Save Civita Because Sudberry Won't v. City of San Diego ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 12/16/21
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SAVE CIVITA BECAUSE SUDBERRY                  D077591
    WON’T,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    (Super. Ct. No. 37-2017-
    v.                                     00045044-CU-TT-CTL)
    CITY OF SAN DIEGO,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
    Joel R. Wohlfeil, Judge. Affirmed.
    Briggs Law Corporation, Cory J. Briggs and Janna M. Ferraro for
    Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Mara W. Elliott, City Attorney, George F. Schaefer, Assistant City
    Attorney, and Lynn M. Beekman and Benjamin P. Syz, Deputy City
    Attorneys, for Defendant and Respondent.
    *      Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 8.1110, this opinion is
    certified for publication with the exception of parts III.A.2, III.A.3, III.A.4,
    and III.B.
    I.
    INTRODUCTION
    The City of San Diego (City) certified an environmental impact report
    (EIR) for the “Serra Mesa Community Plan [SMCP] Amendment Roadway
    Connection Project” (Project) and approved an amendment to the SMCP and
    the City’s General Plan to reflect the proposed roadway.1 The proposed four-
    lane major road—together with a median, bicycle lanes, and pedestrian
    pathways—would run in a north/south direction between Phyllis Place in
    Serra Mesa to Via Alta / Franklin Ridge Road in Mission Valley.2 Via Alta
    and Franklin Ridge Road are contained within Civita, a partially built out
    mixed-use development that the City approved in 2008.3
    Save Civita Because Sudberry Won’t (“Save Civita”) filed a combined
    petition for writ of mandate and complaint for declaratory and injunctive
    relief (Petition / Complaint) against the City, challenging the City’s
    certification of the EIR and approval of the Project.4 In its Petition /
    1      The resolution approving the amendment noted that it “reconciles a
    conflict between the Serra Mesa and Mission Valley community plans
    because the Mission Valley Community Plan [MVCP] includes the street
    connection but the current version of [SMCP] does not.” The resolution also
    stated that the amendment to the City’s General Plan was required “due to
    the [SMCP] being part of the Land Use Element of the 2008 General Plan.”
    2     When depicted on a map, the proposed roadway forms an upside-down
    “Y”-shaped intersection at Phyllis Place, Via Alta, and Franklin Ridge Road.
    (See Appendix A, post.)
    3      Civita was initially named “Quarry Falls.” For purposes of clarity, we
    refer to the development as Civita throughout this opinion.
    4    According to the Petition / Complaint, Save Civita “is a non-profit
    organization,” that has “[a]t least one . . . member[ ] [who] resides in, or near,
    2
    Complaint and briefing, Save Civita contended that the City violated the
    California Environmental Quality Act (“CEQA”) (Pub. Resources Code,
    § 21000 et seq.),5 the Planning and Zoning Law (Gov. Code, § 65000 et seq.),
    and the public’s due-process and fair-hearing rights.6 The trial court denied
    the Petition / Complaint in its entirety and entered a judgment in favor of the
    City.
    On appeal, Save Civita raises four claims related to the City’s
    certification of the EIR for the Project. First, Save Civita claims that the City
    violated Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g)7 in failing to summarize
    revisions made in the Project’s recirculated draft EIR (RE-DEIR). Save
    Civita also claims that the Project’s final EIR (FEIR) was deficient because it
    failed to adequately analyze, as an alternative to the Project, a proposal to
    amend the MVCP to remove the planned road from that community plan.
    Save Civita further contends that the FEIR is deficient because it failed to
    adequately analyze the Project’s traffic impacts. Specifically, Save Civita
    maintains that the FEIR failed to disclose the true margin of error associated
    the Serra Mesa community of [the] City of San Diego, California, and [that]
    has an interest in, among other things, ensuring open, accountable, and
    responsive government and in protecting Serra Mesa’s quality of life.”
    The administrative record indicates that Sudberry Properties is an
    entity associated with Civita’s developer.
    5     Unless otherwise indicated, all subsequent statutory references are to
    the Public and Resources Code.
    6     Specifically, Save Civita raised its CEQA and Planning and Zoning
    Law claims in the Petition / Complaint, and asserted its procedural due
    process claim in a supporting brief.
    7    References to “Guidelines,” are to the administrative guidelines for the
    implementation of CEQA. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, § 15000 et seq.)
    3
    with a traffic projection in the FEIR and “ignored obvious traffic hazards,”
    (capitalization and boldface omitted) that the Project would create on Via
    Alta and Franklin Ridge Road. Save Civita also claims that the FEIR failed
    to adequately discuss the Project’s inconsistency with the General Plan’s goal
    of creating pedestrian-friendly communities.
    In addition to its EIR / CEQA claims, Save Civita maintains that the
    Project will have a deleterious effect on the pedestrian-friendly Civita
    community and that the City therefore violated the Planning and Zoning law
    in concluding that the Project is consistent with the City’s General Plan.
    Finally, Save Civita maintains that the City acted in a quasi-adjudicatory
    capacity in certifying the FEIR and approving the Project and that a City
    Council member violated the public’s procedural due process rights by
    improperly advocating for the Project prior to its approval.
    In a published section of this opinion we conclude that the City did not
    violate Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g) in failing to summarize
    revisions made to the Project’s previously circulated programmatic draft EIR
    (PDEIR) in the RE-DEIR. (See pt. III.A.1, post.) In a second published
    section, we conclude that the City Council acted in a quasi-legislative
    capacity in certifying the FEIR and approving the Project, and that this
    determination forecloses Save Civita’s procedural due process claim. (See
    pt. III.C, post.) In unpublished sections of this opinion, we reject the
    remainder of Save Civita’s contentions. We affirm the trial court’s judgment
    in favor of the City in its entirety.
    4
    II.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. Civita
    1. The Civita development
    In 2005, Civita’s developer sought approvals from the City to develop a
    large mixed-use development in Mission Valley that would contain
    residences, public recreational spaces, open lands, and retail and office space.
    The FEIR8 described the Civita development in part as follows:
    “[The Civita] site encompasses approximately 225 acres
    immediately south of Phyllis Place. The [Civita
    development] includes . . . a mixed-use, walkable
    community including residential, commercial, and parks
    and open space development.”
    The FEIR also described Civita in part as follows:
    “The [Civita EIR] stated that the proposed project would
    include a development cap that would prohibit the project
    from exceeding 4,780 residential units, 603,000 square feet
    of retail space, and 620,000 square feet of office/business
    park uses. The [Civita development] would also include
    31.8 acres of public and private parks, civic uses, open
    space and trails, and an optional school site. Construction
    of . . . the southwestern portion of the site has been
    completed. Land uses within this area include currently
    occupied residences.”
    The Civita development is located primarily within the MVCP area,
    bordered on the south by Friars Road, on the north by Phyllis Place (within
    the SMCP area), on the east by interstate I-805, and on the west by Mission
    Center Road.
    8      The Civita development was subject to a separate EIR, which we refer
    to as the Civita EIR.
    5
    2. The Civita EIR’s analysis of a potential road connection between
    Phyllis Place and Via Alta / Franklin Ridge Road
    The Civita EIR analyzed a potential road connection from Phyllis Place
    to Via Alta / Franklin Ridge Road. Specifically, Alternative 4 of the Civita
    EIR—“Road Connection to Phyllis Place”—provided an analysis of the
    potential environmental impacts of the road connection. The analysis
    included tables describing projected traffic conditions with and without the
    proposed connection, which the Civita EIR summarized as follows:
    “As shown in [various tables], project traffic under this
    alternative would impact roadway segments and
    intersections similar to the proposed project. However, due
    to the different distribution of traffic associated with the
    Phyllis Place connection, traffic impacts under this
    alternative would occur at different locations; in other
    locations, impacts would be avoided. Although significant
    impacts are comparable, in general the redistribution of
    traffic to the Phyllis Place / I-805 interchange is beneficial
    to existing Mission Valley circulation streets where total
    vehicular trips are reduced, such as for Friars Road
    between SR-163 and I-15; Mission Center Road from Friars
    Road to I-8; and Qualcomm Way from Friars Road to I-8.”
    3. The City Council’s approval of the Civita development and its
    direction to analyze a community plan amendment showing the road
    connection
    In October 2008, the City Council approved the Civita development.
    As part of its approval, the City Council adopted a resolution (R-304297),
    directing staff to analyze an amendment to the SMCP and the City’s General
    Plan to include a street connection between Phyllis Place and Friars Road.9
    The resolution provided in relevant part:
    9    Friars Road is a road located to the south of the Project that runs east
    and west. (See Appendix A, post.)
    6
    “Council directs staff to analyze the following issues in
    relation to the aforementioned street connection and land
    use plan amendments:
    “1. Whether police and fire response times would be
    improved with the road connection.
    “2. Whether the road connection could serve as an
    emergency evacuation route.
    “3. Whether it is feasible to make the road available for
    emergency access only.
    “4. Whether pedestrian and bicycle access would be
    improved by the street connection.”
    B. The Project
    1. The PDEIR
    In April 2016, the City issued the PDEIR. The PDEIR indicated that
    the Project was the adoption of an amendment “to the [SMCP] . . . to include
    a street connection from Phyllis Place in Serra Mesa southward to the
    [Civita] Specific Plan area in Mission Valley.”
    2. The RE-DEIR
    The City issued the RE-DEIR in March 2017. As discussed in greater
    detail in part III.A.1, post, the City provided the following explanation for its
    decision to recirculate an EIR:
    “In light of the public comments received during public
    review of the [PDEIR], the construction of the roadway
    connection was determined to be foreseeable; therefore, a
    project-level analysis[10] was conducted and included
    within the [RE-DEIR]. Further evaluation of the
    subsequent actions necessary to implement and construct
    the roadway connection was completed.
    10    We discuss the distinction between a programmatic EIR and a project-
    level EIR in part III.A.1.c.i, post.
    7
    “This revised and recirculated [RE-DEIR] analyzes impacts
    at a project level to ensure that all potential significant
    environmental effects associated with the [P]roject are
    disclosed.”
    3. The FEIR
    In August 2017, the City issued the FEIR for the Project. The FEIR
    describes the Project as follows:
    “The proposed [P]roject consists of construction and
    operation of a four-lane major street, complete with bicycle
    lanes and pedestrian pathways, extending from Phyllis
    Place in Serra Mesa southward to Via Alta and Franklin
    Ridge Road in Mission Valley [citation].
    “The proposed [P]roject would require an amendment to the
    [SMCP]. This amendment would require map and text
    changes to the plan to include the roadway connection as a
    four-lane major street and revise the Street Classification
    and the Bikeways and Pedestrian Walkway figures in the
    currently adopted [SMCP].”
    4. Public review of the Project
    The FEIR contains more than a hundred separate letters from the
    public commenting on the RE-DEIR. The comments, and the City’s
    responses, span nearly a thousand pages in the administrative record.
    In addition to these comments and responses in the FEIR, two
    community planning groups reviewed the Project. In May of 2017, the Serra
    Mesa Community Planning Group (SMPG) voted unanimously to recommend
    denial of the Project. That same month, the Mission Valley Planning Group
    heard the item as an “informational item,” but took no action on the item.
    The City also held several public hearings on the Project. In August
    2017, the City’s Planning Commission held a public hearing and voted
    unanimously, with one member recusing, to recommend approval of the
    8
    Project and certification of the FEIR. The following month, the City Council’s
    Smart Growth & Land Use Committee held a public hearing and voted
    unanimously to recommend approval of the Project to the full City Council.
    5. The City’s certification of the FEIR and its approval of amendments
    to the SMCP and the City’s General Plan
    The City Council held a public hearing on the Project in October 2017.
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the City Council adopted two resolutions.11
    One of the resolutions (R-311380) certified the FEIR and made related
    findings from the FEIR; adopted a statement of overriding considerations
    under CEQA for the Project; and adopted a mitigation, monitoring, and
    reporting program for the Project. The second resolution (R-311381) adopted
    an amendment to the SMCP and the City’s General Plan to “identify a
    roadway connection from Phyllis Place in Serra Mesa southward to the
    boundary between the Serra Mesa and Mission Valley community planning
    areas.”
    C. Procedural background
    1. Save Civita’s Petition / Complaint
    In November 2017, Save Civita filed its Petition / Complaint. In a
    single cause of action styled as “Illegal Approval and Adoption of Project,”
    Save Civita claimed that the City had violated CEQA (§ 21000 et seq.) in
    several ways, including by failing to “provide adequate identification and
    analysis of the significant adverse environmental impacts, [and a] reasonable
    range of alternatives . . . .”
    In this same cause of action, Save Civita further alleged that the City
    violated the Planning and Zoning Law (Gov. Code, § 65000 et seq.) in
    11   Both resolutions were adopted with eight votes in favor and one vote
    against.
    9
    approving the Project because, according to Save Civita, the Project was not
    consistent with “the applicable general and specific plans and their
    components.”
    In its prayer for relief, Save Civita sought various forms of relief,
    including a declaratory judgment stating that the City had failed to comply
    with applicable laws and injunctive relief prohibiting the City from taking
    any action to implement the Project without complying with all applicable
    laws.
    2. Save Civita’s supporting brief
    Save Civita filed a brief in support of its Petition / Complaint. In its
    brief, Save Civita maintained that the City had violated CEQA in four ways:
    (1) the City failed to summarize revisions made to the previously circulated
    PDEIR in the RE-DEIR; (2) the FEIR failed to adequately analyze a
    reasonable range of alternatives; (3) the FEIR failed to analyze the Project’s
    traffic impacts; (4) and the FEIR failed to analyze the Project’s inconsistency
    with relevant land use plans.
    In its brief, Save Civita also maintained that the City violated the
    Planning and Zoning Law in approving the Project. In support of this
    contention, Save Civita argued that the Project was inconsistent with the
    City of Villages strategy contained within the City’s General Plan in that the
    Project was “neither pedestrian-friendly nor likely to reduce greenhouse-gas
    emissions.”
    Finally, Save Civita contended that the City had violated the public’s
    right to due process and a fair hearing. In support of this claim, Save Civita
    asserted that “at least one City Council member had become a cheerleader for
    the Project [and had] decided he was going to approve the Project long before
    any evidence was presented to the City Council.”
    10
    3. The City’s opposition
    The City filed an opposition brief to Save Civita’s Petition / Complaint
    that addressed each of Save Civita’s arguments and contended that it had not
    violated CEQA, the Planning and Zoning Law, or the public’s right to due
    process and a fair hearing.
    4. The administrative record
    With its opposition, the City certified the voluminous administrative
    record, which consists of approximately 41,040 pages.
    The City also lodged salient portions of the administrative record,
    including the following documents: resolutions from the City Council
    pertaining to the approval of the Civita development in 2008 and the City
    Council’s approval of the Project in 2017; excerpts of the final EIR for the
    Civita development; the FEIR; an August 2017 memorandum for the City’s
    Planning Department to the City Council recommending approval of the
    Project; images from a Planning Department presentation on the Project to
    the City Council; minutes from the City Council meeting approving the
    Project; excerpts from the transcript of the City Council meeting approving
    the Project; excerpts from the City’s Street Design Manual; excerpts of traffic
    studies analyzing the Project; an August 2017 memorandum for the City’s
    Planning Department to the City’s Planning Commission recommending
    approval of the Project; an August 2017 letter from the State of California
    Department of Transportation expressing agreement with the “analysis and
    mitigation” contained in the RE-DEIR; excerpts from the transcript of the
    August 2017 City Planning Commission meeting on the Project; a 2012 notice
    of an EIR scoping meeting for the Project; excerpts from various land use
    planning and policy documents, including the City’s General Plan; an e-mail
    related to the Project’s “vehicle miles traveled” analysis contained in the
    11
    FEIR; excerpts from a memorandum to the City Council pertaining to the
    Civita development; excerpts and notices from both the PDEIR and the RE-
    DEIR; and excerpts of a 2007 traffic impact study for the Civita development.
    5. The trial court’s ruling
    The trial court issued a tentative ruling denying Save Civita’s Petition /
    Complaint in its entirety. After a hearing, the trial court issued an order
    clarifying and confirming its tentative ruling in favor of the City.
    In February 2020, the trial court entered a judgment in favor of the
    City.
    6. The appeal
    Save Civita timely appeals from the judgment.
    III.
    DISCUSSION
    A. Neither the RE-DEIR nor the FEIR violated CEQA
    Save Civita raises four claims related to the City’s certification of an
    EIR for the Project. We consider each claim below.
