Paulek v. Department of Water Resources , 179 Cal. Rptr. 3d 775 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 10/31/14
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    ALBERT THOMAS PAULEK,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                      E060038
    v.                                                    (Super.Ct.No. RIC1120142)
    CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF                              OPINION
    WATER RESOURCES,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Daniel A. Ottolia, Judge.
    Affirmed.
    Susan E. Nash for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Robert W. Byrne, Assistant Attorney
    General, and Eric M. Katz, Deputy Attorney General, for Defendant and Respondent.
    Plaintiff and appellant Albert Thomas Paulek appeals the denial of his petition for
    a writ of mandate under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). He seeks a
    writ directing defendant and respondent California Department of Water Resources
    (Department) to vacate its approval of the final environmental impact report (EIR) with
    1
    respect to the Perris Dam Remediation Project. In its draft EIR, the Department proposed
    three activities: (1) remediating structural deficiencies in the Perris Dam, (2) replacing
    the facility’s outlet tower, and (3) creating a new “Emergency Outlet Extension.” In
    response to comments on the draft EIR, the emergency outlet extension was split off into
    a separate environmental review process, and the final EIR at issue considers only dam
    remediation and outlet tower replacement.
    Paulek contends on appeal that the lack of an emergency outlet extension
    constitutes a significant environmental impact that the project as finally approved fails to
    mitigate, and that the separation of the emergency outlet extension into a different project
    constitutes impermissible segmentation. He further contends that the Department did not
    adequately respond to written comments submitted by “Friends of the Northern San
    Jacinto Valley,” an organization of which Paulek is the “Conservation Chair.”1 In
    response, the Department argues that Paulek lacks standing, and the petition in any case
    fails on its merits.
    For the reasons discussed below, we agree with the trial court that Paulek has
    standing, and find no abuse of discretion in its denial of the petition on its merits. We
    therefore affirm.
    1 Paulek brought suit on his own behalf, rather than as an organizational
    representative; Friends of the Northern San Jacinto Valley is not party to the present
    action.
    2
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Perris Dam and Reservoir is a multipurpose facility known collectively as Lake
    Perris, located within the Lake Perris State Recreation Area in Riverside County. Perris
    Dam was built in 1972. A foundation study of the dam—completed by the Department in
    2005 and utilizing recent significant advances in soil liquefaction engineering—showed
    structural deficiencies in its capacity to withstand seismic events not revealed in earlier
    studies. The 2005 report recommended immediately reducing the water level in the
    reservoir, remediation measures to improve the long-term seismic stability of the dam’s
    foundation, and further study, including a seismic review of the dam’s outlet tower.2
    The Department responded to the first recommendation of the report by reducing
    the amount of water held by the dam by about 40 percent. Department staff also
    developed a proposal for long-term improvements to the dam with three parts:
    (1) remediation of the structural deficiencies in the dam’s foundation through various
    measures; (2) replacement of the facility’s existing outlet tower, the structural integrity of
    which was found upon further seismic review to be deficient; and (3) construction of a
    new “emergency outlet extension.”
    The third part of the planned improvements, the emergency outlet extension, was
    not recommended or even considered by the 2005 report. The Department proposed it,
    however, because the emergency water release facilities of the dam, as originally
    2  The outlet tower is a 105-foot-tall freestanding structure containing a number of
    valves at various elevations, the function of which is to convey water to The Metropolitan
    Water District of Southern California’s delivery facility located near the dam, and to
    allow for release of water during emergencies.
    3
    constructed, were designed to discharge water overland, inundating up to 2700 acres of
    flood plain downstream from the dam, and allowing the water to find its own path to the
    Perris Valley Storm Drain. Since the dam’s construction in 1972, however, substantial
    residential developments had been built in that previously-empty flood plain. The
    emergency outlet extension would create a safe route—a two-mile-long path, either
    underground or in an open channel—for such water to flow, if necessary.
    On June 1, 2007, the Department issued a notice of preparation of a draft EIR
    regarding the three-part proposal. The written comments received in response to the
    notice of preparation include, as relevant here, comments from Friends of the Northern
    San Jacinto Valley, an organization with which Paulek is associated, but which were
    drafted for the signature of the organization’s president, Ann L. Turner-McKibben.
