Sharks Sports & Entertainment LLC v. Federal Transit Administration ( 2020 )


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  • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 SAN JOSE DIVISION 11 12 SHARKS SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT Case No. 18-CV-04060-LHK LLC, 13 Plaintiff, ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY 14 v. JUDGMENT; GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR 15 SUMMARY JUDGMENT FEDERAL TRANSIT 16 ADMINISTRATION, et al., Re: Dkt. Nos. 86, 89 17 Defendants. 18 Plaintiff Sharks Sports & Entertainment LLC (“Sharks Sports”) bring the instant lawsuit 19 against Defendants Federal Transit Administration (“FTA”), Acting Administrator of FTA K. Jane 20 Williams, Acting Regional Administrator of FTA Region IX Edward Carranza Jr., and Secretary 21 of the United States Department of Transportation Elaine L. Chao (collectively “FTA” or 22 “Defendants”). Plaintiff alleges that the FTA violated the National Environmental Policy Act 23 (“NEPA”) and the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) when the FTA issued a Record of 24 Decision on June 4, 2018 that announced that environmental requirements had been satisfied for 25 the Bay Area Rapid Transportation Silicon Valley Phase II Extension Project. 26 Having considered the submissions of the parties, the relevant law, and the record in this 27 1 1 case, the Court hereby DENIES Sharks Sports’ motion for summary judgment and GRANTS the 2 FTA’s motion for summary judgment. 3 I. BACKGROUND 4 A. Factual Background 5 1. NEPA Requirements 6 The National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”) requires a federal agency to prepare an 7 environmental impact statement for any “major Federal action[] significantly affecting the quality 8 of the human environment.” 42 U.S.C. § 4332(2)(C). NEPA also applies to state transportation 9 projects with significant federal funding. Rattlesnake Coal. v. EPA, 509 F.3d 1095, 1101 (9th Cir. 10 2007). The environmental impact statement must include a detailed statement regarding, inter 11 alia: (i) “the environmental impact of the proposed action”; (ii) “any adverse environmental 12 effects which cannot be avoided should the proposal be implemented”; and (iii) “alternatives to the 13 proposed action.” 42 U.S.C. § 4332(2)(C). If an agency determines that an environmental impact 14 statement is necessary, the agency must first prepare a draft environmental impact statement. 40 15 C.F.R. § 1502.9(a). The agency must then release the draft environmental impact statement to the 16 public and to other agencies for comment. Id. § 1503.1(a). After the public comment period 17 concludes, the agency prepares a final environmental impact statement, in which the agency must 18 respond to comments made during the draft environmental impact statement comment period. Id. 19 § 1502.9(b). After the final environmental impact statement is released, the agency has the option 20 to request comments before making a final decision. Id. § 1503.1(b). 21 If the agency “makes substantial changes in the proposed action that are relevant to 22 environmental concerns” or if there are “significant new circumstances or information relevant to 23 environmental concerns and bearing on the proposed action or its impacts,” then the agency must 24 also prepare a supplemental draft environmental impact statement or final environmental impact 25 statement. Id. § 1502.9(c). 26 Upon issuance of a decision, the agency ultimately produces a record of decision (“ROD”) 27 2 1 that explains the rationale for the agency’s decision. Id. § 1505.2. The ROD must include an 2 assessment of all practicable measures for mitigating environmental harm. See id. § 1505.2(c). 3 2. Project Overview 4 The instant case concerns the Santa Clara Valley Transit Authority’s (“VTA”) Bay Area 5 Rapid Transportation Silicon Valley Program (“Extension Program”). The Extension Program 6 consists of a 16-mile transit extension from the Bay Area Rapid Transportation’s (“BART”) Warm 7 Springs Station in southern Fremont into Santa Clara County through the cities of Milpitas, San 8 Jose, and Santa Clara. FTA 25.1 The Extension Program2 is divided into two phases: the Phase I 9 Berryessa Extension Project (“Phase I Project”) and the BART Silicon Valley Phase II Extension 10 Project (“Phase II Project”). Id. The FTA provided financial assistance for the Extension 11 Program, and the VTA is charged with carrying out the engineering and construction of the 12 Extension Program. Id. The FTA is the lead agency for NEPA purposes, and VTA is the lead 13 agency for the California Environmental Quality Act (“CEQA”) process. Id. 14 In June 2010, the FTA issued the ROD for the Phase I Project, a 10-mile extension of the 15 BART system into Milpitas and into northern San Jose. FTA 25, 214–69. The Phase II Project, a 16 further 6-mile extension of the BART system into San Jose and Santa Clara, is the subject of a 17 combined joint Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement/Supplemental Environmental 18 Impact Report (“Final SEIS/SEIR”), adopted in February 2018. See FTA 20626–22111 (Volume I 19 of the Final SEIS/SEIR). In June 2018, the FTA issued the ROD for the Phase II Project under 20 NEPA. FTA 25–187. 21 The purpose of the Phase II Project is to “improve transit services and boost intermodal 22 connectivity” in the region. FTA 25, 27, 20738. The Phase II Project would increase transit trips 23 within Alameda and Santa Clara counties, as well as neighboring counties and portions of the 24 Central Valley. FTA 25–26. The Phase II Project would also improve transit services and 25 26 1 Citations to the administrative record are in the form, “FTA XX.” 2 The Extension Program was previously called the “Silicon Valley Rapid Transit Corridor 27 Project.” FTA 26. 