    1. The City did not violate Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g)
    in failing to summarize revisions made to the previously circulated
    PDEIR, in the RE-DEIR
    Save Civita claims that the City violated Guidelines 15088.5,
    subdivision (g) in failing to summarize revisions made to the previously
    circulated PDEIR, in the RE-DEIR.
    a. Relevant law
    i. Guidelines section 15088.5
    Guidelines section 15088.5 outlines the circumstances when a lead
    agency is required to recirculate an EIR (Guidelines, § 15088.5, subds. (a)–
    (b), (e)), and describes how such recirculation is to occur (Guidelines,
    § 15088.5, subds. (c), (f), (g).)
    12
    Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (a) provides in relevant part:
    “A lead agency is required to recirculate an EIR when
    significant new information is added to the EIR after public
    notice is given of the availability of the draft EIR for public
    review . . . but before certification. As used in this section,
    the term ‘information’ can include changes in the project or
    environmental setting as well as additional data or other
    information.”12
    Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (f) pertains to the manner by
    which a lead agency shall evaluate and respond to comments when an EIR is
    recirculated. Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (f)(1) provides:
    “(1) When an EIR is substantially revised and the entire
    document is recirculated, the lead agency may require
    reviewers to submit new comments and, in such cases, need
    not respond to those comments received during the earlier
    circulation period. The lead agency shall advise reviewers,
    either in the text of the revised EIR or by an attachment to
    the revised EIR, that although part of the administrative
    record, the previous comments do not require a written
    response in the final EIR, and that new comments must be
    submitted for the revised EIR. The lead agency need only
    respond to those comments submitted in response to the
    recirculated revised EIR.”
    Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g) requires the lead agency to
    summarize the revisions made to a previously circulated draft EIR. The
    subdivision provides:
    12    (Accord, § 21092.1 [“When significant new information is added to an
    environmental impact report after notice has been given . . . and consultation
    has occurred . . . , but prior to certification, the public agency shall give notice
    again . . . , and consult again . . . before certifying the environmental impact
    report”.)
    13
    “When recirculating a revised EIR, either in whole or in
    part,[13] the lead agency shall, in the revised EIR or by an
    attachment to the revised EIR, summarize the revisions
    made to the previously circulated draft EIR.”
    ii. Case law
    Neither party has cited, and our own research has not uncovered, any
    case law interpreting or applying Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g).
    b. Standard of review
    In Sierra Club v. County of Fresno (2018) 
    6 Cal.5th 502
     (Sierra Club),
    the Supreme Court outlined the following principles concerning the standard
    of review to be applied to a claim that an EIR failed to perform its essential
    function of informing the public of issues raised by a proposed project:
    “The ultimate inquiry, as case law and the CEQA
    guidelines make clear, is whether the EIR includes enough
    detail ‘to enable those who did not participate in its
    preparation to understand and to consider meaningfully
    the issues raised by the proposed project.’ [Citation]; see
    Berkeley Keep Jets Over the Bay Com. v. Board of Port
    Cmrs. [(2001)] 91 Cal.App.4th [1344, 1356] [‘Whether an
    EIR will be found in compliance with CEQA involves an
    evaluation of whether the discussion of environmental
    impacts reasonably sets forth sufficient information to
    foster informed public participation and to enable the
    decision makers to consider the environmental factors
    necessary to make a reasoned decision.’]; Guidelines,
    § 15151 [‘An EIR should be prepared with a sufficient
    degree of analysis to provide decisionmakers with
    information which enables them to make a decision which
    intelligently takes account of environmental
    13    Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (c) provides, “If the revision is
    limited to a few chapters or portions of the EIR, the lead agency need only
    recirculate the chapters or portions that have been modified.”
    Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (f)(2) specifies how a lead
    agency shall evaluate and respond to comments in the event that only
    portions of an EIR are recirculated.
    14
    consequences.’].) The inquiry presents a mixed question of
    law and fact. As such, it is generally subject to
    independent review. However, underlying factual
    determinations—including, for example, an agency’s
    decision as to which methodologies to employ for analyzing
    an environmental effect—may warrant deference.
    [Citations.] Thus, to the extent a mixed question requires a
    determination whether statutory criteria were satisfied, de
    novo review is appropriate; but to the extent factual
    questions predominate, a more deferential standard is
    warranted.” (Id. at p. 516.)
    We apply this standard of review to Save Civita’s claim, reviewing de
    novo both the meaning of the summarization requirement contained in
    Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g) and the question of whether the
    “statutory criteria were satisfied . . . .” (Sierra Club, supra, 6 Cal.5th at
    p. 516.)14
    c. Factual and procedural background
    i. The PDEIR and the RE-DEIR
    A chapter of the PDEIR titled “Project Description,” stated that the
    proposed Project consisted of a “community plan amendment to the [SMCP] to
    include a street connection from Phyllis Place, located in Serra Mesa,
    southward to the boundary of Serra Mesa and Mission Valley.” (Italics
    added.) However, this chapter of the PDEIR also made clear the limited
    scope of the proposed project, stating:
    “The City’s action is only to amend the [SMCP]. The City is
    not proposing to construct or fund the roadway connection.”
    (Italics added.)
    In contrast, the “Project Description” chapter of the RE-DEIR states
    that the Project being analyzed consists of the construction of the road itself,
    14    Neither party points to any disputed factual questions relevant to Save
    Civita’s claim that the City violated section 15088.5, subdivision (g).
    15
    stating, “The proposed [P]roject consists of construction and operation of a
    four-lane major street, complete with bicycle lanes and pedestrian pathways,
    extending from Phyllis Place in Serra Mesa southward to Via Alta and
    Franklin Ridge Road in Mission Valley . . . .”
    A section of the Project Description chapter of the RE-DEIR (section
    3.2) explained the genesis of this change, noting that the PDEIR had
    examined an amendment to the SMCP at a “ ‘programmatic’ level,” and that
    “[a]fter considering the comments received during the public review period,
    the City decided to analyze the road-connection with a project-level analysis.”
    (Compare Guidelines, §§ 15161 [“project” EIR], 15148 [“program” EIR].)15
    The Project Description stated further that revisions to the PDEIR caused
    the City to “replace the P[D]EIR with a project-level EIR and recirculate for a
    second public review.” (Italics added.)
    15     In Citizens for Responsible Equitable Environmental Development v.
    City of San Diego Redevelopment Agency (2005) 
    134 Cal.App.4th 598
    , 605,
    this court noted that the Guidelines describe these two “different type[s],” of
    EIRs as follows:
    “[T]he Guidelines describe several types of EIRs, which
    may be tailored to different situations. The most common
    is the project EIR, which examines the environmental
    impacts of a specific development project. (Guidelines,
    § 15161.) A quite different type is the program EIR, which
    ‘may be prepared on a series of actions that can be
    characterized as one large project and are related either:
    (1) Geographically, (2) As logical parts in the chain of
    contemplated actions, (3) In connection with issuance of
    rules, regulations, plans, or other general criteria to govern
    the conduct of a continuing program, or (4) As individual
    activities carried out under the same authorizing statutory
    or regulatory authority and having generally similar
    environmental effects which can be mitigated in similar
    ways.’ (Guidelines, § 15168, subd. (a); [citation].)”
    16
    The first page of the RE-DEIR is a Public Notice of Availability for
    Recirculation (the Notice), which also states that the PDEIR “has been
    revised to analyze impacts at a project level to ensure that all potential[ly]
    significant environmental effects associated with the [P]roject are disclosed,
    and further evaluation of the subsequent actions necessary to implement and
    construct the roadway connection is included.” The Notice informed readers
    that comments on the PDEIR would not receive responses.16
    The executive summary of the RE-DEIR reiterated that the EIR
    evaluated both “an amendment to the [SMCP],” and the “construction and
    operation of a four-lane major street, complete with bicycle lanes and
    pedestrian pathways, extending from Phyllis Place in Serra Mesa southward
    to Via Alta and Franklin Ridge Road in Mission Valley.”
    Chapter 4 of the RE-DEIR details the “History of Project Changes”
    stating:
    “The [PDEIR] analyzed the programmatic action of the
    amendment to include Franklin Ridge Road in the
    Circulation Element of the [SMCP]. [¶] In light of the
    public comments received during public review of the
    [PDEIR], the construction of the roadway connection was
    determined to be foreseeable; therefore, a project-level
    analysis was conducted and included within the
    recirculated [RE-DEIR]. Further evaluation of the
    subsequent actions necessary to implement and construct
    the roadway connection was completed.”
    ii. The City states in the FEIR that it has complied with
    Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g)
    In response to the City’s issuance of the RE-DEIR, the SMPG sent the
    City a letter containing 212 separately analyzed comments. One of the
    comments specifically alleged that the City had failed to comply with the
    16    Section 1.4 of the RE-DEIR reiterated these aspects of the Notice.
    17
    summarization requirement contained in Guidelines section 15088.5,
    subdivision (g). In the FEIR, the City responded to this comment in relevant
    part as follows:
    “The [RE-]DEIR complied with this requirement. A
    summary of the revisions made to the previously circulated
    [PD]EIR was provided in the Public Notice of Availability
    for Recirculation of an EIR and also within Chapter 3,
    Project Description: ‘After considering the comments
    received during the public review period, the City decided
    to analyze the road connection with a project‐level analysis.
    The additional description and analysis warranted
    revisions to the [PDEIR], which in turn led the City to
    decide to replace the [PDEIR] with a project-level EIR and
    recirculate for a second public review.’ As the scope of
    analysis changed from a programmatic level (e.g., not
    including any specific roadway design, construction details)
    to a project level of analysis, the entire [PDEIR] necessarily
    warranted revisions throughout to reflect that detail.
    Furthermore, the [RE-]DEIR was in an entirely new format
    (e.g., font, numbering, figures) which would indicate that
    the entirety of the [PDEIR] had been revised.”
    An attorney representing the Serra Mesa Community Council
    reviewing the RE-DEIR also sent the City a letter asserting that the City had
    failed to comply with Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g). The
    attorney stated the following:
    “Please identify, by providing either, or both: (a) a list of
    material changes in the [P]roject design and/or study, and
    (b) an interlineated and strike-out version of the [RE-]DEIR
    and its appendices so that the public, third party agencies,
    and decisionmakers know what to focus on during their
    second reading and comments such that meaningful
    comment can be provided. (CEQA Guidelines § 15088,
    subds. (f)(1), (g)).” (Italics omitted.)
    The City responded in part to this comment by stating:
    18
    “The commenter also requests that the City provide a list of
    material changes to the [P]roject design and/or study as
    well as a strike-out version of the [PD]EIR so that
    interested parties ‘know what to focus on . . . such that
    meaningful comment can be provided.’ To provide a
    strikeout version of the originally circulated [PD]EIR or a
    more detailed summary that contains what would amount
    to a long list of changes between versions would provide no
    additional meaningful information to the reader and
    decision-maker other than to support the statement
    already in the Public Notice and [PD]EIR that substantial
    revisions had occurred since the previously circulated draft.
    Moreover, in practical terms, if the document was provided
    in strikeout/underline format, as suggested, nearly the
    entire document would be shown as strikeout/underline.
    The result would be a recirculated [draft EIR] of limited
    informational value to the majority of readers because of its
    near illegible condition. In addition, because the entire
    [PD]EIR was completely overhauled, a summary statement
    indicating that the [PD]EIR was converted from a high
    level program analysis to a detailed project level analysis is
    a sufficient summary because it accurately conveys to the
    reader and decision-maker the significant changes that
    occurred since the previous review. Finally, the public
    review was 60 days, which is more than 15 days beyond the
    45 days required by CEQA and which would provide more
    time than required by State law for the public to review the
    recirculated [RE-]DEIR in its entirety.”
    iii. Save Civita’s claim in the trial court
    Save Civita contended that the City had failed to comply with
    Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g), arguing, “neither the [RE-]DEIR
    nor any attachment to it summarizes the revisions made.” Save Civita
    contended that “[r]equiring members of the public to rifle through these two
    voluminous, technical documents to try and figure out the differences was an
    obstacle to informed discussion.”
    19
    The City responded by contending that it had adequately summarized
    the changes to the PDEIR in the RE-DEIR, arguing that its “summarization
    is sufficient to appri[s]e the reader that this is an entirely different level of
    analysis and revisions are throughout.”17 The City also argued that “[n]o
    prejudice ha[d] been shown,” from any insufficiency in the RE-DEIR’s
    summary of changes because “public comment was vigorous.”
    The trial court issued a tentative ruling stating that the City
    “arguably” had failed to summarize the revisions made to the PDEIR in the
    RE-DEIR as required by Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g), but
    concluding that any such failure was not prejudicial:
    “The City was required to reference, discuss or list in some
    logical, meaningful way the changes made between the
    [PDEIR] and the [RE-D]EIR. Arguably, the City did not do
    this. The references cited by the City do not alert the
    reader as to the specific changes. On the other hand, this is
    not a situation where the re-circulation was driven by
    changes in the facts or conclusions reached within the EIR.
    The final EIR underwent a structural change, but
    maintained the same discussion regarding impacts and
    mitigation, and relied on the same data. Importantly, the
    City’s failure was not prejudicial. There is no evidence
    suggesting the public was deprived of a meaningful
    opportunity to discuss and critique the [P]roject. Re-
    circulation was not used as an opportunity to insert new
    conclusions as to significant impacts on the community.
    Re-circulation did not prevent the relevant decision makers
    from reaching an informed final decision. There is no
    evidence that the City’s failure to comply was done in bad
    faith. Therefore, any violation of Guidelines section
    15088.5 was not prejudicial and does not constitute a basis
    on which to grant this Petition.”
    17    The City stated that it summarized the revisions to the PDEIR in the
    following sections of the RE-DEIR, “[Section] 1.4[,] Availability of this EIR,
    [Section] 3.2[,] Project Background, [Chapter] 4[,] History of Project
    Changes.” We have summarized those provisions in part III.A.1.c.i, ante.
    20
    At the hearing on Save Civita’s writ petition, Save Civita argued that
    there had been numerous substantive changes to the PDEIR, and Save
    Civita’s counsel reviewed several of those changes at the hearing. For
    example, Save Civita’s counsel noted that the PDEIR determined that there
    was “no environmentally superior alternative as compared to the proposed
    community plan amendment,” while the FEIR18 concluded that “the bicycle,
    pedestrian and emergency access only alternative is . . . the environmentally
    superior alternative.” Save Civita’s counsel argued that, in light of all the
    revisions to the PDEIR, the City’s failure to summarize such changes was
    prejudicial because the “information [was] necessary to an informed
    decision.”
    The City argued:
    “[L]ooking at the merits of the discussion on section
    15088.5[, subdivision] (g) CEQA guidelines, this is to
    summarize the revisions made. That’s the requirement
    under CEQA. Summarize the revisions made. In this
    particular instance, these weren’t just revisions, it was an
    entire structural redo. As a result of scoping comments
    that the public made and community interaction, they
    wanted more information. So instead of giving them a
    [programmatic] EIR, we went back and did a project level
    EIR. . . . The intent we believe of the Guidelines is that the
    public gets more information and that’s what we tried to do
    at this point, not a reduction of information. At some point
    when you do red line drafts, which I’m sure your honor
    knows, it gets so confusing you can’t even tell what has
    been added and what has been not added.
    18   While Save Civita’s counsel compared the PDEIR with the FEIR rather
    than with the RE-DEIR, it appears that the FEIR and the RE-DEIR are not
    materially distinct with respect to any of the changes referenced by counsel.
    21
    “Also in this regard, there’s no evidence to suggest the
    public was deprived of a meaningful opportunity to discuss
    the [P]roject.”
    After the hearing on Save Civita’s writ petition, the trial court
    confirmed its tentative ruling and “clarif[ied]” that ruling, stating the
    following:
    “Regarding the re-circulation issue, the argument
    presented by [Save Civita] made several references to the
    administrative record that were not contained in [Save
    Civita’s] briefing.[19] These references are improper and
    cannot be considered by the Court because . . . [the] City
    has not had an opportunity to address or rebut these
    additional citations. To some extent, these additional
    references support the City’s argument: the [RE-D]EIR
    contained significant organizational changes such that it
    would have been confusing, if not futile to attempt to list or
    ‘redline’ each change. Ultimately, no prejudice was
    incurred. The public was given ample opportunity to
    review and comment on the revised project level EIR. The
    City did not seek to mislead the public [as] to whether it
    was necessary to review or comment on the revised project
    level EIR. The administrative record contains evidence
    supporting the City’s good faith understanding that a
    revised and re-circulated project level EIR would enhance
    the ability of the public and decision makers to understand
    and act on the [P]roject.”
    d. Analysis
    Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g) required the City to
    “summarize the revisions made to the previously circulated draft EIR.”
    As outlined in detail in part III.A.1.c.i, ante, statements in the “Project
    Description” and the “History of Project Changes” chapters of the RE-DEIR
    summarized the changes to the PDEIR by stating that: (1) the RE-DEIR
    19    It appears that the trial court was referring to the substantive changes
    to the PDEIR that Save Civita’s counsel outlined at the hearing.