    In January 2010, the Department issued a draft EIR for the “Perris Dam
    Remediation Program,” analyzing the environmental impacts of the three-part proposal.
    On February 3, 2010, the Department conducted a public workshop to discuss the draft
    EIR and the proposed activities. Paulek participated in this meeting, as will be discussed
    in more detail below. Additionally, on April 10, 2010, Friends of the Northern San
    Jacinto Valley submitted written comments with respect to the draft EIR, signed by
    Paulek in his capacity as “Conservation Chair” of that organization.
    In the final EIR, dated September 2011, the Department removed the emergency
    outlet extension component of the proposal; this change was in response to comments
    4
    received suggesting consideration of new alternatives.3 With respect to the dam
    remediation and outlet tower replacement portions, the Department certified the final EIR
    on November 18, 2011, and issued a notice of determination.
    Paulek filed his initial petition for a writ of mandate on December 21, 2011; the
    operative first amended petition was filed August 7, 2012. On September 27, 2013, the
    trial court heard oral argument with respect to the first amended petition. On October 1,
    2013, the trial court issued a minute order denying the first amended petition, attaching a
    14-page “Subsequent Ruling on Submitted Mandamus Petition” explaining its decision.
    Judgment was entered on October 24, 2013.
    II. DISCUSSION
    A. Paulek Satisfied CEQA Prerequisites for Bringing His Petition.
    The Department contends Paulek “lacks standing” to challenge the project
    approval because he failed to comply with the requirements of Public Resources Code
    section 21177, subdivision (b).4 The Department argues that Paulek’s comments during
    the public hearing on the project constituted questions, but not objections, and therefore
    do not satisfy the prerequisite for bringing a petition to challenge the Department’s
    approval of the final EIR. We are not persuaded.
    3 The various alternatives for the emergency outlet extension are being considered
    as a separate project with a separate CEQA review. The trial court took judicial notice of
    the notice of preparation for the “DWR Perris Dam Emergency Release Facility Project
    EIR,” issued on September 9, 2013, as well as a printout of a PowerPoint presentation
    made at the scoping meeting for that project, held September 19, 2013.
    4 Further statutory references are to the Public Resources Code unless otherwise
    indicated.
    5
    “‘Only a proper party may petition for a writ of mandate to challenge the
    sufficiency of an EIR or the validity of an act or omission under CEQA.’”5 (Center for
    Biological Diversity v. County of San Bernardino (2010) 
    185 Cal. App. 4th 866
    , 889.)
    Section 21177 requires a petitioner to have “objected to the approval of the project orally
    or in writing during the public comment period provided by this division or prior to the
    close of the public hearing on the project before the filing of the notice of determination
    pursuant to Sections 21108 and 21152.” (§ 21177, subd. (b).) “‘[G]eneralized
    environmental comments’” or “‘relatively . . . bland and general references to
    environmental matters’” or ‘“isolated and unelaborated comment[s]’” are insufficient, but
    comments need only “‘“be sufficiently specific so that the agency has the opportunity to
    evaluate and respond to them”’” to constitute an objection that confers standing. (Sierra
    Club v. City of Orange (2008) 
    163 Cal. App. 4th 523
    , 536.) Any person who objected to a
    CEQA approval on some ground may also raise issues presented to the agency by any
    other person who objected. (§ 21177, subd. (a); see Maintain Our Desert Environment v.
    Town of Apple Valley (2004) 
    124 Cal. App. 4th 430
    , 439 [Fourth Dist., Div. Two]
    [“[section 21177] permits any person who objected to raise any ground asserted as an
    objection by any other objecting party”].)
    5  Whether section 21177, subdivision (b) is better viewed as a requirement to
    obtain standing or an application of the exhaustion of administrative remedies doctrine is
    an academic debate in which we need not take sides. (See Tahoe Vista Concerned
    Citizens v. County of Placer (2000) 
    81 Cal. App. 4th 577
    , 589-591 [discussing whether
    section 21177 is properly considered an exhaustion of remedies statute or a standing
    requirement].) Either way, satisfaction of section 21177, subdivision (b) is a
    “jurisdictional prerequisite to maintenance of a CEQA action.” (Bakersfield Citizens for
    Local Control v. City of Bakersfield (2004) 
    124 Cal. App. 4th 1184
    , 1199.)
