The act in its current form has three main provisions:
1) It directs the State of California Division of Mines and Geology (now known as the California Geological Survey) to compile detailed maps of the surface traces of known active faults. These maps include both the best known location where faults cut the surface and a buffer zone around the known trace(s);
2) It requires property owners (or their real estate agents) to formally and legally disclose that their property lies within the zones defined on those maps before selling the property; and
3) It prohibits new construction of houses within these zones unless a comprehensive geologic investigation shows that the fault does not pose a hazard to the proposed structure.
The Act was one of several that changed building codes and practices to improve earthquake safety. These changes are intended to reduce the damage from future earthquakes.
While the Act mandates that owners disclose the fact that their property lies within the Alquist-Priolo zone when they sell it, there are no legal requirements to disclose the fact to renters living on the property. Renters should investigate the location of active faults on their own before signing a lease or rental agreement.
Legally, the Act only applies to structures for human occupancy (houses, apartments, condominiums, etc.). However, the official geologic maps delineating the fault zone are used to help place a variety of structures on safe ground. For example, the development Belmont Learning Center, a large school complex, in Downtown Los Angeles by the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) was complicated by discovery of a surface fault on the property in 2002. The LAUSD was required to remove a building that had been built directly atop the fault prior to its discovery.
The Act only addresses the hazard of surface fault rupture and does not address other earthquake hazards. The Seismic Hazards Mapping Act, passed in 1997, addresses non-surface fault rupture earthquake hazards, including liquefaction and seismically induced landslides.
In January 1972, Governor Reagan established the Governor’s Earthquake Council as a reaction to the Sylmar quake, whose recommendations led to the Act.
It went into effect on March 7, 1973. This law was amended a few years later to include a disclosure obligation for real estate licensees.
The Act was called the Alquist-Priolo State Special Studies Zone Act prior to 1994.
The Act was Amended September 26, 1974, May 4, 1975, September 28, 1975, September 22, 1976, September 27, 1979, September 21, 1990, and July 29, 1991.