    22
    “replaced” the PDEIR; (2) the Project had changed from a community plan
    amendment to an amendment and the construction of a major road, and
    (3) while the PDEIR had analyzed only “the programmatic action of the
    amendment to include Franklin Ridge Road in the Circulation Element of the
    Serra Mesa Community Plan,” the RE-DEIR contained a “project-level
    analysis,” of the foreseeable construction of the new road. In short, these
    summary provisions of the RE-DEIR informed the public that the revisions to
    the PDEIR were extensive, and that the PDEIR had been “replaced” by the
    RE-DEIR. As the City explained in the FEIR, given the extensive nature of
    the changes, “if the document was provided in strikeout/underline format, as
    suggested, nearly the entire document would be shown as
    strikeout/underline.”
    In interpreting the summarization mandate of Guidelines section
    15088.5, subdivision (g), it is important to recall the context in which that
    mandate arises. Section 15088.5, subdivision (a) requires the recirculation of
    an EIR where “significant new information is added to the EIR.” Such new
    information can “include changes in the project.” The “History of Project
    Changes,” chapter of the RE-DEIR apprised the public that, in the wake of
    the issuance of the PDEIR, the City had conducted “further evaluation of the
    subsequent actions necessary to implement and construct the roadway
    connection.” Thus, the RE-DEIR summarized the changes in the Project that
    had occurred.
    The summarization requirement in section 15088.5, subdivision (g) also
    must be interpreted in connection with section 15088.5, subdivision (f), which
    requires that an agency inform the public that “[w]hen an EIR is
    substantially revised and the entire document is recirculated,” comments on
    a prior EIR will not receive a response. The City’s compliance with section
    23
    15088.5, subdivision (f) further alerted the public that substantial changes
    had been made to the PDEIR.
    In sum, where a recirculated EIR states that it is replacing a prior EIR
    and the agency makes clear the overall nature of the changes (as the City did
    in this case), and states that prior comments will not receive responses, the
    agency may be said to have complied with the Guidelines requirement that it
    “summarize the revisions made to the previously circulated draft EIR.”
    (§ 15088.5, subd. (g).)
    However, even if we were to assume that the City failed to comply with
    section 15088.5, subdivision (g), we agree with the trial court that any such
    failure was not prejudicial. Save Civita argues, “ ‘An EIR will be found
    legally inadequate – and subject to independent review for procedural error –
    where it omits information that is both required by CEQA and necessary to
    informed discussion.’ ” (Italics added, citing California Native Plant Society
    v. City of Santa Cruz (2009) 
    177 Cal.App.4th 957
    , 986; see also Sierra Club,
    supra, 6 Cal.5th at p. 515 [an agency’s “failure to comply with the law
    subverts the purposes of CEQA” and constitutes prejudicial error if the
    agency “omits material necessary to informed decisionmaking and informed
    public participation” (italics added)].)
    Save Civita argues that the City’s failure to summarize the changes in
    the RE-DEIR from the PDEIR had “two detrimental consequences,” namely,
    it forced readers to “leaf through thousands of pages,” and caused “readers to
    have the mistaken belief” that the two EIRs address the same project. We
    are not persuaded. With respect to the first consequence, the need to review
    the entire RE-DEIR was driven by the nature of the changes (i.e., the
    changes to the PDEIR were wholesale and material). As to the second
    consequence, no reasonable reader could have been misled as to the
    24
    distinction between the nature of the projects evaluated in the PDEIR and
    the RE-DEIR, respectively. The RE-DEIR clearly and expressly stated that,
    while the PDEIR had evaluated a community plan amendment, the RE-DEIR
    evaluated the amendment and the construction of a major road.
    Save Civita also argues that the City’s failure to provide a summary
    was an “obstacle to informed discussion,” but the administrative record
    indicates that there was ample and vigorous public discussion of the RE-
    DEIR. We agree with the trial court that such discussion was not hampered
    by the absence of a summary of the changes in the RE-DEIR. Save Civita
    also argues that failing to provide a summary required commentators to
    either resubmit letters or to “start over,” with the latter option “being the
    non-obvious option,” since the RE-DEIR indicated that it was a recirculated
    draft EIR. However, as discussed above, the City informed the public that
    comments on the PDEIR would not receive responses. Thus, the public was
    on notice of the need to resubmit comments or to submit new comments.
    In sum, we conclude that the City did not violate Guidelines section
    15088.5, subdivision (g) in failing to summarize the changes from the PDEIR
    to the RE-DEIR. We further conclude that, even assuming the City did
    violate Guidelines section 15088.5, subdivision (g), such error was not
    prejudicial because any failure to summarize did not deprive the public of a
    meaningful opportunity to discuss and critique the Project.
    2. The FEIR reasonably did not analyze in detail the Amend MVCP
    Alternative as an alternative to the Project
    Save Civita claims that the FEIR was deficient because it failed to
    analyze in detail the Amend MVCP Alternative as an alternative to the
    Project.
    25
    a. Relevant law
    “CEQA requires that an EIR, in addition to analyzing the
    environmental effects of a proposed project, also consider and analyze project
    alternatives that would reduce adverse environmental impacts. [Citations.]”
    (In re Bay-Delta etc. (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 1143
    , 1163 (In re Bay Delta).)
    Guidelines section 15126.6, subdivision (a) states that an agency must
    describe a range of reasonable alternatives to the project, and provides in
    relevant part:
    “Alternatives to the Proposed Project. An EIR shall
    describe a range of reasonable alternatives to the project, or
    to the location of the project, which would feasibly attain
    most of the basic objectives of the project but would avoid
    or substantially lessen any of the significant effects of the
    project, and evaluate the comparative merits of the
    alternatives. An EIR need not consider every conceivable
    alternative to a project. Rather it must consider a
    reasonable range of potentially feasible alternatives that
    will foster informed decisionmaking and public
    participation. An EIR is not required to consider
    alternatives which are infeasible. The lead agency is
    responsible for selecting a range of project alternatives for
    examination and must publicly disclose its reasoning for
    selecting those alternatives. There is no ironclad rule
    governing the nature or scope of the alternatives to be
    discussed other than the rule of reason.”20
    20     The Guidelines describe the “rule of reason” by which an agency’s
    selection of alternatives is judged as follows:
    “(f) Rule of reason. The range of alternatives required in an
    EIR is governed by a ‘rule of reason’ that requires the EIR
    to set forth only those alternatives necessary to permit a
    reasoned choice. The alternatives shall be limited to ones
    that would avoid or substantially lessen any of the
    significant effects of the project. Of those alternatives, the
    EIR need examine in detail only the ones that the lead
    agency determines could feasibly attain most of the basic
    26
    An alternative that avoids significant environmental effects should be
    evaluated even if it “impede[s] to some degree the attainment of the project
    objectives, or would be more costly.” (Guidelines, § 15126.6, subd. (b).)
    In selecting a range of alternatives to study in an EIR, an agency is to
    be guided by the following principles:
    “Selection of a range of reasonable alternatives. The range
    of potential alternatives to the proposed project shall
    include those that could feasibly accomplish most of the
    basic objectives of the project and could avoid or
    substantially lessen one or more of the significant effects.
    The EIR should briefly describe the rationale for selecting
    the alternatives to be discussed. The EIR should also
    identify any alternatives that were considered by the lead
    agency but were rejected as infeasible during the scoping
    process and briefly explain the reasons underlying the lead
    agency’s determination. Additional information explaining
    the choice of alternatives may be included in the
    administrative record. Among the factors that may be used
    to eliminate alternatives from detailed consideration in an
    EIR are: (i) failure to meet most of the basic project
    objectives, (ii) infeasibility, or (iii) inability to avoid
    significant environmental impacts.” (Guidelines, § 15126.6,
    subd. (c).)
    “[A]n EIR need not study in detail an alternative . . . that the lead
    agency has reasonably determined cannot achieve the project’s underlying
    fundamental purpose.” (In re Bay-Delta, 
    supra,
     43 Cal.4th at p. 1165.) As
    the In re Bay-Delta court explained:
    “[A] lead agency may structure its EIR alternative analysis
    around a reasonable definition of underlying purpose and
    objectives of the project. The range of feasible alternatives
    shall be selected and discussed in a manner to foster
    meaningful public participation and informed decision
    making.” (Guidelines, § 15126.6, subd. (f).)
    27
    need not study alternatives that cannot achieve that basic
    goal. For example, if the purpose of the project is to build
    an oceanfront resort hotel [citation] or a waterfront
    aquarium [citation], a lead agency need not consider inland
    locations. (See also Sequoyah Hills Homeowners Assn. v.
    City of Oakland (1993) 
    23 Cal.App.4th 704
    , 715 [lead
    agency need not consider lower density alternative that
    would defeat primary purpose of providing affordable
    housing].)” (Id. at p. 1166.)
    b. Standard of review
    We determine whether the City’s decision not to analyze in detail the
    Amend MVCP Alternative as an alternative to the Project is supported by
    substantial evidence and is consistent with the rule of reason. (See In re Bay-
    Delta, 
    supra,
     43 Cal.4th at p. 1167 [stating that agency’s determinations that
    project objective could not be achieved with proposed alternative were
    “supported by substantial evidence and consistent with the rule of reason”].)
    c. Factual and procedural background
    i. The Amend MVCP Alternative
    The Amend MVCP Alternative would amend the MVCP to remove a
    proposed road connection between Phyllis Place and Franklin Ridge Road /
    Via Alta from that planning document.
    ii. The FEIR’s objectives
    The FEIR outlines the following objectives for the Project:
    “1. Resolve the inconsistency between the [MVCP] and the
    [SMCP] by providing a multi-modal linkage from Friars
    Road in Mission Valley to Phyllis Place in Serra Mesa.
    “2. Improve local mobility in the Serra Mesa and Mission
    Valley planning areas.
    “3. Alleviate traffic congestion and improve navigational
    efficiency to and from local freeway on and off-ramps for
    the surrounding areas.
    28
    “4. Improve emergency access and evacuation route options
    between the Serra Mesa and Mission Valley planning
    areas.
    “5. Provide a safe and efficient street design for motorists,
    cyclists, and pedestrians that minimizes environmental and
    neighborhood impacts.”
    iii. The FEIR’s stated reasons for not studying the Amend
    MVCP Alternative as an alternative to the Project
    The FEIR stated that the City had initially considered four possible
    alternatives to the Project for evaluation, including the Amend MVCP
    Alternative.21 The FEIR explained that the City had not selected the Amend
    MVCP Alternative as an alternative for detailed study for the following
    reasons:
    “The No Build/Remove from Mission Valley Community
    Plan Alternative would not include the construction and
    operation of the roadway connecting Phyllis Place to
    Franklin Ridge Road/Via Alta, and would remove language
    regarding the potential connection from the Mission Valley
    Community Plan. This alternative was rejected from
    further consideration because it would not meet any of the
    [P]roject objectives, as detailed below.
    “1. This alternative would resolve the inconsistency
    between community plans; however, it would not provide a
    multi-modal linkage from Friars Road in Mission Valley to
    Phyllis Place in Serra Mesa, as no roadway would be
    constructed, thereby limiting multi-modal options between
    these roadways. Therefore, it would not fully meet this
    objective.
    21   In the FEIR, the City referred to this option as the “No Build/Remove
    from Mission Valley Community Plan Alternative.”
    29
    “2. This alternative would not improve local mobility in the
    Serra Mesa and Mission Valley planning areas, as no
    roadway would be constructed, thereby limiting routes
    between these planning areas.
    “3. This alternative would not help to alleviate traffic
    congestion and improve navigational efficiency to and from
    local freeway on- and off-ramps for the surrounding areas,
    as no roadway would be constructed, thus limiting access
    options for those in the areas within the vicinity of the
    [P]roject site.
    “4. This alternative would also not improve emergency
    access and evacuation route options between the Serra
    Mesa and Mission Valley planning areas, as it would not
    provide additional ingress/egress for emergency responders,
    nor would an additional emergency evacuation route
    be created.
    “5. Finally, this alternative would not provide a safe and
    efficient street design for motorists, cyclists, and
    pedestrians, as no roadway would be constructed.
    “Furthermore, although this alternative would remove the
    language associated with the roadway connection, it would
    not resolve the inconsistency with other land use plans that
    have already been adopted. For example, the City’s
    Climate Action Plan and Bicycle Master Plan . . . include
    the proposed roadway connection in their assumptions.
    Therefore, this inconsistency would require additional
    environmental analysis prior to removal from the Mission
    Valley Community.”
    iv. The claim at the administrative level
    In comments on the RE-DEIR, reprinted in the FEIR, an attorney for
    the Serra Mesa Community Council stated that the City had “failed to
    present a reasonable range of project alternatives because it did not correctly
    include or conclude analyses of one or more identified adverse effects or
    30
    mitigating alternatives.” Counsel specifically contended that the RE-DEIR
    “never properly analyzed or considered,” the “[MVCP] amendment
    consistency option.” The City responded to this comment in the FEIR by
    stating that it had provided a reasoned explanation for not selecting the
    Amend MVCP Alternative as an alternative for detailed study in the RE-
    DEIR.
    v. Save Civita’s claim in the trial court
    In its writ petition, Save Civita claimed that “substantial evidence does
    not support the [FEIR’s] conclusion that an MVCP amendment alternative is
    unworthy of more in-depth consideration.”
    The trial court rejected Save Civita’s claim, reasoning:
    “Section 9.4.1.2 of the [F]EIR addresses the ‘No
    Build/Remove from Mission Valley Community Plan
    Alternative.’ [Citation.] Although this alternative removes
    the inconsistency, it does not fulfill the other objectives
    such that this alternative was not analyzed in detail.
    Section 9.5.1 of the [F]EIR addresses the no project
    alternative in detail. [Citation.] The analys[e]s in both
    sections are complimentary and sufficient, and fostered
    informed decision making and informed public
    participation. Lead agencies are entitled to exercise
    discretion to exclude consideration of alternatives that do
    not meet a project’s fundamental purpose or are
    inconsistent with the basic nature of the project. After a
    detailed analysis, the [F]EIR concludes that the goals of
    alleviating traffic congestion and improving navigational
    efficiency to and from local freeway ramps would best be
    met utilizing this connector road. Substantial evidence
    exists within the administrative record supporting the
    City’s conclusion that the no build alternatives did not meet
    most of the basic [P]roject objectives. The record reflects a
    complete analysis regarding issues of mobility, traffic
    congestion, navigational efficiency, the City’s Climate
    Action Plan, emergency access, air quality, noise, etc.”
    31
    d. Application
    Save Civita advances several arguments in support of its claim that the
    FEIR is deficient because it failed to analyze the Amend MVCP Alternative
    in detail as an alternative to the Project. We find none to be persuasive.
    First, Save Civita argues that because the “impetus to this Project” was
    allegedly “the inconsistency between the MVCP and the SMCP with respect
    to this potential roadway connection,” (boldface & italics omitted) a “feasible
    alternative would have been amending the MVCP to remove the road
    connection.” (Boldface omitted.) However, there is considerable evidence in
    the record that improving connectivity between Serra Mesa and Mission
    Valley via a new road has always been the central objective of the Project.
    For example, in the 2008 resolution (R-304297) referenced in part II.A.3,
    ante,22 the City Council stated that “the construction of the street connection
    between Phyllis Place and Friars Road and the associated land use plan
    amendments were analyzed in [EIR] No. 49068 certified for the [Civita]
    [p]roject,” and the City Council directed “staff to analyze the following issues
    in relation to the aforementioned street connection,” (italics added) including:
    “1. Whether police and fire response times would be
    improved with the road connection.
    “2. Whether the road connection could serve as an
    emergency evacuation route.
    “3. Whether it is feasible to make the road available for
    emergency access only.
    22    The FEIR notes in a response to a comment that the Project “results
    from the City Council initiating an amendment to the [SMCP] on October 21,
    2008 (Initiative R-304297), and directing the Planning Department to
    address the issues and impacts related to construction and operation
    associated with the proposed roadway connection to Phyllis Place.”
    32
    “4. Whether pedestrian and bicycle access would be
    improved by the street connection.” (Italics added.)
    Further, while the PDEIR stated that one of the objectives of the
    Project was to “[r]esolve the inconsistency between the [SMCP] and [MVCP]
    as it pertains to a connection from Mission Valley to Phyllis Place in Serra
    Mesa,” the PDEIR’s second objective was to amend the SMCP “to include a
    street connection,” that, “if built,” could:
    “[1.] Improve the overall circulation network in the Serra
    Mesa and Mission Valley planning areas.
    “[2.] Alleviate traffic congestion and improve navigational
    efficiency to and from local freeway on- and off-ramps for
    the surrounding areas.
    “[3.] Along the street connection, allow for safe travel
    conditions for motorists, cyclists, and pedestrians [along
    the street connection].