    6
    At the public workshop with respect to the draft EIR, Paulek expressed concern
    that the proposed remediation measures with respect to Perris Dam’s structural integrity,
    as he understood them, were insufficient, commenting: “[O]ne thing that’s not clear to
    me is will this solution fix the problem? . . . [¶] It . . . looks like you’re building another
    dam in front of the existing dam. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . Is this going to work?” He asked a
    further question about why the capacity of the proposed emergency outlet extension,
    which was still a part of the project at the time, was less than the existing emergency
    release capability, implicitly expressing concern that the new structure’s capacity would
    be sufficient.6 These are not generalized environmental comments, but rather
    expressions of concern specifically regarding the proposed project—essentially,
    objections—that are sufficiently specific in both subject and level of detail to allow the
    Department to evaluate and respond to them. As such, Paulek satisfied the prerequisite
    codified in section 21177, subdivision (b), for bringing his petition.
    The Department argues to the contrary that, because Paulek’s comments were
    phrased as questions, they do not constitute objections in the meaning of section 21177.
    The Department presents no case law in support of its narrow definition of “objection,”
    and we are aware of none. Moreover, a comment that raises questions about whether a
    proposed project will in fact solve the problem it is supposed to remedy is fairly
    understood as an expression of disapproval, no matter whether phrased as a declarative
    6 According to the draft EIR, the existing emergency release structures were
    designed to accommodate the release of 3800 cubic feet per second of water; the
    proposed new emergency release structures would accommodate release of up to 1500
    cubic feet per second.
    7
    sentence or a question. As such, it constitutes an “objection,” even under the definition
    of the word proposed by the Department, adopted from an online dictionary, which
    includes “‘a feeling or expression of disapproval.’” The same reasoning applies to a
    comment that raises questions about why a proposed structure that has less capacity than
    the one it is replacing.
    The Department further suggests that Paulek should not be understood to have
    “objected” within the meaning of section 21177, subdivision (b), because he “raised no
    environmental issues whatsoever,” instead only “ask[ing] questions about whether the
    project will achieve its objectives . . . .” This argument ignores that CEQA explicitly
    requires balancing of the expected benefits of a project against its unavoidable adverse
    environmental risks. (See Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, § 15093, subd. (a) [“CEQA requires
    the decision-making agency to balance, as applicable, the economic, legal, social,
    technological, or other benefits . . . of a proposed project against its unavoidable
    environmental risks when determining whether to approve the project.”].) An objection
    challenging a project’s purported benefits is just as pertinent to the required balancing
    analysis as an objection regarding environmental risks, and is equally adequate for
    satisfying section 21177, subdivision (b).
    In short, Paulek satisfied the prerequisites for bringing his petition articulated in
    section 21177, subdivision (b).7 We turn now to the merits of the petition.
    7 Having concluded that Paulek satisfied the requirements of section 21177,
    subdivision (b), we need not consider whether the exception to those requirements in
    section 21177, subdivision (e) applies, as Paulek has argued.
    8
    B. Paulek’s Challenges to the Department’s Approval of the Final EIR Lack Merit.
    1. Standard of review.
    In reviewing compliance with CEQA, we review the agency’s action, not the trial
    court’s decision; “in that sense appellate judicial review under CEQA is de novo.”
    (Vineyard Area Citizens for Responsible Growth, Inc. v. City of Rancho Cordova (2007)
    
    40 Cal. 4th 412
    , 428.) The agency’s action is reviewed for prejudicial abuse of discretion.
    (§ 21168.5.) An agency abuses its discretion if it fails to proceed in a manner required by
    law or if substantial evidence in the record does not support the agency’s decision. (Save
    Our Peninsula Committee v. Monterey County Bd. of Supervisors (2001) 
    87 Cal. App. 4th 99
    , 117.) “[A]n EIR is presumed adequate [citation], and the [petitioner] in a CEQA
    action has the burden of proving otherwise.” (State of California v. Superior Court
    (1990) 
    222 Cal. App. 3d 1416
    , 1419.)
