of Evolving the Status Quo

Email Me

headshot of Chelsea Richer

Chelsea Richer

Climate & Resilience Discipline Leader

Email Me

headshot of Ian Barnes

Ian Barnes

Principal

Email Me

Bob Grandy

Bob Grandy

Principal

Email Me

Headshot of Jason Pack

Jason Pack

Principal

Email Me

Explore More

Navigating Long-Term Transit: Planning in an Uncertain Time

Navigating Long-Term Transit: Planning in an Uncertain Time

We’re partnering with the Whatcom Transportation Authority in Bellingham, Washington to plan the long-term future and develop a strategy for restarting transit service, welcoming back riders, and ensuring riders can safely get where they would like to go. See what’s in the works.

VMT Mitigation Through Fees, Banks, and Exchanges

VMT Mitigation Through Fees, Banks, and Exchanges

On September 27, 2013, Governor Jerry Brown signed SB 743 into law and started a process intended to fundamentally change transportation impact analysis as part of CEQA compliance. These changes include elimination of auto delay, level of service (LOS), and other similar measures of vehicular capacity or traffic congestion as a basis for determining significant impacts. Instead, transportation impacts will be determined based on changes to vehicle miles of travel (VMT).