    “[4.]Implement the General Plan and Bicycle Master Plan
    as they pertain to developing interconnectivity between
    communities.”
    In short, Save Civita’s suggestion that the Project morphed from being
    primarily about a planning amendment to being primarily about a road
    connection is not entirely accurate. While the PDEIR indicated that it was
    analyzing a community plan amendment at the programmatic level, the
    objective of the Project as described in the PDEIR was not merely to resolve
    the inconsistency between two planning documents, but rather, to adopt an
    amendment to the SMCP that would eventually permit the construction of a
    road to improve connectivity between Serra Mesa and Mission Valley. In any
    event, even assuming that the “impetus” of the Project had been merely
    maintaining consistency in planning documents, an agency is required to
    33
    determine whether the alternative meets “most of the basic project
    objectives,” (Guidelines, § 15126.6, subd. (c), italics added) not whether it is
    consistent with the impetus of the project. Thus, we are unpersuaded by
    Save Civita’s suggestion that the City was required to study in detail the
    Amend MVCP Alternative because that alternative was allegedly consistent
    with the impetus of the Project.
    In a related argument, Save Civita suggests that the City improperly
    effectuated a “significant shift,” in the Project’s objectives from the PDEIR to
    the FEIR, and that the City used an “artificially narrow definition” of the
    Project’s objectives in the FEIR so “that the Amend MVCP alternative would
    appear infeasible.” Save Civita’s argument is supported by neither the facts
    nor the law. Factually, as suggested above, a comparison of the objectives
    contained in the PDEIR (see ante), and those in the FEIR (see III.A.2.c.ii,
    ante), reveals stylistic changes as well as incremental modifications to the
    objectives as the Project shifted from a programmatic EIR studying a
    community plan amendment to facilitate the construction of a new road
    connector to a project-level EIR studying the construction of the road itself.
    However, we see nothing about these modifications to the objectives of the
    Project that demonstrates an intent to eliminate the Amend MVCP
    Alternative as an alternative worthy of detailed study. In fact, the City also
    reasonably concluded in the PDEIR that the Amend MVCP Alternative was
    not worthy of detailed study because it “would not promote intercommunity
    connectivity as envisioned in the City’s General Plan.”
    In any event, even assuming that the City had fundamentally changed
    the objectives of the Project, Save Civita presents no persuasive legal
    argument that such a change would have been improper. County of Inyo v.
    City of Los Angeles (1977) 
    71 Cal.App.3d 185
    , which Save Civita cites for the
    34
    proposition that an “accurate, stable and finite project description is the sine
    qua non of an informative and legally sufficient EIR,” (id. at p. 199, italics
    omitted) is entirely distinguishable. In County of Inyo, the Court of Appeal
    concluded that the EIR at issue was faulty because “the project concept
    expands and contracts from place to place within the EIR,” (id. at p. 190,
    italics added), noting that the “EIR does not cling to its truncated project
    description,” provided at the outset of the EIR, but “[r]ather . . . shifts from
    that description to a ‘reappraisal’ of the rate of water export and then to a
    third concept called the ‘recommended project.’ ” (Id. at p. 197.) The County
    of Inyo court reasoned, that, “[t]he incessant shifts among different project
    descriptions . . . vitiate the city’s EIR process as a vehicle for intelligent
    public participation.” (Id. at p. 197.) Unlike in County of Inyo, there are no
    changes in the Project or its description within the FEIR.
    Save Civita also notes that, “ ‘ “A lead agency may not give a project’s
    purpose an artificially narrow definition.” ’ ” (Quoting North Coast Rivers
    Alliance v. Kawamura (2015) 
    243 Cal.App.4th 647
    , 668 (North Coast Rivers
    Alliance).) In North Coast Rivers Alliance, the lead agency “purport[ed] to
    view eradication [of an agricultural pest] as the ‘objective,’ ” (id. at p. 668) of
    the project, and on this basis failed to study the “control” of the pest as a
    potential alternative. (Ibid.) In addition, the EIR “confusingly mislabeled
    various tools for attacking [the pests] as ‘alternatives’ to the program.” (Id.
    at p. 667.) The North Coast Rivers Alliance court concluded that the
    “protection of plants and crops,” (id. at p. 669) rather than “eradication,”
    (ibid.) was “clearly” (ibid.) the objective of the project, and that this error led
    the agency to have an “ ‘artificially narrow,’ ” definition of the project. (Id. at
    p. 668.)
    35
    Save Civita claims that, like the situation in North Coast Rivers
    Alliance, “the RE-DEIR/FEIR summarily dismissed any alternative that did
    not construct a road.” We are not persuaded. To begin with, the RE-
    DEIR/FEIR did study an alternative that did not result in the construction of
    a new road—the No Project Alternative, and the RE-DEIR/FEIR also studied
    a second alternative—Bicycle, Pedestrian, and Emergency Access Only
    Alternative, that would not have resulted in a road that could be used by
    private vehicles. In addition, unlike in North Coast Rivers Alliance, the City
    neither conflated methods and objectives, nor developed an artificially
    narrow set of objectives. On the contrary, the FEIR broadly defined the
    objectives of the Project as including: improving consistency among planning
    documents, providing a multi-modal linkage within the Project area,
    improving local mobility, alleviating traffic congestion and navigational
    efficiency, improving emergency and evacuation access, and providing a safe
    street design. (See pt. III.A.2.c.ii, ante.) We therefore reject Save Civita’s
    contention that reversal is required under North Coast Rivers Alliance on the
    ground that “creating objectives so narrow that they could not be met by
    anything other than the proposed project does not meet the requirements of
    CEQA, in letter or in spirit.”
    Save Civita also argues that the “Amend MVCP [A]lternative achieved
    most of the Project’s [objectives.23]” We are not persuaded. By way of
    summary, the City reasonably concluded that an amendment to a community
    planning document to remove a road connection would not achieve the
    fundamental objective of improving connectivity between Mission Valley and
    Serra Mesa. Specially, the City reasonably concluded that the Amend MVCP
    23    Save Civita’s brief contains the word “alternatives,” but it is clear that
    the intended word is “objectives.”
    36
    Alternative would not achieve any of the following objectives outlined in the
    FEIR: “provid[ing] a [new] multi-modal linkage,” “improv[ing] local mobility
    in the Serra Mesa and Mission Valley planning areas,” “alleviat[ing] traffic
    congestion and improv[ing] navigational efficiency,” “improv[ing] emergency
    access and evacuation route options between the Serra Mesa and Mission
    Valley planning areas,” or “provid[ing] a safe and efficient street design.”
    (See pt.III.A.2.c.iii, ante.) Save Civita’s arguments to the contrary are
    without merit. In essence, Save Civita’s arguments boil down to the
    contention that there is evidence that not building the Project would achieve
    the objectives of the Project better than completing the project would. For
    example, in its brief, Save Civita argues, “multi-modal linkages . . . already
    exist,” “there are already routes and linkages between the communities,” the
    “Amend MVCP [A]lternative – i.e., not building the roadway – would be
    better for traffic congestion than the Project,” “emergency access from Serra
    Mesa to Mission Valley already exists,” and “Via Alta and Franklin Ridge
    already provide a safe and efficient design” (italics and boldface omitted).
    These arguments are unpersuasive, both because they do not demonstrate
    that amending the MVCP would achieve these objectives, and because the
    No Project Alternative analyzed these issues.
    Save Civita’s complaint that the FEIR provided “no data or analysis to
    support,” its conclusion that the Amend MVCP Alternative “would not meet
    four of the five listed objectives” is also without merit. To begin with, an
    agency need only “briefly describe the rationale for selecting the alternatives
    to be discussed,” and “briefly explain,” the reasons why an alternative was
    not selected for detailed study. (Guidelines, § 15126.6, subd. (c), italics
    added.) The FEIR complies with this mandate by providing a brief
    explanation for its reasons for not selecting the Amend MVCP Alternative for
    37
    in depth study. (See pt. III.A.2.c.iii, ante.) Further, the FEIR is replete with
    “data” and “analysis” about the No Project Alternative, and in particular, the
    impact of selecting such an alternative on “Transportation and Circulation.”
    The City could reasonably conclude that because the Amend MVCP
    Alternative and the No Project Alternative would both result in the road
    connector not being built, they would likely have similar impacts.
    Finally, Save Civita argues that the “trial court erred in equating the
    No Project Alternative with the Amend MVCP [A]lternative.” We reject this
    argument for two reasons. First, it is clear that the trial court did not
    “equat[e]” the No Project Alternative with the Amend MVCP Alternative. On
    the contrary, the trial court noted the distinction between the two
    alternatives. The court cited to the separate sections in the FEIR in which
    the two alternatives are discussed and summarized two key conclusions of
    the FEIR concerning the Amend MVCP Alternative, namely, that it resolves
    the inconsistency between the two community planning documents, but does
    not fulfill the other objectives of the Project. In addition, rather than
    “equating” the two alternatives, the trial court observed that the analysis of
    the two alternatives in the FEIR was “complementary.”24 Second, it cannot
    24    As noted in part III.A.2.c.v, ante, the trial court’s statement of decision
    provided in relevant part:
    “Section 9.4.1.2 of the [FEIR] addresses the ‘No
    Build/Remove from Mission Valley Community Plan
    Alternative.’ [Citation.] Although this alternative removes
    the inconsistency, it does not fulfill the other objectives
    such that this alternative was not analyzed in detail.
    Section 9.5.1 of the [FEIR] addresses the no project
    alternative in detail. [Citation.] The analys[e]s in both
    sections are complimentary and sufficient, and fostered
    informed decision making and informed public
    participation.”
    38
    reasonably be disputed that, with respect to many impacts, the No Project
    Alternative and the Amend MVCP Alternatives are similar, if not identical,
    even if they are not identical as to all impacts. To state the obvious, and as
    discussed above, under both the No Project Alternative and the Amend
    MVCP Alternative, no road would be built. Thus, the effects of selecting
    either of these alternatives would be similar in many respects. Indeed, in
    their opening brief in this court, Save Civita equated the two alternatives in
    arguing that “there is substantial evidence in the record demonstrating that
    the Amend MVCP [A]lternative - i.e., not building the roadway - would be
    better for traffic congestion than the Project.” (Italics added.) The similarity
    of the two alternatives further supports the City’s decision not to subject the
    Amend MVCP to independent detailed study in the FEIR. (See Preservation
    Action Council v. City of San Jose (2006) 
    141 Cal.App.4th 1336
    , 1358–1359
    (Preservation Action Council) [rejecting claim that agency was required to
    study “Alternative 2,” because agency “had already analyzed a range of
    alternatives directed at the same goal and Alternative 2 did not appear to be
    substantially different or potentially feasible”].)
    In short, given the overwhelming evidentiary support for the City’s
    conclusion that the Amend MVCP Alternative would not have achieved the
    vast majority of the Project’s objectives and would not have meaningfully
    furthered analysis of the Project, we conclude that the FEIR was not
    defective for failing to study in detail the Amend MVCP Alternative.25
    25    Save Civita also claims that the FEIR erroneously concluded that the
    Amend MVCP Alternative would require additional environmental analysis
    before implementation due to inconsistencies with the Climate Action Plan
    and the Bicycle Plan Master Update. We need not consider this contention
    because even if Save Civita were correct in this regard, given the City’s
    reasonable conclusion that the Amend MVCP Alternative fails to achieve the
    Project’s fundamental objectives and fails to meaningfully further analysis of
    39
    3. The FEIR is not defective for failing to adequately analyze the
    Project’s traffic impacts
    Save Civita claims that the FEIR’s analysis of the Project’s traffic
    impacts is inadequate for two reasons. First, Save Civita claims that the
    FEIR’s projection of the Project’s impact on “vehicle miles traveled” (VMT) is
    clearly inadequate because it did not disclose the true margin of error
    associated with the projection. Save Civita also contends that the FEIR
    failed to adequately analyze “obvious traffic hazards” (boldface & underscore
    omitted) to two roads, Via Alta and Franklin Ridge, that the Project will
    allegedly cause.
    We first outline the relevant law and standard of review governing both
    claims. We then consider each claim in turn.
    a. Governing law and standard of review
    “ ‘[C]hallenges to the scope of the analysis, the methodology for
    studying an impact, and the reliability or accuracy of the data present factual
    issues, so such challenges must be rejected if substantial evidence supports
    the agency's decision as to those matters and the EIR is not clearly
    inadequate or unsupported.’ ” (City of Maywood v. Los Angeles Unified
    School Dist. (2012) 
    208 Cal.App.4th 362
    , 425 (City of Maywood).) “ ‘The
    drafters of an EIR may . . . rely upon the credible opinions of experts
    concerning environmental impacts. [Citation.] [The party challenging the
    EIR] has the burden on appeal of demonstrating that these sources are so
    “clearly inadequate or unsupported” as to be “entitled to no judicial
    deference.” [Citation.]’ ” (Id. at p. 424.) “We apply the substantial evidence
    test to conclusions, findings, and determinations, and to challenges to the
    the Project, the City was not required to study the Amend MVCP Alternative
    in detail irrespective of its consistency or inconsistency with these planning
    documents.
    40
    scope of an EIR’s analysis of a topic, the methodology used for studying an
    impact, and the reliability or accuracy of the data upon which the EIR relied
    because these types of challenges involve factual questions.” (City of Long
    Beach v. Los Angeles Unified School Dist. (2009) 
    176 Cal.App.4th 889
    , 898.)
    b. Save Civita has not demonstrated that the FEIR’s VMT
    calculation is clearly inadequate
    Save Civita claims that the FEIR “[m]isrepresented [t]raffic [d]ata,”
    (boldface omitted) because it failed to adequately disclose that the VMT
    calculation for 2017 was subject to a 7 to 10% margin of error, and that the
    2035 VMT calculation was subject to an even greater margin of error.
    i. Factual and procedural background
    (a.) Relevant sections of the FEIR
    Section 5.2.4.1 of the FEIR describes the following predicted decreases
    in VMT in the near-term (2017) if the Project were constructed:
    “An analysis of the regional VMT was conducted with the
    implementation of the proposed roadway connection. The
    modeled VMT with the roadway connection under the
    Near-Term Scenario (Year 2017) within the study area[26]
    is 521,826. This represents a 1.8 percent decrease of VMT
    within the study area. With the proposed [P]roject, the
    region-wide VMT total is 1,518,696, a decrease of 0.32
    percent.”
    Section 5.2.5.1 of the FEIR describes the following predicted decreases
    in VMT in 2035 if the Project were constructed:
    “With the proposed [P]roject, VMT within the study area
    would be 720,196, a 1.8 percent decrease in VMT when
    compared to the baseline condition in Year 2035. Region-
    wide, the VMT with the [P]roject would be 1,629,137, a 0.28
    26    A map of the study area is contained in Appendix A, post.
    41
    percent decrease compared to the baseline condition in
    Year 2035.”
    Appendix H of the FEIR contains the VMT analysis and describes the
    modeling performed to produce the data contained in the appendix as follows:
    “Section 4.2,[27] Transportation/Circulation and Appendix
    C provide technical information on transportation model
    forecasting and detailed traffic operational analyses for the
    various freeway and roadway segments as well as
    intersections that would be affected as a result of the
    proposed [P]roject. This appendix includes the modeling
    results performed by SANDAG [San Diego Association of
    Governments] for the calculation of VMT within the
    [P]roject influence area. [¶] The [P]roject influence area is
    defined as all Traffic Analysis Zones (TAZ) where the
    [P]roject may cause an increase or decrease of 500 or more
    average daily trips (ADT).”
    Appendix H also contains a figure depicting the “Community Plan
    Amendment [P]roject [I]nfluence [A]rea.”
    Appendix H contains a table that states, “the proposed [P]roject would
    reduce the VMT within the [P]roject influence area by 1.8% under both the
    Near-Term Year 2017 with Connection and the Cumulative Year 2035 with
    Connection scenarios. The proposed [P]roject would also reduce the region
    wide VMT by .32% under the Near-Term Year 2035 with Connection scenario
    and by .28% under the Cumulative Year 2035 with Connection scenario.”
    Appendix H explains the basis of its VMT conclusions stating, “The
    VMT analysis was conducted consistent with methodologies discussed in the
    technical white paper ‘Vehicle Miles Traveled Calculations Using the
    SANDAG Regional Travel Demand Model’ prepared by the San Diego
    Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE)’s Transportation Capacity and
    27   The intended citation is to Section 5.2.
    42
    Mobility Task Force in May of 2013 (ITE 2013) [(White Paper)].” The
    appendix also contains a citation with a hyperlink to the White Paper.
    (b.) The White Paper
    The White Paper is a highly technical report describing a model that
    may be used to perform VMT calculations, and a case study application of the
    model to a community in San Diego (North Park).