    2. Removal of the emergency outlet extension from the final EIR does not leave a
    significant environmental impact of the project unmitigated.
    Paulek contends that the decision to remove the new emergency outlet extension
    from the project leaves a significant environmental impact of the project unmitigated,
    pointing to the flooding that would occur in residential areas downstream of the dam in
    the event of an emergency water release, absent the emergency outlet extension. This
    argument fails, because nothing in the administrative record suggests the proposed dam
    remediation or outlet tower replacement activities will cause or increase the risk of
    flooding that the emergency outlet extension is intended to remedy.
    9
    CEQA requires that public agencies “mitigate or avoid the significant effects on
    the environment of projects that it carries out or approves whenever it is feasible to do
    so.” (§ 21002.1, subd. (b), italics added.) A project’s environmental effects “are
    determined by comparison with the existing ‘baseline physical conditions.’” (In re Bay-
    Delta etc. (2008) 
    43 Cal. 4th 1143
    , 1167.) Environmental problems that would continue
    to exist even in the absence of any project are “part of the baseline conditions rather than
    program-generated environmental impacts . . . .” (Id. at 1168.)
    Here, the administrative record demonstrates, and Paulek has not contested, that in
    the absence of any project, the danger of flooding residential areas below Perris Dam in
    the event of an emergency release would remain; it is a product of the original design of
    the dam’s emergency release facilities, which did not account for later-developed
    residential areas in the previously empty flood plain. The proposed dam remediation and
    outlet tower replacement would not increase that baseline danger. To the contrary, the
    Department concluded the dam remediation and outlet tower replacement “would not
    alter existing draining patterns or expose people to structures that could result in
    significant injury or death through flooding.” Indeed, the two proposed activities, even
    without the emergency outlet extension, will reduce the baseline flooding danger;
    remediation of structural deficiencies in the dam and rebuilding the outlet tower to
    current seismic standards decreases the likelihood of dam failure, thereby reducing the
    likelihood any emergency release of water will be necessary. The flooding danger from
    the lack of an emergency outlet extension, therefore, is part of the baseline conditions that
    do not fall within the CEQA mitigation requirements.
    10
    Paulek misreads the final EIR when he infers that the Division of Safety of Dams
    (DSOD), which is a part of the Department, has imposed requirements regarding dam
    release capacity that require a different conclusion. Paulek here conflates two separate
    issues: (1) the emergency release capacity of the dam, and (2) preventing flooding of
    residential areas downstream from the dam in the event of an emergency release. Paulek
    cites to a Department response to a comment referencing a DSOD requirement that a dam
    facility be capable of drawing down 10 percent of its full capacity within 10 days, and
    noting that a controlled release of 1500 cubic feet per second is required to meet that
    capacity. Paulek ignores, however, that the dam as originally constructed meets that
    requirement; it is capable of releasing 3800 cubic feet per second. The emergency outlet
    extension originally proposed in the draft EIR, and now being considered in a separate
    CEQA process (see fn. 4, ante), would also meet the DSOD release capacity requirement,
    but with the additional benefit of not flooding residential areas beneath the dam in the
    process. It does not follow that the project for dam remediation and outlet tower
    replacement—which would have no effect on the current release capacity of the
    facility—cannot be approved except together in the same CEQA process with the
    emergency outlet extension, or that the DSOD release capacity requirement will remain
    unsatisfied upon completion of only the two-part program contemplated by the final EIR.
    In short, Paulek fails to show any unmitigated environmental impact of the two-
    part program considered in the final EIR and approved by DWR.
    11
    3. Considering alternatives for the emergency outlet extension in a separate
    CEQA process does not constitute improper segmentation.
    Paulek contends the deferral of the emergency outlet extension constitutes
    improper segmentation of the project, and that the emergency outlet extension “is an
    integral part of the Perris Dam Remediation Program and must be part of the [final EIR].”
    The Department disagrees, as do we.
