Description: California's coastal management program is carried out through a partnership between state and local governments. Each of the 15 counties and 61 cities located in whole or in part within the Coastal Zone is required to prepare a local coastal program (LCP) that specifies land use and zoning for their respective areas. After certification of an LCP, coastal development permit authority is delegated to the appropriate local government, however, the Coastal Commission retains original permit jurisdiction over developments occurring on tidelands, submerged lands, and public trust lands. This dataset provides a current cadastral (parcel-based) depiction of the Coastal Commission's adopted post LCP certification permit jurisdiction boundary identified pursuant to Public Resources Code (PRC) Section 30519(b) and California Code of Regulations (CCR) Sections 13577(d), (e) and (f) within the City.The permit jurisdiction boundary is a critical element in both the regulatory and planning programs undertaken by the Coastal Commission and forms an essential component of the geographic permit and appeal jurisdictions administered by the Commission within the Coastal Zone. The development of the permit boundary dataset is part of an effort to create updated digital cadastral jurisdiction boundaries throughout the Coastal Zone. The permit jurisdiction is defined in PRC Section 30519(b) as including any tidelands, submerged lands, or public trust lands, whether filled or unfilled, lying within the Coastal Zone. California Code of Regulations (CCR) Sections 13577(d), (e) and (f) respectively specify tidelands as lands which are located between the lines of mean high tide and mean low tide, submerged lands as lands which lie below the line of mean low tide, and public trust lands as all lands subject to the Common Law Public Trust for commerce, navigation, fisheries, recreation and other public purposes. Public Trust lands include tidelands, submerged lands, the beds of navigable lakes and rivers, and historic tidelands and submerged lands which are presently filled or reclaimed, and which were subject to the Public Trust at any time. In addition to tidelands, submerged lands, and public trust lands, the Commission's permit jurisdiction also includes any uncertified LCP areas within the City.