    The conclusion of the White Paper states as follows:
    “The Methodology section of this white paper discusses the
    technical approach to using the traffic model to generate
    the three types of VMT trips.[28] Listing of the tools
    needed, the data input, general assumptions, and the steps
    required are discussed in detail in this section. . . . As
    shown in this paper, the methodology developed by
    SANDAG results in a 0.06% margin of error, which is well
    below the 0.1% margin of error threshold set by SANDAG.”
    28   The White Paper defines these trips in relevant part as follows:
    “1. Internal-to-Internal (I-I)
    This category includes trips that have both the Origin and
    Destination (two trip-ends) within the same
    city/community/development being analyzed. . . .
    “2. Internal-to-External, and External-to-Internal
    (I-E, E-I)
    This category includes trips with either the Origin or
    Destination (one trip-end) within the
    city/community/development being analyzed. . . .
    “3. External-to-External (E-E)
    The third category includes trips with neither Origin nor
    Destination (zero trip-ends) within the
    city/community/developments being analyzed. These are
    essentially trips passing through the
    city/community/development.”
    43
    (c.) The Surpi / Calandra e-mail exchange
    The administrative record contains an e-mail that a resident of Serra
    Mesa, Garbiela Surpi, sent to Mike Calandra, one of the authors of the White
    Paper. Her e-mail states as follows:
    “I came across your [White Paper]. While reading it I was
    wondering if you could give an idea of the margin of error a
    given VMT predicted with this model would have. The
    model uses inputs that by themselves are estimated
    projections so they carry some error that would propagate
    into the predictions. As a rule of thumb would you say, in a
    typical situation, the error of a VMT calculated by model
    could be up to 1%, 5%, 10%, other?
    “Thanks you very much in advance for any guidance you
    can provide on how to interpret the output of the model
    considering its expected error.”
    In response, Calandra sent Surpi an e-mail that states:
    “Hi Gabriela,
    “Thank you for your interest in the VMT White Paper, and
    these are indeed some very good questions!
    “We spend a lot of time calibrating and validating
    SANDAG’s travel demand model. The process includes
    creating a base year model where the results can be
    compared to real-world observed data (ADT, VMT, travel
    time, etc.). Calibration includes making adjustments to
    better replicate observed conditions, while validation
    includes statistical documentation of the performance.
    There are many guidelines and resources regarding model
    calibration, and we try to adhere to what the Federal
    Highway Administration has produced.
    “The short and very general answer is for model validation
    to be within +/- 10% of observed conditions for the region as
    a whole. A couple of interesting caveats include: the
    higher-volume roads are easier to calibrate, and observed
    44
    data from Caltrans’ freeway Performance Monitoring
    System confirms that travel on the freeways and highways
    can vary +/- 7% from day-to-day.
    “You correctly point out that future-year scenarios might
    include input assumptions, however the model calibration
    process does not address this. Even a well calibrated and
    validated travel demand model will have a larger margin of
    error the further out into the future you go.”
    (d.) Comments in public hearings concerning the
    margin of error issue
    During the Planning Commission hearing, Surpi spoke against the
    Project. During her presentation, she stated:
    “According to one of the principal authors of the [W]hite
    [P]aper that describes the methodology that was used for
    the vehicle miles traveled analysis, in general, a calibrated
    model generates a forecast that has a margin error of plus,
    minus 7 percent and can go up to plus, minus 10 percent.
    That is for near-term predictions. If you are trying to do
    long-term predictions, the errors are going to be higher,
    because any accuracy in the input propagates to your
    conclusions.”
    During the Planning Commission hearing, the following colloquy also
    occurred:
    “Commissioner Whalen: We have a lot of communications
    saying that the EIR was wrong. Start with that part.
    “Mr. Hajjiri: Let me -- good afternoon. This is Samir Hajjiri
    with the Planning Department, senior traffic engineer.
    “Let me try to address the VMT numbers. The VMT
    numbers in the report were developed based on a
    methodology that was developed by SANDAG staff. The
    methodology relies on that -- on the travel forecasting
    model. It extracts information from the origin [and]
    destination. It’s a very close approximation of the vehicle
    45
    miles traveled within the region and . . . from the study
    area of the [P]roject influence area. So that -- that’s the
    base tool available to us that we used to -- we used to report
    the numbers related to the VMT.
    “Commissioner Whalen: It’s worth mentioning that the
    courts have supported the level of accuracy of traffic
    modeling, too.
    “Mr. Hajjiri: That -- that’s definitely accurate. And we rely
    on a calibrated model that basically -- that with ground-
    toothing effort that, basically, we -- relates the forecast
    volumes to the count volumes on the roadways. And we use
    that information as a basis to create some traffic forecast
    to, basically, project future conditions on the roadways.”
    During her presentation before the City Council, in discussing the VMT
    analysis, Surpi stated:
    “So the VMT reports a reduction of minus 1.8, minus 0.32,
    and minus [0.28] VMT. However, the report fails to
    mention that there is a significant margin of error of ten
    percent. When you include that margin of error that
    means, for example, if you say minus three, 0.32 plus
    minus ten percent, that means that the VMT can be very
    well as between minus ten and plus ten. So that means
    there is no conclusion there that you can tell that the VMT
    is going to be reduced.”29
    A City Deputy Director of the Planning Department stated during the
    City Council hearing that “the VMT modeling used for this [P]roject was
    based on SANDAG modeling, the same modeling that we used to prepare our
    Climate Action Plan for the City that was adopted in 2015.”
    29    The contention that the margin of error for the VMT was much larger
    than disclosed in the RE-DEIR/FEIR was also made in comments on the RE-
    DEIR; in reports presented for a City Council committee; and in a
    memorandum that Save Civita sent to the City Council.
    46
    ii. Analysis
    The law is clear that it is Save Civita’s burden to demonstrate the clear
    inadequacy of the FEIR’s methodology. (City of Maywood, supra,
    208 Cal.App.4th at pp. 424–426.)
    The FEIR explained that its VMT analysis was premised on a White
    Paper that utilized a SANDAG travel demand model. The FEIR also
    provided a hyperlink to the White Paper, which is contained in the
    administrative record. The administrative record also indicates that the
    SANDAG model has been used to prepare other planning documents,
    including the Climate Action Plan. Yet, despite charging that the projected
    decrease in VMT “was subject to a 7 to 10 percent margin of error,” Save
    Civita’s opening brief contains no analysis of the White Paper’s methodology
    and no discussion of the margin of error identified in that document. Nor did
    Save Civita provide any expert testimony or any other evidence
    demonstrating that the FEIR’s VMT analysis is subject to a 7 to 10 percent
    margin of error.
    Instead of providing a reasoned analysis of the White Paper, Save
    Civita attempts to carry its burden of demonstrating that the FEIR’s reliance
    on the White Paper was “ ‘clearly inadequate,’ ” (City of Maywood, supra,
    208 Cal.App.4th at p. 425) entirely by way of Caldara’s e-mail exchange with
    Supri. In his e-mail to Surpi, Calandra discussed the concepts of
    “calibration,” and “validation,” and stated, “Calibration includes making
    adjustments to better replicate observed conditions, while validation includes
    statistical documentation of the performance.” Calandra then stated that
    47
    “[t]he short and very general answer[30] is for model validation to be within
    +/- 10% of observed conditions for the region as a whole,” before noting that
    “observed data from Caltrans’ freeway Performance Monitoring System
    confirms that travel on the freeways and highways can vary +/- 7% from day-
    to-day.” It is not clear from this single e-mail exchange that Calandra was
    supplying the margin of error in the VMT forecasts contained in the FEIR.31
    Thus, we conclude that Save Civita has not carried the difficult burden of
    establishing that the FEIR’s VMT analysis, which is built on a model
    developed by SANDAG that has been used in connection with other regional
    planning efforts, was “ ‘clearly inadequate.’ ” (City of Maywood, supra,
    208 Cal.App.4th at p. 425.)
    We are also not persuaded by Save Civita’s contention that the FEIR is
    inadequate because it fails to disclose the potential for the Project to
    substantially increase VMT. Save Civita notes that the FEIR states that a
    significant environmental impact would occur “if the [P]roject would result in
    a substantial increase in VMT when compared to the baseline condition.”
    (Italics added.) However, Save Civita’s contention that the “Project could
    actually increase VMT by 10 percent now and by an even higher percent in
    the future,” is based on nothing more than the single vague e-mail described
    above —a reed that we have found to be far too thin to establish the actual
    margin of error in the FEIR’s VMT analysis. We therefore also conclude that
    30    Supri stated in her e-mail, “As a rule of thumb would you say, in a
    typical situation, the error of a VMT calculated by model could be up to 1%,
    5%, 10%, other?”
    31     The City argues that Save Civita’s “entire argument hangs on
    Mr. Calandra’s ‘very general answer’ referencing 10% margin of error. But
    this relates to the model calibration in the Base Year, not the .06% margin of
    error for the VMT disaggregation methodology developed by SANDAG.”
    48
    Save Civita has not demonstrated that the FEIR is clearly inadequate for
    failing to disclose a potential substantial increase in VMT.
    c. Save Civita has not demonstrated that the Project would cause
    traffic hazards on Via Alta and Franklin Ridge that the FEIR
    failed to analyze
    i. Background
    Issue 4 of Section 5.2.6 of the FEIR analyzes the following question:
    “Would the proposed [P]roject result in an increase in
    traffic hazards for motor vehicles, bicycles, or pedestrians
    due to a proposed, non-standard design feature (e.g., poor
    sight distance or driveway onto an access-restricted
    roadway)?” (Italics omitted.)
    In analyzing this issue, the FEIR notes that the proposed roadway
    connector was conceptually designed to be consistent with the City’s Street
    Design Manual “and would not create a hazard for vehicles, bicycles, or
    pedestrians using the proposed roadway connection.” The FEIR also
    discusses the following characteristics of the proposed roadway:
    “The proposed roadway would be approximately 460 feet
    long and classified as a four-lane Major street with an
    approximately 120-foot right-of-way and would include a
    design speed of 55 mph. The posted speed for the roadway
    may be different from the design speed. However, the
    posted speed cannot be determined before the facility is in
    operation. After the [P]roject is completed, the City would
    resurvey the roadway traffic and set the posted speed limits
    based on the factors determined by that survey, including
    but not limited to the 85th percentile speed. The posted
    speed would not exceed the design speed and safety would
    be a primary consideration for the limit set.”
    The FEIR determined that there was a single traffic hazard associated
    with construction of the proposed roadway, related to the sight distance
    between a church driveway and the roadway connection:
    49
    “City View Church, located on the north side of Phyllis
    Place, has a 50-foot-wide driveway that provides access to
    the Church’s parking lot. The proposed roadway
    connection would not align with the City View Church
    driveway, as it would be located approximately 150 feet
    west of the driveway. This is because the roadway
    connection is required to be farther west in order to provide
    adequate sight distance due to the slight curve along
    Phyllis Place from the I-805 ramps. Therefore, the
    intersection at Phyllis Place and the proposed roadway
    would not directly align with the City View Church
    driveway.
    “As the roadway alignment cannot be shifted east to align
    with the driveway due to sight distance requirements, the
    driveway itself would need to be moved approximately
    150 feet to the west, thus creating a four-way intersection
    at Phyllis Place. However, as City View Church is
    privately owned, it is assumed for purposes of this analysis
    that the driveway would not be realigned as part of the
    proposed [P]roject. Therefore, the proposed [P]roject would
    have the potential to result in a safety hazard for vehicles
    entering or exiting the City View Church, as sight distance
    from the driveway to the intersection would likely not be
    sufficient. Impacts related to traffic hazards would
    therefore be potentially significant . . . and mitigation is
    required.”
    ii. Analysis
    Save Civita raises several arguments in support of its contention that
    the FEIR fails to adequately study traffic hazards on Via Alta and Franklin
    Ridge. First, Save Civita notes that evidence in the record establishes that
    both Via Alta and Franklin Ridge are “steep and curvy,” and contends that, if
    the road curvature on Phyllis Place warranted mitigation for the City View
    Church driveway, “then the steep and curvy nature of Via Alta and Franklin
    Ridge should have likewise been considered significant enough to warrant
    study and mitigation for the residents of Civita.” The FEIR explains that the
    50
    mitigation recommended for the church driveway is due to the location of the
    driveway in relation to the proposed connector. The mitigation was not
    required merely because of the curvature of Phyllis Place. Save Civita does
    not identify any features on Via Alta and Franklin Ridge analogous to the
    church driveway as to which the FEIR is clearly inadequate in failing to
    study possible traffic hazard mitigations. Indeed, in response to a comment
    on the RE-DEIR, in discussing the church driveway, the FEIR states, “It
    should also be noted that no other residential or any other driveways would
    be affected by the proposed roadway.”32 In addition, in response to a
    comment concerning potential visibility issues on Via Alta, the FEIR states,
    “the proposed [P]roject does not include any hazardous design features on Via
    Alta that would result in dangerous conditions for drivers,” Save Civita has
    not demonstrated that these statements are unreasonable.
    Save Civita also notes that the impact of increased traffic on pedestrian
    crossings on the roads was discussed during public hearings on the Project.
    While it is true that safety issues were discussed during public hearings,
    Save Civita does not demonstrate that the FEIR is obviously deficient in
    failing to address safety concerns on these roads. The FEIR extensively
    studied the projected increased traffic on Via Alta and Franklin Ridge Road,
    and notes that the design of the two roads in question could safely
    accommodate such increased traffic. For example, in a response to Save
    Civita’s comment on the RE-DEIR, the City stated the following:
    “This comment states that segments of Via Alta and
    Franklin Ridge Road will have limited pedestrian crossings
    with significant distance between crossings. It also states
    32     An agency’s responses to comments on a draft EIR are “an integral part
    of the EIR,” and may be considered in considering the sufficiency of an EIR’s
    analysis of an issue. (Cleveland National Forest Foundation v. San Diego
    Assn. of Governments (2017) 
    3 Cal.5th 497
    , 517.)
    51
    that long-term traffic projections show Via Alta and
    Franklin Ridge operating at level of service (LOS) C and
    LOS F,[33] respectively. The comment also asks several
    questions regarding if the [RE-]DEIR reviewed the
    projected volume of pedestrian traffic, pedestrian crossings,
    and pedestrian safety.
    “Pedestrian circulation and linkages are detailed within the
    [Civita] Specific Plan. For example, the Specific Plan
    states: ‘Streetside sidewalks, separated from the streets by
    landscaped parkways, occur as pedestrian elements along
    [Civita] Boulevard, Community Lane, Russell Park Way,
    Via Alta and Franklin Ridge Road. Sidewalks should be
    provided along local streets and private drives in
    accordance with the City of San Diego Street Design
    Manual (November 2002).’ Figure 4-14 from the [Civita]
    Specific Plan shows the pedestrian circulation and linkages
    within [Civita] and has been included as a figure within the
    FEIR [citation]. . . . [I]nternal circulation within Civita was
    developed as part of the [Civita] project, including the
    locations of signalized, designated pedestrian crosswalks.
    The proposed road connection would include bicycle lanes
    and a sidewalk for pedestrians, which would be consistent
    with the Street Design Manual. It is assumed pedestrians
    would use designated crosswalks and comply with
    applicable City laws and regulations. . . .
    33   The FEIR describes “level of service” (LOS) in the following manner:
    “To determine if a roadway segment is operating
    effectively, a level of service (LOS) grade is applied. LOS is
    an index used to quantitatively evaluate the operational
    quality of the roadway segments in the study area. LOS on
    roadway segments is determined by the ratio of the
    roadway’s volume divided by its design capacity, a metric
    known as volume to capacity (V/C) ratio. LOS takes into
    account factors such as roadway geometries, signal
    phasing, speed, travel delay, freedom to maneuver, and
    safety, and expresses these conditions using a letter-graded
    scale, with ‘A’ representing free flow and ‘F’ representing
    considerable congestion and delay.”
    52
    “Although vehicle traffic along Via Alta and Franklin Ridge
    Road will increase as a result of the [P]roject, the roadways
    are designed to accommodate this amount of vehicle traffic.
    In the long-term scenario (Year 2035), the segment of
    Franklin Ridge Road from Via Alta to Civita Boulevard is
    projected to operate at an LOS F [citation]. However, as
    detailed above, this would not result in an impact to
    pedestrian safety. Franklin Ridge Road has been designed
    with sidewalks separated from the streets by landscaped
    parkways and has multiple crossings and linkages
    [citation]. Therefore, as adequately detailed in the [RE-]
    DEIR, the proposed [P]roject would not result in an impact
    related to pedestrian safety. No revisions to the FEIR are
    warranted as a result of this comment.” (Italics added.)