    It is well established that “‘CEQA forbids “piecemeal” review of the significant
    environmental impacts of a project.’” (Banning Ranch Conservancy v. City of Newport
    Beach (2012) 
    211 Cal. App. 4th 1209
    , 1222 (Banning Ranch).) Rather, CEQA mandates
    “that environmental considerations do not become submerged by chopping a large project
    into many little ones—each with a minimal potential impact on the environment—which
    cumulatively may have disastrous consequences.” (Bozung v. Local Agency Formation
    Com. (1975) 
    13 Cal. 3d 263
    , 283-284 (Bozung).) Thus, the term “project” as used for
    CEQA purposes is defined broadly as “the whole of an action, which has a potential for
    resulting in either a direct physical change in the environment, or a reasonably
    foreseeable indirect physical change in the environment . . . .” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14,
    § 15378, subd. (a).)
    “Courts have considered separate activities as one CEQA project and required
    them to be reviewed together where, for example, the second activity is a reasonably
    foreseeable consequence of the first activity [citation]; the second activity is a future
    expansion of the first activity that will change the scope of the first activity’s impacts
    [citation]; or both activities are integral parts of the same project [citation].” (Sierra Club
    12
    v. West Side Irrigation Dist. (2005) 
    128 Cal. App. 4th 690
    , 698 (Sierra Club)). Whether a
    project has received improper piecemeal review is a question of law that we review
    independently. (Banning 
    Ranch, supra
    , 211 Cal.App.4th at p. 1224.)
    There is no basis in the administrative record to conclude that the emergency
    outlet extension is a “reasonably foreseeable consequence” of the dam remediation and
    tower rebuilding projects. (See Sierra 
    Club, supra
    , 128 Cal.App.4th at p. 698.) To be
    sure, as Paulek notes, all three activities are necessary to “remediate all the flood hazards
    present at Lake Perris.” As discussed above, however, the need for an emergency outlet
    extension is not a consequence of the dam remediation or outlet tower reconstruction.
    Rather, it is necessitated by the original design of the dam’s emergency release facilities,
    combined with the land use decisions resulting in construction of residential
    developments in a previously empty flood plain below the dam. This case is therefore
    distinguishable from cases where one stage of a project is the first domino to fall in a
    causally-related series of events to follow. (See 
    Bozung, supra
    , 13 Cal.3d at p. 279
    [agency’s annexation of land was first step towards development of that land].) Neither
    does approval of the dam remediation and outlet tower replacement legally or practically
    compel completion of an emergency outlet extension. (See Banning 
    Ranch, supra
    , 211
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1223 [collecting cases where “reviewed project legally compels or
    practically presumes completion of another action”].)
    Authority requiring separate activities to be reviewed together because a second
    activity is a “future expansion” of the first that will “change the scope of the first
    activity’s impacts” is also inapplicable. (See Sierra 
    Club, supra
    , 128 Cal.App.4th at p.
    13
    698.) For example, in Laurel Heights Improvement Assn. v. Regents of University of
    California (1988) 
    47 Cal. 3d 376
    (Laurel Heights), the California Supreme Court required
    a project involving university research facilities moving into part of a newly-purchased
    building to be reviewed, together with plans to later occupy the remainder of the building,
    once the leases of other tenants expires. (Id. at pp. 396-397.) Thus, if the Department
    contemplated, say, remediation of structural deficiencies in the foundation of the right
    abutment of Perris Dam, but also anticipated performing similar work on the left
    abutment at a later time, Laurel Heights and similar authority might well require review
    of the two separate activities in a single EIR. But those are not the facts of this case. The
    emergency outlet extension of course has environmental impacts that are different from
    those of the dam remediation and outlet tower reconstruction emergency outlet extension.
    But there is no basis to conclude that it is a “future expansion” of either of the other two
    projects.
    Neither is there any basis to conclude that the emergency outlet extension is an
    “integral part of the same project” as the dam remediation and outlet tower replacement
    projects. (See Sierra 
    Club, supra
    , 128 Cal.App.4th at p. 698.) Dam remediation and
    outlet tower replacement both are intended to improve the ability of the Lake Perris
    facility to withstand seismic events. Those projects will both serve that purpose, no
    matter whether an emergency outlet extension is built or not. The emergency outlet
    extension does not improve the ability of the facility to withstand seismic events. Rather,
    its purpose is to prevent downstream flooding in the event an emergency release of water
    from Lake Perris is necessary (whether the emergency is caused by a seismic event, or
    14
    some other circumstance). Again, even if the dam remediation were not performed, and
    the outlet tower were not constructed, a new emergency outlet extension would serve its
    primary purpose. Paulek’s assertion that the dam remediation and tower replacement
    “would not be constructed without the construction of the ‘emergency outlet
    conveyance’” is simply unsupported by anything in the administrative record.
    Communities for a Better Environment v. City of Richmond (2010) 
    184 Cal. App. 4th 70
    , is instructive. In that case, the court of appeal considered an EIR for a
    refinery upgrade that would include a new hydrogen plant that, in addition to improving
    the refinery’s own operations, would allow production of additional hydrogen, beyond
    that needed at the facility. (Communities for a Better 
    Environment, supra
    , at pp. 97-98.)
    The EIR did not consider as part of the same project a pipeline that would be needed to
    transport any such excess hydrogen off site; that was being considered in a separate
    CEQA process. (Communities for a Better 
    Environment, supra
    , at p. 97.) The court of
    appeal found that treating the pipeline as a separate project for purposes of CEQA review
    did not constitute “illegal ‘piecemealing,’” reasoning that the principal purpose of the
    refinery upgrade—to “‘improve the [r]efinery’s ability to process crude oil and other feed
    stocks’” was different from the principal purpose of the pipeline—“to transport excess
    hydrogen . . . to other hydrogen consumers . . . .” (Communities for a Better
    
    Environment, supra
    , at p. 101.) Similarly, here, the principal purpose of the dam
    remediation and outlet tower reconstruction—to improve the ability of the Perris Lake
    facility itself to withstand seismic events—is different from, and does not depend on, the
    15
    functioning of the emergency outlet extension, the purpose of which is to transport water
    out of the lake and safely downstream from the dam, should it be necessary to do so.
    The circumstance that the draft EIR for the “Perris Dam Remediation Program”
    described a three-part program, while the final EIR includes only two of those parts, is,
    contrary to Paulek’s suggestion, immaterial to our analysis. Under CEQA, an agency
    may prepare one EIR for several similar projects that do not comprise a single larger
    project, or prepare one for each project, in its discretion. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14,
    § 15165.) The Department’s initial decision to analyze each of the three proposed
    activities related to Lake Perris together in one draft EIR is not determinative, or even
    probative, of whether the emergency outlet extension is part of a single larger project that
    must be considered in a “single program EIR.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, § 15165.)
    Paulek’s contention that the project was improperly segmented is rejected.
    4. The Department’s responses to comments were adequate.
    Paulek contends that the Department’s responses in the final EIR to comments
    submitted by the Friends of the Northern San Jacinto Valley—a July 2, 2007 letter
    regarding the notice of preparation, and an April 10, 2010, letter regarding the draft EIR,
    which makes reference to the first letter—are inadequate. We disagree; DWR’s
    responses were sufficient.
    After issuance of a draft EIR, “[t]he lead agency shall evaluate comments on
    environmental issues received from persons who reviewed the draft EIR and shall prepare
    a written response.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, § 15088, subd. (a).) “Responses to
    comments need not be exhaustive; they need only demonstrate a ‘good faith, reasoned
    16
    analysis.’” (Gilroy Citizens for Responsible Planning v. City of Gilroy (2006) 
    140 Cal. App. 4th 911
    , 937 (Gilroy Citizens); Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, § 15088, subd. (c).)
    “‘“The determination of the sufficiency of the agency’s responses to comments on the
    draft EIR turns upon the detail required in the responses. [Citation.] Where a general
    comment is made, a general response is sufficient.”’” (Gilroy 
    Citizens, supra
    , 140
    Cal.App.4th at p. 937.) “Satisfactory responses to comments ‘“may be provided by
    reference to the EIR itself.”’” (Ibid.)
    First, the April 10, 2010, letter comments that the draft EIR ignores or gives “short
    shrift” to comments submitted in the July 2, 2007, letter.8 It further asserts that the draft
    EIR “fails as a CEQA information document” in that it “does not provide the necessary
    information and analysis for the public, lead, responsible, and trustee agencies to make
    informed well reasoned decisions on this project.” The Department’s response in the
    final EIR is as follows: “The draft EIR adequately discusses the types and level of
    impacts this project will have on the environment.” Paulek contends this response was
    legally inadequate.