    In addition, at the hearing on the Project before the City Council, a City
    representative stated the following:
    “Additionally, pedestrian safety within the neighborhood of
    Civita has been brought up throughout this planning effort.
    Following Planning Commission, staff revisited the [Civita]
    Specific Plan and also conducted additional site visits to the
    area. It was observed that safe pedestrian connections
    have been developed with both the constraints of the
    topography and the projected roadway volumes for build
    out of the Civita neighborhood.
    “[¶] . . . [¶]
    “I’d also like to point out that there’s an existing pedestrian
    under-crossing across Via Alta . . . .
    “ . . . Currently, there are crosswalks in place with curb
    ramps, enhanced paving, pedestrian refuges at the
    medians, and pedestrian scale lighting. So[,] if and when
    the roadway connection is constructed, the pedestrian
    improvements would continue with similar landscaping,
    sidewalks, designated bike lanes. They are consistent with
    the Bicycle Master Plan and similar safe pedestrian
    crossings at the intersection. . . .
    53
    “[¶] . . . [¶]
    “Along Franklin Ridge Road, note the six-foot-wide
    sidewalks with landscape buffer and designated bike lane
    and the northern slopes with development beginning on the
    -- on the berm.
    “So similar to Franklin Ridge, Via Alta includes dedicated
    bike lanes and sidewalks, separated by the road with
    landscaping. Via Alta is, approximately, a half-a-mile long.
    The farthest a pedestrian would need to travel in order to
    cross Via Alta would be, approximately, a quarter-of-a-mile.
    These distances and safe connections within the
    neighborhood are consistent with the General Plan and the
    recommendations in the General Plan Park Guidelines.”
    .
    Save Civita fails to demonstrate that the City’s discussion of the
    Project’s impact on Via Alta and Franklin Ridge is clearly inadequate. While
    Save Civita asserts that “there are non-standard design features the impacts
    of which will be significant given the amount of traffic slated to be redirected
    to these roads,” it fails to identify the specific “non-standard design features”
    of which it is complaining.
    At bottom, Save Civita appears to be broadly arguing that the
    increased traffic projected on Via Alta and Franklin Ridge with the
    construction of the Project will present unspecified traffic hazards on these
    two roads. However, Save Civita does not demonstrate how this increased
    traffic would result in hazardous conditions. Merely noting that the roads
    are steep and that concerns have been raised about the adequacy of
    pedestrian crossings does not establish that the FEIR is inadequate for
    failing to adequately study alleged traffic hazards. Given Save Civita’s
    failure to demonstrate how projected increased traffic on the two roads would
    likely result in specific traffic hazards that the FEIR failed to study, we
    54
    conclude that Save Civita has not demonstrated that the FEIR is “ ‘clearly
    inadequate’ ” in failing to adequately analyze alleged traffic hazards on Via
    Alta and Franklin Ridge. (City of Maywood, supra, 208 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 425–426.)
    4. The FEIR is not defective for failing to discuss purported
    inconsistencies of the Project with the City’s General Plan
    Save Civita claims that the FEIR fails to adequately discuss the
    Project’s inconsistency with the City’s General Plan.
    a. Governing law
    Guidelines section 15125, subdivision (d) provides in relevant part:
    “The EIR shall discuss any inconsistencies between the
    proposed project and applicable general plans . . . .”
    Because EIRs are required to discuss only “any inconsistencies”
    between the project and planning documents (Guidelines, § 15125, subd. (d),
    italics added), no analysis is required if the project is consistent with the
    relevant plans. (See, e.g., The Highway 68 Coalition v. County of Monterey
    (2017) 
    14 Cal.App.5th 883
    , 894 (The Highway 68 Coalition).) Nevertheless,
    “Some EIRs go beyond the CEQA Guidelines requirement . . . and discuss
    plan consistency as well as inconsistency.” (1 Kostka & Zischke, Practice
    Under the Cal. Environmental Quality Act (Cont.Ed.Bar 2021) Discussion of
    Consistency May Be Provided, § 12.29.)
    b. Standard of review
    We apply the standard of review discussed in part III.A.1.b, ante, to
    Save Civita’s claim. (See Sierra Club, supra, 6 Cal. 5th at p. 516 [describing
    standard of review to be applied to claim that EIR failed to perform its
    function of informing the public of issues raised by a proposed project].)
    55
    c. Application
    Save Civita claims that the FEIR “almost completely ignored,” the
    General Plan’s goal of promoting walkability and pedestrian-friendly
    development.34 We disagree. Table 5.1-1 of the FEIR is a multi-page table
    titled, “Proposed Project’s Consistency with the City of San Diego 2008
    General Plan,” that repeatedly discusses the Project’s consistency with the
    General Plan’s walkability goal. For example, Table 5.1-1 of the FEIR
    includes the following:
    Policy/             Goal/                         Proposed Project            Proposed
    Recommendation      Recommendation                                            Project
    Number                                                                        Consistency/
    Inconsistency
    Create a safe and             The proposed [P]roject      The proposed
    A. Walkable         comfortable pedestrian        would include a street      [P]roject is
    Community Goal II   environment.                  connection. Sidewalks       consistent
    would be included as part   with this goal.
    of the future
    implementation of the
    roadway (if constructed),
    as well as a landscape
    buffer between the
    34     We conclude in part III.B, post, that the City reasonably determined
    that the Project is consistent with the General Plan. We nevertheless assume
    for purposes of this opinion that this determination does not foreclose Save
    Civita’s claim that the FEIR is deficient in failing to disclose the Project’s
    purported inconsistency with the General Plan. (See Stop Syar Expansion v.
    County of Napa (2021) 
    63 Cal.App.5th 444
    , 462.) In Stop Syar Expansion,
    the appellant maintained that “ ‘[t]he injury that [it] claims is not the
    Project’s inconsistency with the General Plan as a whole as would be
    addressed by a Planning and Zoning Law (Gov. Code, § 65000 et seq.) action,
    but rather the failure to adequately inform the public and decisionmakers
    about inconsistencies with any policies as required by CEQA.’ ” (Id. at p. 462,
    underscore omitted.) Although expressing skepticism as to the legal validity
    of such a claim (see id. at p. 460 [stating that appellant’s claim that the “EIR
    failed to address the project’s asserted inconsistencies with the County’s
    general plan,” was “[n]ot [a] CEQA [i]ssue” (italics omitted)], the Stop Syar
    Expansion court ultimately considered appellant’s claim on the merits. (Id.
    at p. 463.) We adopt the same approach here and consider Save Civita’s
    claim on the merits.
    56
    sidewalk and road for a
    safe and comfortable
    pedestrian linkage to the
    surrounding communities.
    A. Walkable         A complete, functional, and    The proposed [P]roject         The proposed
    Community Goal      interconnected                 would include a street         [P]roject is
    III                 pedestrian network that is     connection that if             consistent
    accessible to pedestrians      implemented would              with this goal.
    of all abilities.              include sidewalks that
    would serve as an
    Americans with
    Disabilities Act (ADA)
    compliant pedestrian
    facility that would link the
    communities of Serra
    Mesa and Mission Valley.
    Greater walkability            The proposed [P]roject         The proposed
    A. Walkable         achieved through               would include a street         [P]roject is
    Community Goal IV   pedestrian-friendly street,    connection that if             consistent
    site, and building design.     implemented would be           with this goal.
    designed to address
    pedestrian needs by
    providing pedestrian
    facilities such as
    sidewalks and landscaping
    along the roadway
    extension.
    Save Civita also contends that the FEIR lacks substantial evidence to
    support its conclusion that the Project is consistent with the City’s General
    Plan. Again, we disagree. As summarized in part III.B, post, the FEIR
    outlines numerous ways in which the Project is consistent with the General
    Plan.
    Save Civita also maintains that the FEIR “omits relevant policies” from
    its analysis, including General Plan Policy, ME-C.6, which encourages that
    streets and roads be designed to promote community character. Save Civita
    quotes Policy ME-C.6 as providing:
    “Locate and design new streets . . . to:
    respect the natural environment, scenic
    character, and community character of
    the area traversed; and meet safety
    standards.
    57
    ...
    b. Design roadways and road
    improvements to maintain and enhance
    neighborhood character.”
    The FEIR was not required to include any discussion of the Project’s
    consistency with the General Plan (see, e.g., The Highway 68 Coalition,
    supra, 14 Cal.App.5th at p. 894), and it is plainly not defective for failing to
    address every individual policy within the General Plan. Moreover, the
    FEIR does discuss a number of policies from the General Plan, including
    Policy ME-C.3, which provides:
    “Design an interconnected street network within and
    between communities that includes pedestrian and bicycle
    access while minimizing landform and community
    character impacts.” (Italics added.)
    The FEIR reasonably finds that the Project is consistent with this
    policy, stating:
    “The proposed project would include a street connection
    linking the communities of Serra Mesa and Mission Valley.
    Impacts on community character and landform would be
    minimal because the surrounding area is already developed
    with homes, streets, and a church.”
    Finally, Save Civita claims that the FEIR is defective in that it
    concludes that the Project is consistent with the General Plan’s Walkable
    Community Goals, despite the fact that the FEIR also concludes that the
    Project would result in an increase in traffic on roads in the Civita
    development. The FEIR exhaustively considered this issue, and reasonably
    concludes, for the reasons outlined in part III.B, post, that the Project is
    consistent with the General Plan’s goal of promoting walkability.
    58
    Accordingly, we conclude that the FEIR is not defective for failing to
    discuss purported inconsistencies of the Project with the City’s General Plan.
    B. The City did not violate the Planning and Zoning law
    Save Civita claims that the City violated the Planning and Zoning Law
    (Gov. Code, §§ 65000, 65300) in approving the Project. Specifically, Save
    Civita contends that the Project is inconsistent with the “City of Villages
    concept” in the City’s General Plan, “which emphasizes walkable
    communities and pedestrian-friendly features.”35
    1. Governing law and standard of review
    In Pfeiffer v. City of Sunnyvale City Council (2011) 
    200 Cal.App.4th 1552
     (Pfeiffer), the Court of Appeal described the law governing a claim that
    a city’s land use decision is inconsistent with the city’s general plan:
    “Under the Government Code, every county and city is
    required to adopt ‘ “a comprehensive, long-term general
    plan for the physical development of the county or city. . . .”
    (Gov. Code, § 65300.) A general plan provides a “ ‘charter
    for future development’ ” and sets forth a city or county’s
    fundamental policy decisions about such development.
    [Citation.] These policies “typically reflect a range of
    competing interests.” [Citation.] Nevertheless, a city’s
    land use decisions must be consistent with the policies
    expressed in the general plan. [Citation.] “ ‘[T]he propriety
    of virtually any local decision affecting land use and
    development depends upon consistency with the applicable
    general plan and its elements.’ [Citation.]” [Citation.]’
    [Citation.]
    35     The City claims that Save Civita forfeited this claim by failing to
    adequately raise it either at the administrative level or in the trial court. We
    reject the City’s forfeiture argument. At the administrative level, Save Civita
    opposed the Project and sent the City Council a memorandum that states in
    relevant part, “The Proposed Project is Inconsistent with the City of San
    Diego General Plan . . . .” (Underscore omitted.) In addition, Save Civita’s
    writ petition in the trial court also expressly alleged that the Project is
    inconsistent with the General Plan.
    59
    “ ‘ “ ‘An action, program, or project is consistent with the
    general plan if, considering all its aspects, it will further
    the objectives and policies of the general plan and not
    obstruct their attainment.’ [Citation.]” [Citation.] State
    law does not require perfect conformity between a proposed
    project and the applicable general plan . . . . [Citation.]’
    [Citation.] In other words, ‘it is nearly, if not absolutely,
    impossible for a project to be in perfect conformity with
    each and every policy set forth in the applicable plan. . . . It
    is enough that the proposed project will be compatible with
    the objectives, policies, general land uses and programs
    specified in the applicable plan. [Citations.]’ [Citation.]”
    (Id. at pp. 1562–1563.)
    “ ‘A city’s findings that the project is consistent with its general plan
    can be reversed only if [they are] based on evidence from which no reasonable
    person could have reached the same conclusion.’ ” (Pfeiffer, supra,
    200 Cal.App.4th at p. 1563.)
    2. Application
    Save Civita claims that the Project is not consistent with the City of
    Villages concept in the general plan due to the “substantial increase in
    vehicle thru-traffic on three-residential roads,” namely Phyllis Place, Via
    Alta, and Franklin Ridge.
    Notwithstanding the projected increase in traffic, the City could have
    reasonably determined that the Project is consistent with the walkable
    village concept in the General Plan. As the FEIR notes, the Project would
    have pedestrian components that would “provide linkages among
    employment sites, housing, and villages.” Specifically, “Sidewalks would be
    included as part of the future implementation of the roadway (if constructed),
    as well as a landscape buffer between the sidewalk and road for a safe and
    comfortable pedestrian linkage to the surrounding communities.” The FEIR
    60
    also reasonably states, “pedestrian facilities would increase walkability in the
    area and accommodate pedestrian activity.” In addition, the FEIR notes, in a
    response to a comment concerning the [P]roject’s effect on walkability in the
    area, that “Existing signalized, designated pedestrian crosswalks are located
    at the intersection of Via Alta and Franklin Ridge Road and the intersection
    of Via Alta and Civita Boulevard.”36
    The City was not required to consider the walkability of Civita to the
    exclusion of all other policies discussed in the General Plan. (Pfeiffer, supra,
    200 Cal.App.4th at p. 1563 [“ ‘policies in a general plan reflect a range of
    competing interests’ ”].) The City reasonably determined in the FEIR that
    the Project furthers numerous policies in the General Plan, including linking
    communities to the regional transit system,37 reducing traffic congestion,
    36     In addition, as quoted in part III.A.3.c.ii, ante, another response to
    comment in the FEIR specifically addressed how the projected increased
    traffic on roads in Civita would likely impact pedestrian safety:
    “Although vehicle traffic along Via Alta and Franklin Ridge
    Road will increase as a result of the project, the roadways
    are designed to accommodate this amount of vehicle traffic.
    In the long-term scenario (Year 2035), the segment of
    Franklin Ridge Road from Via Alta to Civita Boulevard is
    projected to operate at an LOS F [Citation]. However, as
    detailed above, this would not result in an impact to
    pedestrian safety. Franklin Ridge Road has been designed
    with sidewalks separated from the streets by landscaped
    parkways and has multiple crossings and linkages . . . .”
    37    During the Planning Commission hearing on the Project, the State
    Transportation Commissioner stated: “I can tell you that the I-805-Phyllis
    Place interchange is a state asset that was built, not just to serve . . . a small
    hamlet of 220 homes but instead to be part of a regional transportation plan.
    Mission Valley and Serra Mesa will definitely benefit from the additional
    north-south connection.”
    61
    increasing multi-modal transportation choices, preventing a closed loop-
    subdivision, improving traffic circulation, and reducing greenhouse gas
    emissions.
    In the end, while the Project is predicted to increase traffic on several
    roads, the City could reasonably determine that the Project would further
    numerous policies in the General Plan while preserving walkability in the
    Civita development. In short, the City reasonably “ ‘weigh[ed] and balance[d]
    the plan’s policies,’ ” in approving the Project. (Pfeiffer, supra,
    200 Cal.App.4th at p. 1563.)
    Accordingly, we conclude that the City did not act arbitrarily or
    capriciously in determining that the Project is consistent with the General
    Plan.
    C. The City Council, in certifying the FEIR and approving the Project, acted
    in a quasi-legislative capacity and therefore was not subject to procedural
    due process requirements applicable to quasi-adjudicatory hearings
    Save Civita claims that the City’s certification of the FEIR and its
    approval of amendments to the SMCP and City General Plan were quasi-
    adjudicatory decisions.38 Save Civita further contends that the City violated
    the public’s procedural right to due process and a fair hearing because a
    member of the City Council who voted to approve the FEIR and the Project
    38    Specifically, Save Civita argues, “The certification of an EIR and
    attendant approval of a project are reviewed under the administrative-
    mandamus procedures under Code of Civil Procedure Section 1094.5. See . . .
    § 21168.” “ ‘ “[W]hen functioning in such an adjudicatory capacity, the city
    council must be ‘neutral and unbiased.’ ” ’ ”
    As explained in part III.C.2, post, quasi-adjudicative decisions are
    reviewed by way of administrative mandamus pursuant to Code of Civil
    Procedure Section 1094.5 and section 21168. Quasi-legislative decisions are
    reviewed by way of traditional mandamus pursuant to section Code of Civil
    Procedure Section 1085 and section 21168.5.