    The Department’s response was sufficient. First, the Department had no
    obligation to respond to the July 2, 2007, letter. A response is required only with respect
    to comments “from persons who reviewed the draft EIR.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14,
    § 15088. subd. (a).) On July 2, 2007, there were no such persons, because the draft EIR
    had not been circulated. Second, the April 10, 2010, comment references the earlier
    8   This portion of the letter is referred to as Comment 15A in DWR’s responses.
    17
    letter, but provides no specific examples of how the draft EIR “fails as a CEQA
    information document,” or what sort of “necessary information and analysis” was omitted
    from the draft EIR. As noted, a general comment requires only a general response.
    (Gilroy 
    Citizens, supra
    , 140 Cal.App.4th at p. 937.)
    Second, the April 10, 2010, letter states that it attaches a “1979 Mitigation
    Agreement,” to which the Department was a party, so that it may be included in the
    administrative record. With respect to that agreement, the letter alleges that the draft EIR
    failed to analyze environmental impacts on lands beneath the dam, or to address the need
    for “wildlife mitigation replacement lands.”9 The Department’s response acknowledges
    that the 1979 Mitigation Agreement will become a part of the administrative record,
    because all comments submitted become a part of the administrative record.10
    Additionally, the Department’s response points to specific portions of the draft EIR
    analyzing permanent and temporary environmental impacts on lands beneath the dam.
    The response affirms that permanent environmental impacts will be mitigated as required,
    and notes that various other governmental agencies will have to be involved in
    identifying any necessary replacement lands.
    Paulek complains that the Department’s response is “completely devoid of any
    direct discussion of the [1979 Mitigation Agreement]” but points to no authority
    supporting the notion that such “direct discussion” was required. To the contrary, it is
    9  These comments are referred to as Comment 15B in the Department’s
    responses.
    10 The 1979 Mitigation Agreement is included in the administrative record, as
    stated in the Department’s response.
    18
    perfectly appropriate for the Department to provide a response by reference to the
    portions of the draft EIR in which the environmental impacts raised by the comment are
    analyzed. (Gilroy 
    Citizens, supra
    , 140 Cal.App.4th at p. 937.) Paulek further complains
    that the response does not “describe the disposition of the significant environmental
    issues raised,” apparently demanding a complete accounting of what specific parcels will
    be used as replacement for any land permanently impacted by the projects. But the
    response adequately explains that approval of various other public agencies will be
    necessary before such identification could be accomplished, and affirms the
    Department’s intention to fully comply with applicable mitigation requirements. We
    conclude the Department’s response fully complies with CEQA’s requirement to
    demonstrate good faith, reasoned analysis.
    Paulek’s reliance on The Flanders Foundation v. City of Carmel-by-the-Sea
    (2012) 
    202 Cal. App. 4th 603
    , is misplaced. In that case, a comment proposed specific
    mitigation measures, and the agency involved failed to provide any response to the
    suggestion. (Id. at pp. 615-616.) Here, the Department did respond to the comment at
    issue by pointing to the portions of the draft EIR that perform the analysis demanded, and
    affirming the Department’s intention to comply with the mitigation requirements
    referenced. Paulek additionally cites Katzeff v. California Deptartment of Forestry &
    Fire Protection (2010) 
    181 Cal. App. 4th 601
    , 614, for the proposition that “ . . . where a
    public agency has adopted a mitigation measure for a project, it may not authorize
    destruction or cancellation of the mitigation . . . without reviewing the continuing need
    for the mitigation, stating a reason for its actions, and supporting it with substantial
    19
    evidence.’” But it is not apparent what this proposition has to do with the proverbial
    price of tea in China. Nothing in the Department’s response, or anywhere else in the
    administrative record, suggests that the Department has authorized or contemplates
    “destruction or cancellation” of any mitigation measure.
    The April 10, 2010, letter further attaches a Department of Fish and Game
    authorization implementing the “Stephens’ Kangaroo Rat Habitat Conservation Plan
    (SKR HCP), and requests its inclusion in the administrative record. It also cites various
    provisions of law related to the SKR HCP, including the role of the Riverside County
    Habitat Conservation Agency (RCHCA) regarding the Stephens’ kangaroo rat under
    California’s Endangered Species Act, and requirements for mitigation of “incidental
    take” of endangered species generally.11 The Department’s response points to portions
    of the draft EIR discussing the Stephens’ kangaroo rat and the SKR HCP, acknowledges
    that RCHCA approval will be needed for any impacts within the area governed by the
    SKR HCP, and cites to a mitigation measure requiring the Department to comply with the
    requirements of the SKR HCP.12
    Again, the rule that a general comment requires only a general response applies.
    Paulek fails to identify specifically any manner in which this response is deficient, and
    we can discern none.
    11  These comments are referred to as Comment 15C in the Department’s
    responses.
    12 The authorization regarding the SKR HCP is included in the administrative
    record, as Paulek had requested.
    20
    The April 10, 2010, letter further asserts that the “Draft EIR fails to properly
    qualify and quantify the incidental take this project will precipitate on the endangered
    [Stephens’ kangaroo rat],” and fails to fully minimize or mitigate such incidental take, or
    to conduct an analysis of the cumulative impact of the proposed activity together with
    other past and reasonably foreseeable future activities.13 The Department’s response
    points to its analysis in the draft EIR with respect to potential impacts on biological
    resources, explicitly including analysis of impacts on the Stephens’ kangaroo rat, and
    including a detailed cumulative impact analysis. The response further points to surveys
    conducted and included in the administrative record that found no Stephens’ kangaroo
    rats would be directly impacted by the project, because none were located in project
    areas, and the areas anticipated to be impacted by the projects have not been identified as
    historically occupied by the Stephens’ kangaroo rat. The response also refers to
    discussion in the EIR of mitigation measures adopted with respect to any potential
    impacts, and acknowledges again that compliance with the SKR HCP would be required,
    including approvals from the RCHCA for any temporary or permanent impacts to
    grasslands.
    Paulek asserts that this response is overly general and fails to respond in detail to
    the “significant environmental issues” raised by the comments. Again, however,
    response by reference to the draft EIR itself is permissible. (Gilroy 
    Citizens, supra
    , 140
    Cal.App.4th at p. 937.) Paulek provides no cogent analysis as to why the referenced
    13 These comments are referred to as Comment 15D in the Department’s
    responses.
    21
    sections of the draft EIR are not responsive to the comments. For example, Paulek insists
    that the Department’s “failure to address the cumulative impact of taking SKR habitat
    within the SKR reserve is particularly egregious.” He fails to articulate, however, any
    reason why the cumulative impact analysis that is in the draft EIR—the comment’s false
    assertion of a complete lack of such analysis notwithstanding—does not suffice. And he
    ignores entirely the circumstance that CEQA does not require exhaustive analysis of
    cumulative impacts. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, § 15130, subd. (b) [“The discussion of
    cumulative impacts shall reflect the severity of the impacts and their likelihood of
    occurrence, but the discussion need not provide as great detail as is provided for the
    effects attributable to the project alone.”] Further, the response acknowledges that the
    Department would be required to comply with the SKR HCP and obtain the approvals
    required under that conservation plan, which was specifically designed to facilitate
    preservation and management of habitat occupied the Stephens’ kangaroo rat within a
    large area encompassing multiple developments.14 (See Banning 
    Ranch, supra
    , 211
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1231 [discussing purpose of conservation plan].)
    In sum, Paulek has failed to meet his burden of showing the Department’s
    responses to written comments regarding the draft EIR to be inadequate.
    14  To the extent Paulek may suggest compliance with the SKR HCP is insufficient
    to protect the Stephens’ kangaroo rat, that is a matter beyond the scope of this action, and
    should have been raised during proceedings regarding the adoption of the SKR HCP.
    22
    III. DISPOSITION
    The judgment appealed from is affirmed. Defendant and Respondent California
    Department of Water Resources shall recover its costs on appeal.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION.
    HOLLENHORST
    Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    KING
    J.
    CODRINGTON
    J.
    23
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E060038

Citation Numbers: 231 Cal. App. 4th 35, 179 Cal. Rptr. 3d 775, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 999

Judges: Hollenhorst

Filed Date: 10/31/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024