    62
    was, according to Save Civita, “a cheerleader for the Project and decided he
    was going to approve the Project long before any evidence was presented to
    the [Smart Growth & Land Use Committee] or City Council.”39
    The threshold question of whether the City acted in a quasi-
    adjudicatory capacity in certifying the FEIR and approving amendments to
    planning documents raises a question of law. We review this question of law
    de novo. (See Abatti v. Imperial Irrigation Dist. (2012) 
    205 Cal.App.4th 650
    ,
    668 [questions of law arising in CEQA cases are reviewed de novo).]
    1. Factual and procedural background
    In its brief in support of a petition for writ of mandamus, Save Civita
    cited Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5, subdivision (b),40 and
    maintained that the City had deprived the public of its right to a fair trial. In
    support of this contention, Save Civita noted that, after the RE-DEIR was
    released for public review and prior to public hearings on the Project, City
    39   While this appeal was pending, we requested that the parties file
    supplemental briefs addressing the following two questions:
    “1. Were the City’s certification of the [F]EIR and approval
    of the amendments to planning documents in this case
    quasi-adjudicatory decisions, reviewable pursuant to Public
    Resources Code section 21168 and Code of Civil Procedure
    section 1094.5 or quasi-legislative decisions, reviewable
    pursuant to Public Resources Code section 21168.5 and
    Code of Civil Procedure section 1085?”
    “2. Would a determination that the City was acting in a
    quasi-legislative capacity foreclose appellant’s procedural
    due process claim?”
    We have reviewed the parties’ briefing in addressing Save Civita’s
    claim.
    40    We discuss Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5 in part III.C.2.a.ii,
    post.
    63
    Council Member Scott Sherman’s staff sent e-mails to various associations
    seeking support for the Project and, on at least one occasion, offered to write
    a letter of support for the Project on behalf of a group. In addition, Save
    Civita noted that on the day after the Planning Commission recommended
    approval of the Project, a staff member from Council Member Sherman’s
    office sent out an e-mail to those who had attended the meeting thanking
    them for their support and seeking their support in future proceedings
    related to the Project. Save Civita claimed that these actions demonstrated
    that Council Member Sherman did not act in an impartial matter at the City
    Council hearing on the Project. Accordingly, Save Civita argued, “the
    hearing failed to comport with the fair-hearing aspect of due process.”
    In its opposition, the City maintained that Save Civita had not
    “identified any actions by Mr. Sherman that approach establishing an
    ‘unacceptable probability of actual bias.’ ” In support of this contention, the
    City noted that Save Civita had “only identifie[d] several emails sent, not by
    Mr. Sherman, but by his district office staff generally seeking support for the
    Project.” According to the City, such evidence did not meet the “exacting
    standard to prove actual bias.”
    After further briefing and a hearing, the trial court rejected Save
    Civita’s argument in its order denying its Petition / Complaint. The trial
    court reasoned in part:
    “[Save Civita] has not identified actions by Councilperson
    Sherman that establish a probability of actual bias. [Save
    Civita] does not identify any concrete facts showing actual
    bias. Mr. Sherman’s office was entitled to communicate
    with constituents and take a position regarding approval of
    the connector road. Mr. Sherman’s motives are irrelevant
    when assessing the validity of the [P]roject approval.”
    64
    2. Governing law
    a. Quasi-legislative and quasi-adjudicative decisions
    i. The distinction between quasi-legislative and quasi-
    adjudicative acts
    “City council members wear multiple hats. It is commonly understood
    that they function as local legislators. But sometimes they act in a quasi-
    adjudicatory capacity similar to judges. (Woody’s Group, Inc. v. City of
    Newport Beach (2015) 
    233 Cal.App.4th 1012
    , 1021 (Woody’s).) . . . [¶] ‘[W]hen
    functioning in such an adjudicatory capacity, the city council must be
    “neutral and unbiased.” ’ (Woody’s, 
    supra,
     233 Cal.App.4th at p. 1021
    [citation]; see also Asimow et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Administrative Law
    (The Rutter Group 2019) ¶ 3:426, at p. 3-70 [‘A decisionmaker must be
    unbiased (meaning that the decisionmaker has no conflict of interest, has not
    prejudged the specific facts of the case, and is free of prejudice against or in
    favor of any party)’].)” (Petrovich Development Co., LLC v. City of
    Sacramento (2020) 
    48 Cal.App.5th 963
    , 973 (Petrovich), italics altered.)
    In Beck Development Co. v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co. (1996)
    
    44 Cal.App.4th 1160
     (Beck Development Co.) the court summarized the
    distinction between quasi-legislative and quasi-adjudicative actions, and
    noted that principles of procedural due process do not apply to quasi-
    legislative actions:
    “In considering the applicability of due process principles,
    we must distinguish between actions that are legislative in
    character and actions that are adjudicatory. . . . [T]he
    terms ‘quasi-legislative’ and ‘quasi-judicial’ are used to
    denote these differing types of action. Quasi-legislative
    acts involve the adoption of rules of general application on
    the basis of broad public policy, while quasi-judicial acts
    involve the determination and application of facts peculiar
    to an individual case. [Citations.] Quasi-legislative acts
    65
    are not subject to procedural due process requirements[41]
    while those requirements apply to quasi-judicial acts
    regardless of the guise they may take. . . .” (Id. at p. 1188,
    italics added.)
    The principle that procedural due process protections do not apply
    to quasi-legislative action is well established. (See, e.g., Western Oil & Gas
    Assn. v. Air Resources Board (1984) 
    37 Cal.3d 502
    , 525 [no constitutional
    issue of procedural due process was presented because Board was acting in a
    quasi-legislative capacity]; Horn v. County of Ventura (1979) 
    24 Cal.3d 605
    ,
    612–613 [stating that it is “well settled . . . that only those governmental
    decisions which are adjudicative in nature are subject to procedural due
    process principles. Legislative action is not burdened by such requirements.
    [Citations]”].) “ ‘Legislative action generally is not governed by these
    procedural due process requirements because it is not practical that everyone
    should have a direct voice in legislative decisions; elections provide the check
    there. [Citations.]’ ” (San Francisco Tomorrow v. City and County of San
    Francisco (2014) 
    229 Cal.App.4th 498
    , 526.)
    ii. Judicial review of quasi-legislative and quasi-
    adjudicative acts
    Quasi-legislative actions are generally reviewed by a proceeding in
    ordinary or traditional mandate (Code Civ. Proc., § 1085), in which judicial
    review is confined to the question whether the classification is arbitrary,
    capricious, or without reasonable or rational basis. (County of Los Angeles v.
    City of Los Angeles (2013) 
    214 Cal.App.4th 643
    , 648–655.)
    41     The right to an adjudicator who has not “prejudged the specific facts of
    the case,”— the right that Save Civita claims was violated in this case—is a
    right that attaches when local legislators “act in a quasi-adjudicatory
    capacity similar to judges.” (Petrovich, supra, 48 Cal.App.5th at p. 973.)
    66
    Administrative mandamus (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5) is available only
    when “by law a hearing is required to be given, evidence is required to be
    taken, and discretion in the determination of facts is vested in the inferior
    tribunal, corporation, board, or officer . . . .” (Id., subd. (a); see, e.g., Citizens
    for East Shore Parks v. State Lands Com. (2011) 
    202 Cal.App.4th 549
    , 571
    [“ ‘[T]he intent of the Legislature in enacting [Code of Civil Procedure section]
    1094.5 was to authorize “. . . judicial review. . . of an adjudicatory or quasi-
    judicial function” ’ ”].)
    b. Judicial review under CEQA
    i. Statutory framework
    Sections 21168 and 21168.5 outline the manner by which a party may
    obtain judicial review of an agency’s decision under CEQA. Except for
    proceedings under section 21168 to challenge quasi-adjudicatory decisions,
    section 21168.5 governs judicial review of all decisions by a public agency
    under CEQA. Section 21168.5 provides in relevant part:
    “In any action or proceeding, other than an action or
    proceeding under Section 21168, to attack, review, set
    aside, void or annul a determination, finding, or decision of
    a public agency on the grounds of noncompliance with this
    division, the inquiry shall extend only to whether there was
    a prejudicial abuse of discretion. Abuse of discretion is
    established if the agency has not proceeded in a manner
    required by law or if the determination or decision is not
    supported by substantial evidence.”
    Section 21168 governs judicial review of a public agency’s CEQA quasi-
    adjudicative decisions:
    “Any action or proceeding to attack, review, set aside, void
    or annul a determination, finding, or decision of a public
    agency, made as a result of a proceeding in which by law a
    hearing is required to be given, evidence is required to be
    taken and discretion in the determination of facts is vested
    67
    in a public agency, on the grounds of noncompliance with
    the provisions of this division shall be in accordance with
    the provisions of Section 1094.5 of the Code of Civil
    Procedure.
    “In any such action, the court shall not exercise its
    independent judgment on the evidence but shall only
    determine whether the act or decision is supported by
    substantial evidence in the light of the whole record.”
    ii. Western States
    In Western States Petroleum Assn. v. Superior Court (1995) 
    9 Cal.4th 559
    , 566 (Western States), the Supreme Court outlined the distinction
    between administrative and traditional mandamus and between review
    under sections 21168 and 21168.5 as follows:
    “A party may seek to set aside an administrative decision
    for failure to comply with CEQA by petitioning for either
    administrative mandamus (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5) or
    traditional mandamus (id., [Code Civ. Proc.,] § 1085). A
    petition for administrative mandamus is appropriate when
    the party seeks review of a ‘determination, finding, or
    decision of a public agency, made as a result of a proceeding
    in which by law a hearing is required to be given, evidence
    is required to be taken and discretion in the determination
    of facts is vested in a public agency, on the grounds of
    noncompliance with [CEQA],’ generally referred to as an
    ‘adjudicatory’ or ‘quasi-judicial’ decision. (. . . § 21168; see
    Langsam v. City of Sausalito (1987) 
    190 Cal.App.3d 871
    ,
    879 [‘It is well established that the intent of the Legislature
    in enacting [Code of Civil Procedure section] 1094.5 was to
    authorize “. . . judicial review only of the exercise by an
    administrative agency of an adjudicatory or quasi-judicial
    function.” ’]; see also Cal. Administrative Mandamus
    (Cont.Ed.Bar 1989) § 1.1, p. 2 [administrative mandamus is
    the ‘procedure used to obtain judicial review of adjudicative
    decisions (i.e., decisions that determine what the facts are
    in relation to specific private rights or interests)’].) A
    petition for traditional mandamus is appropriate in all
    68
    other actions brought ‘to attack, review, set aside, void or
    annul a determination, finding, or decision of a public
    agency on the grounds of noncompliance with [CEQA].’
    [Citations.]” (Western States, supra, at pp. 566–567.)
    The Western States court specifically rejected the argument that review
    could be had under section 21168 whenever an agency was required by law to
    hold a hearing on a matter. (Western States, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at p. 567.)
    Instead, the Western States court made clear that review under section 21168
    is proper only when an agency acted in a quasi-adjudicatory capacity,
    reasoning in part:
    “When the Legislature drafted . . . section 21168 in 1972, it
    borrowed the words, ‘made as [a] result of a proceeding in
    which by law a hearing is required to be given, evidence is
    required to be taken and discretion in the determination of
    facts is vested in [a public agency],’ from Code of Civil
    Procedure section 1094.5, subdivision (a). It was well
    established in 1972 that an administrative mandamus
    action under Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5 was not
    the proper vehicle to challenge a quasi-legislative
    administrative decision even if the agency was required by
    law to hold a hearing as part of its rulemaking procedures.
    [Citation.] We assume that when the Legislature chose to
    incorporate the language of Code of Civil Procedure section
    1094.5 into . . . section 21168, it intended that language to
    have the same meaning and be construed and applied in
    the same way as the courts had done up to that point.
    [Citation.]” (Western States, supra, at p. 568.)
    Thus, under Western States, a local agency’s certification of an EIR is
    quasi-legislative, unless the underlying action that the public agency
    analyzed in the EIR is quasi-adjudicative. (See Cal. Administrative
    Mandamus (3d ed. Cal CEB) Administrative Mandamus, § 5.19 [describing as
    “quasi-legislative and hence subject to review under [Code of Civil Procedure
    section] 1085,” a “[CEQA] decision, such as certification of an EIR, when the
    69
    underlying decision is quasi-legislative, such as adoption of an ordinance,
    rule, regulation, or policy,” citing Western States, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at p. 566].)
    In Madera Oversight Coalition, Inc. v. County of Madera (2011)
    
    199 Cal.App.4th 48
     (Madera), the Court of Appeal concluded that a plaintiffs’
    petition for writ of mandate challenging a local agency’s certification of an
    EIR challenged a quasi-legislative action:
    “The acts of County’s board of supervisors in (1) certifying
    the final EIR and (2) approving an ordinance that adopted
    the Tesoro Viejo specific plan and related rezoning
    constituted legislative and quasi-legislative decisions.
    In Yost v. Thomas (1984) 
    36 Cal.3d 561
     [(Yost)], the
    California Supreme Court stated that it had ‘no doubt’ that
    ‘the adoption of a specific plan is to be characterized as a
    legislative act.’ (Id. at p. 570.) It also stated that ‘the
    rezoning of land is a legislative act . . . .’ (Ibid.)” (Id. at
    p. 75.)
    The Madera court continued:
    “In this case, plaintiffs’ petition for a writ of mandamus is
    properly classified as a petition for traditional mandamus
    (1) subject to the procedures set forth in Code of Civil
    Procedure section 1085 and (2) reviewed under the
    standards contained in . . . section 21168.5. [Citation.]
    This conclusion is not controversial, as a vast majority of
    proceedings challenging agency action for violating CEQA
    are treated as traditional mandamus reviewed under
    section 21168.5.” (Madera, supra, 199 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 76.)
    Similarly, in Citizens Opposing a Dangerous Environment v. County of
    Kern (2014) 
    228 Cal.App.4th 360
    , the Court of Appeal stated that a challenge
    to the certification of an EIR containing a particular mitigation measure was
    “as one for a writ of traditional mandamus under section 21168.5,” because
    “the challenged agency decision is legislative in character.” (Id. at p. 365,
    fn. 5.)
    70
    c. Relevant law with respect to whether the underlying actions
    analyzed in the FEIR are quasi-legislative or quasi-
    adjudicatory
    The FEIR analyzed two underlying actions to be taken by the City:
    (1) the approval of the building of the road and; (2) the amendment of
    planning documents to show the proposed roadway.42
    i. An agency’s decision to approve the building of a road is
    a quasi-legislative act
    In Save Lafayette Trees v. East Bay Regional Park Dist. (2021)
    
    66 Cal.App.5th 21
    , 52–56 (Save Lafayette Trees) the Court of Appeal provided
    an extensive discussion of the distinction between land use decisions that are
    legislative in nature and those that are adjudicative. The Save Lafayette
    Trees court noted that, where an agency has to consider “a broad spectrum of
    community costs and benefits which cannot be limited to ‘facts peculiar to the
    individual case,’ ” the agency acts in a legislative manner. (Save Lafayette
    Trees, supra, at p. 56; quoting Oceanside Marina Towers Assn. v. Oceanside
    Community Development Com. (1986) 
    187 Cal.App.3d 735
     (Oceanside Marina
    42    The FEIR’s “Project Description,” stated in relevant part:
    “The proposed [P]roject consists of construction and
    operation of a four-lane major street . . . . [¶] The proposed
    [P]roject would require an amendment to the Serra Mesa
    Community Plan.”
    The FEIR also indicated that, although it was “reasonably foreseeable
    that the roadway could be proposed and implemented without further
    discretionary review if the proposed [P]roject were to be approved and this
    [FEIR] were to be certified,” the City was not “at this time,” “proposing to
    construct or fund the roadway construction.” (Underscore omitted.) The
    FEIR stated that the City was “only . . . analyz[ing] the environmental effects
    of [the road’s] construction and operation, as directed by the City Council,”
    and that, “[t]he [Civita] developer or another entity could implement the
    proposed [P]roject.” (Underscore omitted.)
    71
    Towers) [concluding that agencies’ CEQA decision pertaining to relocation of
    railroad switchyard was legislative in nature because “like any other decision
    regarding the location of a public improvement,” (id. at p. 747) the agencies
    were required to consider numerous interests in selecting location, and
    “[a]lthough these types of decisions have substantial impact on surrounding
    properties, they have consistently been held to be ‘legislative’ acts exempt
    from due process hearing requirements” (id. at p. 745)].)
    Among the cases cited by the Save Lafayette Trees court is Quinchard v.
    Board of Trustees (1896) 
    113 Cal. 664
    , 669 (Quinchard), in which the
    California Supreme Court concluded that “[w]hether an existing street shall
    be improved,” was a legislative question, reasoning:
    “Whether an existing street shall be improved, is a question
    to be addressed to the governing body of a municipality in
    its legislative capacity, and its determination upon that
    question, as well as upon the character of the improvement
    to be made, is a legislative act. [Citations.] The act does
    not cease to be legislative because the members of the city
    council are required to exercise their judgment in
    determining whether the improvement shall be made. The
    judgment which they exercise in ordering the improvement
    is not a determination of the rights of an individual under
    existing laws, but is the conclusion or opinion which they
    form in the exercise of the discretionary power that has
    been [e]ntrusted to them, and upon a consideration of the
    public welfare and demands for which they are to provide.”
    Quinchard is consistent with other California Supreme Court case law
    stating that a governmental decision to approve road construction is
    legislative in nature. (See Brown v. Board of Supervisors (1899) 
    124 Cal. 274
    ,
    277–278 [“The act of the board of supervisors in determining whether a street
    shall be opened or closed, or widened or contracted, or otherwise improved, is
    a legislative act performed in the exercise of the power which has been
    72
    conferred upon the municipality by the legislature to enable it to provide for
    the welfare of its citizens”]; accord Wheelright v. County of Marin (1970)
    
    2 Cal.3d 448
    , 452, 458 [concluding that an ordinance approving “a precise
    development plan for the construction of the Tennessee Valley access road,”
    was a legislative act because “[r]oadways are of sufficient public interest and
    concern to weight the scales in favor of construing this ordinance as being
    legislative”].)
    ii. An agency’s amendment of planning documents is a
    quasi-legislative act
    An agency’s act in adopting or amending a general or specific plan is a
    legislative act. (Yost, supra, 
    36 Cal.3d 561
    .) In reaching this conclusion, the
    Yost court reasoned in part:
    “The adoption of a general plan is a legislative act
    [Citation] ‘The amendment of a legislative act is itself a
    legislative act’ [citation] and the amendment of a general
    plan is thus a legislative act . . . . [Citation.] Therefore, the
    amendments to [city’s] general plan were legislative
    acts . . . . [¶] This leaves the question whether the adoption
    of a specific plan is to be characterized as a legislative act.
    We have no doubt that the answer is affirmative.
    Certainly[,] such action is neither administrative nor
    adjudicative. [Citations.] On the other hand the elements
    of a specific plan are similar to those found in general plans
    or in zoning regulations—the siting of buildings, uses and
    roadways; height, bulk and setback limitations; population
    and building densities; open space allocation. [Citation.]
    The statutory procedure for the adoption and amendment
    of specific plans is substantially similar to that for general
    plans [citation]. It appears therefore that the legislative
    aspects of a specific plan are similar to those of general
    plans.” (Id. at p. 570.)
    In Sierra Club v. Gilroy City Council (1990) 
    222 Cal.App.3d 30
    , the
    Court of Appeal applied Yost in concluding that, because “[t]he amendment of
    73
    a general plan has been held to be a quasi-legislative action,” judicial review
    of a CEQA decision pertaining to such action, “is governed by section
    21168.5.” (Sierra Club v. Gilroy City Council, supra, at p. 39.)
    3. Application
    In order to determine whether the City’s certification of the FEIR and
    its approval of amendments to the SMCP and City’s General Plan were
    quasi-adjudicatory acts, and thus subject to procedural due process
    requirements as Save Civita maintains, we must consider the nature of the
    acts undertaken by the City. (See Western States, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at
    pp. 566–567 [stating that whether a petition challenging an agency’s action
    for failing to comply with CEQA sounds in traditional or administrative
    mandate is determined by whether the agency’s action was quasi-
    adjudicative or quasi-legislative]; Save Lafayette Trees, supra, 66 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 52 [in determining whether party could properly allege procedural due
    process claim against agency, Court of Appeal evaluated whether agency’s
    action was quasi-adjudicatory]).
    a. The City’s approval of amendments to the SMCP and City’s
    General Plan
    Considering the latter issue first, it appears clear that the City’s
    approval of amendments to the SMCP and City’s General Plan are quasi-
    legislative actions, because such actions “involve the adoption of rules of
    general application on the basis of broad public policy.” (Beck Development
    Co., supra, 44 Cal.App.4th at p. 1188.) Indeed, as noted, the California
    Supreme Court has concluded that a governmental entity’s action in adopting
    or amending a general or specific plan is clearly a legislative act (Yost, supra,
    36 Cal.3d at pp. 570–571; see also, e.g., The Park at Cross Creek, LLC v. City
    of Malibu (2017) 
    12 Cal.App.5th 1196
    , 1204 [“A city’s or county’s adoption of
    74
    a general plan for its physical development is a legislative act. [Citations.]
    Adoption or amendment of a specific plan for the systematic implementation
    of the general plan is also a legislative act”].)
    In its supplemental brief, Save Civita cites Rural Landowners Assn. v.
    City Council (1983) 
    143 Cal.App.3d 1013
    , 1018, footnote 4 (Rural
    Landowners) and Friends of the Old Trees v. Department of Forestry & Fire
    Protection (1997) 
    52 Cal.App.4th 1383
    , 1390, footnote 5 (Friends of the Old
    Trees), in support of its contention that the City’s approval of amendments to
    the SMCP and City’s General Plan were quasi-adjudicatory because
    provisions of City and state law require public hearings before the adoption of
    such amendments. Neither case supports Save Civita’s position.
    In Rural Landowners, supra, 143 Cal.App.3d at page 1018, footnote 4,
    the Court of Appeal stated, without analysis, that judicial review was
    governed by the administrative mandamus procedures of section 21168
    because “[t]he actions under consideration by the City (general plan
    amendment, prezoning, tentative map approval) required public hearings.”
    However, subsequent to the decision in Rural Landowners, as explained in
    part III.C.2.b.ii, ante, in Western States, the Supreme Court specifically
    rejected the notion that section 21168 applies whenever an agency is required
    by law to hold a hearing. (Western States, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 567
    [explaining that the view that section 21168 applies whenever an agency is
    required to hold a hearing was incorrect as a matter of statutory
    interpretation].) Thus, even assuming that Save Civita is correct that the
    City was required to hold a hearing before adopting the amendments,43 this
    43    Save Civita cites to provisions of the San Diego Municipal Code, a City
    policy manual, and provisions of the Government Code in support of the
    proposition that “all plan amendments are required to be brought to a public
    hearing.” (Boldface omitted.) However, Save Civita fails to demonstrate that
    75
    fact does not demonstrate that the City’s action was quasi-adjudicatory.
    Thus, to the extent that Rural Landowners, supra, at page 1018, footnote 4
    suggests that a general plan amendment is reviewable pursuant to section
    21168 because an agency is required by law to hold a hearing, it is no longer
    good law in the wake of Western States. (See Kostka & Zischke, Practice
    Under the California Environmental Quality Act, supra, § 23.44 [stating that
    “Western States implicitly overrules” decisions such as Rural Landowners,
    supra, at p. 1018, footnote 4, in which courts have concluded that section
    21168 applied because the agency held a hearing mandated by law].)
    Rural Landowners also was decided before Yost, supra, 
    36 Cal.3d 561
    in which the Supreme Court expressly held that it had “no doubt,” that the
    “adoption of a specific plan is to be characterized as a legislative act.” (Id. at
    p. 570.) While Save Civita notes that the Yost court did not apply this
    conclusion in determining whether general plan amendments are reviewable
    by way of traditional mandamus under section 1085, Yost has been applied in
    such a fashion. For example, in Cormier v. County of San Luis Obispo (1984)
    
    161 Cal.App.3d 850
    , 855, the Court of Appeal stated:
    “The actions of the legislative body in enacting zoning
    regulations are generally held to be legislative. For
    instance, a city council acts in a legislative capacity when it
    adopts a General Plan Amendment. This includes an
    amendment to a general plan. (Yost[, supra,] 36 Cal.3d
    any of the public hearings referenced in these provisions are adjudicative
    hearings under Western States. (See Western States, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at
    p. 567 [stating that “administrative mandamus is the ‘procedure used to
    obtain judicial review of adjudicative decisions (i.e., decisions that determine
    what the facts are in relation to specific private rights or interests),’ ” and
    noting that administrative mandamus is not the proper method to challenge
    “a quasi-legislative administrative decision even if the agency was required by
    law to hold a hearing as part of its rulemaking procedures” (id. at p. 568,
    italics added)].)
    76
    561.) This action is reviewable under Code of Civil
    Procedure section 1085.”
    Other courts have also applied Yost in determining that a CEQA action
    that involves a challenge to the adoption of a general plan sounds in
    traditional mandate. (See, e.g., Sierra Club v. Gilroy City Council, supra,
    222 Cal.App.3d at p. 39.)
    Save Civita also cites Friends of the Old Trees, supra, 
    52 Cal.App.4th 1383
    , in support of Save Civita’s contention that “[c]onsideration of the
    community-plan amendment in this case is . . . a quasi-judicial function that
    requires a hearing, evidence, and the exercise of discretion.” In Friends of the
    Old Trees, supra, the court noted that section 4582.7, subdivision (c), requires
    a public hearing with respect to administrative appeals of certain timber
    harvest plans. (Friends of the Old Trees, at p. 1390, fn. 5.) The Friends of the
    Old Trees court stated further that, “in such a scenario, the hearing
    requirement of section 21168 is clearly met” and judicial review is by way of
    administrative mandamus. (Ibid.) However, Save Civita fails to present any
    argument as to the ways in which a timber harvest plan administrative
    appeal is similar to a hearing pertaining to the adoption of a general plan
    amendment. Further, as explained above, in the wake of Western States,
    even assuming that the City’s adoption of a general plan amendment
    required a public hearing, this fact is clearly not a sufficient basis to warrant
    review by way of administrative mandamus.44
    44     We also reject Save Civita’s argument that the City’s adoption of the
    plan amendments was adjudicatory because “although the proposed
    amendment was to a community plan, which is typically a broadly applicable
    policy document, the amendment referred to one specific project only—the
    road connection.” As explained in connection with our analysis whether the
    City’s certification of the FEIR was quasi-legislative or quasi-adjudicative,
    post, in approving the building of the road, the City Council was acting in a
    77
    In sum, following Yost, we conclude that the enactment of a plan
    amendment involves the quasi-legislative act of adopting a rule of general
    application. Thus, we conclude that the City acted in a quasi-legislative
    capacity in approving amendments to the SMCP and City’s General Plan.
    b. The City’s certification of the FEIR
    In order to determine whether the City’s certification of the FEIR was
    “quasi-legislative” or “quasi-adjudicative,” we look to the nature of the
    underlying action that the City was analyzing in the FEIR. (See Western
    States, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at p. 566; Madera, supra, 199 Cal.App.4th at p.76;
    Kostka & Zischke, Practice Under the Cal. Environmental Quality Act,
    (Cont.Ed.Bar. 2021) Is Review Governed by Pub Res C §21168 or §21168.5?,
    § 23.41(c) [explaining that under Western States, “When an agency’s decision
    on the merits of a project is reviewable [as a quasi-adjudicative act] under
    [Code of Civil Procedure section] 1094.5, [section] 21168 governs review of the
    related CEQA determination,” but that “when the agency’s decision on the
    merits of a project is reviewable [as a quasi-legislative act] under [Code of
    Civil Procedure section] 1085, [section] 21168.5 governs review of the related
    CEQA determination”].) In applying the Western States framework in this
    case, as discussed in part III.C.2.c, ante, the FEIR analyzed two underlying
    actions to be taken by the City: (1) approval of the building of the road and;
    (2) amendment of planning documents to show the proposed roadway. The
    administrative record makes clear that, in approving the building of the road,
    the City Council was not “limited to a consideration of the interests of nearby
    property owners.” (Save Lafayette Trees, supra, 
    66 Cal.App.5th 21
    .)
    Moreover, in considering the “location of a public improvement” (Oceanside
    legislative capacity in broadly considering the interest of the public generally
    and was not “limited to a consideration of the interests of nearby property
    owners.” (Save Lafayette Trees, supra, 66 Cal.App.5th at p. 55.)
    78
    Marina Towers, supra, 187 Cal.App.3d at p. 747), the City Council had to
    assess “a broad spectrum of community costs and benefits . . . [that are not]
    limited to ‘facts peculiar to the individual case.’ ” (Ibid.) Thus, consistent
    with the case law discussed in part III C.2.c.i, ante (see, e.g., Quinchard,
    supra, 113 Cal. at pp. 669–670 [“[w]hether an existing street shall be
    improved . . . is a question to be addressed to the governing body of a
    municipality in its legislative capacity”]), we conclude that the City’s act in
    approving the building of the road was a quasi-legislative act. In addition,
    for the reasons stated ante, it is clear that the City’s acts in amending
    planning documents to show the proposed roadway were quasi-legislative.
    Because both of the underlying acts analyzed in the FEIR are quasi-
    legislative, we conclude that the City’s act in certifying the FEIR was also
    quasi-legislative.
    Rather than apply the Western States framework and analyze the
    nature of the underlying actions evaluated in the FEIR, Save Civita broadly
    argues that “[w]here the agency’s CEQA determination requires it to make
    findings, . . . section 21168 applies.” (Citing Association for Protection etc.
    Values v. City of Ukiah (1991) 
    2 Cal.App.4th 720
    , 729; CalBeach Advocates v.
    City of Solana Beach (2002) 
    103 Cal.App.4th 529
    , 539.) Neither case holds
    that section 21168 applies whenever an agency is required to make findings.
    Rather, both cases merely state the proposition that “ ‘[s]ection 21168
    requires the agency make findings supporting its decision . . . .’ ” (CalBeach
    Advocates v. City of Solana Beach, supra, at p. 539; quoting Association for
    Protection etc. v. City of Ukiah, supra, at p. 729.)
    We are not persuaded by Save Civita’s contention that “the Legislature
    intended the CEQA process for the certification of [EIRs] to be quasi-
    adjudicatory in nature.” Save Civita’s suggestion that the certification of any
    79
    EIR is a quasi-adjudicative act is contrary to numerous cases holding that a
    CEQA petition challenging an EIR was quasi-legislative and/or reviewable
    under section 21168.5. (See Madera, supra, 199 Cal.App.4th at p. 76;
    Citizens Opposing a Dangerous Environment v. County of Kern, supra,
    
    228 Cal.App.4th 360
    ; Preservation Action Council, supra, 141 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1352; Cal. Administrative Mandamus, supra, Administrative Mandamus,
    § 5.19; cf. Laurel Heights Improvement Assn. v. Regents of University of
    California (1988) 
    47 Cal.3d 376
    , 392, fn. 5 [“The parties dispute whether the
    Association’s challenge to the Regents’ certification of the [EIR] and approval
    of the project was a traditional or administrative mandamus proceeding. . . .
    This action appears to be one of traditional mandamus because the agency
    did not conduct a hearing at which evidence was taken in a judicial
    (adjudicative) sense, but we need not decide this issue”].)
    Save Civita’s contention that the certification of an EIR is, by default,
    quasi-adjudicatory and therefore reviewable under section 21168 is also
    contrary to the Western States framework for determining whether section
    21168 or 21168.5 applies. (See Western States, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at pp. 566–
    567 [whether a CEQA petition is reviewable under section 21168 or 21168.5
    is driven by an analysis of the nature of the agency’s actions on the merits of
    a project].)
    In sum, we reject Save Civita’s argument that “the CEQA process pulls
    this Project into the quasi-adjudicatory realm.” Instead, applying the
    Western States framework, we conclude that the City’s certification of the
    FEIR was a quasi-legislative act.
    80
    c. Save Civita’s procedural due process claim is foreclosed by our
    conclusions that the City was acting in a quasi-legislative
    capacity
    Our conclusions that the City was acting in a quasi-legislative capacity
    in certifying the FEIR and approving the amendments to the SMCP and
    City’s General Plan forecloses Save Civita’s procedural due process claim.
    (See, e.g., Beck Development Co., supra, 44 Cal.App.4th at p. 1188.)
    Accordingly, we conclude that Save Civita is not entitled to reversal on
    the ground that the City violated the public’s right to a fair hearing based on
    evidence that a City Council Member’s staff solicited support for the
    Project.45
    IV.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    AARON, Acting P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    DATO, J.
    GUERRERO, J.
    45     We also reject Save Civita’s contention, raised in its supplemental brief,
    that “[e]ven if the City’s decisions were quasi-legislative in nature, Save
    Civita’s procedural due process claim would not be foreclosed because
    procedural unfairness is actionable under either section 1085 or section
    1094.5.” Save Civita has not cited, and our research has not uncovered, any
    case law supporting the proposition that it is improper for a legislator or his
    staff to seek public support for a project when the legislator is acting in a
    quasi-legislative capacity. Thus, Save Civita has not identified any
    procedural unfairness on which its petition for writ of mandate may
    challenge.
    81
    Appendix A:
    (FEIR, Figure 5.2-1, “Traffic Impact Study Area”)
    82
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D077591

Filed Date: 12/16/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/16/2021