3 1 options, enhance regional connectivity, improve mobility options, and maximize transit usage and 2 ridership in order to reduce automobile traffic and related air quality emissions. FTA 26 and 30– 3 31. The Court provides additional details concerning the Phase I Project and the Phase II Project 4 as relevant below. 5 3. The Phase I Project 6 a. 2001-2003: The VTA Considers Eleven Alternatives. 7 In 2001, the VTA initiated a Major Investment Study of various transportation options for 8 the Extension Program. FTA 26, 440, 506, 31024–130. The VTA identified eleven possible 9 alternatives that could address the project’s goals. FTA 26, 486, 31042–70. In November 2001, 10 the VTA approved a locally preferred alternative that would extend BART service from Fremont 11 to Santa Clara through Milpitas and San Jose. FTA 26, 486, 31032–33. 12 b. 2004: The Draft EIS/EIR and Final EIR. 13 In 2004, the FTA and the VTA prepared a combined Draft EIS/EIR for the entire 16-mile 14 Extension Program (“2004 Draft EIS/EIR”). FTA 26, 439, 781–1533. The 2004 Draft EIS/EIR 15 listed “[p]arking spillover into communities at BART station sites” as an “area of controversy.” 16 FTA 836. The 2004 Draft EIS/EIR listed two options for the location of the proposed BART 17 Diridon Station (“Diridon Station”) (a North Option and South Option), and stated that “two large, 18 multi-level parking structures” would be built to “replace lost parking” and to “add 1,500 to 2,200 19 new park-and-ride spaces for the BART station.” FTA 882. Diridon Station already exists and is 20 a “multi-modal transportation center within the City of San Jose’s downtown urban core.” FTA 21 20987. Diridon Station is currently “served by several transit modes including VTA’s Light Rail 22 and express and local bus service, ACE, Amtrak, Capitol Corridor, and regional bus lines to 23 Alameda and Santa Cruz County.” Id. The Extension Program would make Diridon Station a 24 BART station as well. The 2004 Draft EIS/EIR projected “park-and-ride demand” at the various 25 BART stations, including Diridon Station. FTA 924–25. Pursuant to that model, the 2004 Draft 26 EIS/EIR anticipated a parking demand of 2,056 spaces at Diridon Station. FTA 925. The Diridon 27 4 1 Station parking structures were slated to create 2,262 new parking spaces, which exceeded the 2 modeled park-and-ride demand. Id. 3 After the public review period of the 2004 Draft EIS/EIR, the VTA chose to pursue federal 4 and state environmental clearance on independent paths. FTA 1711. Moreover, a NEPA Notice 5 of Intent to prepare an environmental impact statement was published for the BART extension to 6 the proposed Warm Springs Station. FTA 26. This Warm Springs project served as a required 7 precursor to the broader Extension Program because it would serve as a “critical link between the 8 existing BART system” and the Extension Program. Id. The remainder of the Extension Program 9 was not ripe for NEPA review, as it was in early planning stages. Id. As a result, VTA withdrew 10 the Extension Program from FTA’s New Starts qualification and funding program. Id. 11 Meanwhile, the VTA continued the CEQA process for the Extension Program. FTA 440. 12 Thus, in December 2004, the VTA issued a 2004 Final Environmental Impact Report (“2004 Final 13 EIR”) that discussed the Extension Program and responded to comments. FTA 2528–2978. The 14 2004 Final EIR was certified only by the VTA, not the FTA. FTA 2495 (noting that 2004 Final 15 EIR was prepared pursuant to CEQA by the VTA). The 2004 Final EIR contained the same 16 parking projections that had been included in the 2004 Draft EIS/EIR. FTA 3000. In a letter, the 17 SAP Center3 raised concerns about parking at Diridon Station, but stated that “we continue to be 18 excited about potential benefits of this project in enhancing accessibility for HP Pavilion and for 19 other uses in downtown San Jose.” FTA 2772–75. The VTA responded that because the parking 20 structures at Diridon Station were slated to create 2,262 parking spaces, “there would be no 21 adverse long-term parking impacts at the Diridon Station.” FTA 2779. 22 c. 2007: The Final SEIR. 23 In January 2007, the VTA published a Final Supplemental EIR (“2007 Final SEIR”). FTA 24 3058–3698. The 2007 Final SEIR updated the 2004 Final EIR and analyzed the environmental 25 impacts of several proposed design changes, including changes to Diridon Station. One such 26 27 3 The SAP Center was previously named HP Pavilion. 5 1 change was the addition of a “No Parking Option” to Diridon Station. FTA 3083. Indeed, the 2 2007 Final SEIR identified two parking options at the Diridon Station: a Parking Structure Option, 3 which included a four-level parking structure of 1,320 spaces, and a No Parking Option, in which 4 no parking structure at Diridon Station would be built. FTA 3157. In the event of the No Parking 5 Option, “additional parking would be provided at the Santa Clara Station.” Id. The 2007 Final 6 SEIR ultimately did not identify a preferred option for Diridon Station parking. FTA 3705. 7 Moreover, the 2007 Final SEIR adjusted the 2030 projected park-and-ride demand for Diridon 8 Station down from the 2,262 listed in the 2004 Final EIR to either 1,313 or 1,319, depending on 9 whether an additional BART station was constructed in Calaveras. FTA 4116. 10 During the comment period, the SAP Center commented on both the reduction of the park- 11 and-ride demand, as well as the addition of the No Parking Option. FTA 3965. As to the first 12 issue, the VTA explained that “parking demand at the Diridon/Arena Station is less than what was 13 projected in the 2004 FEIR. One key reason is the use of ABAG’s 2003 ‘Smart Growth’ Land 14 Use Projections that assume intense development in downtown areas and future transit stations. 15 The Diridon/Arena Station is assumed to evolve into a downtown type of station supporting high- 16 rise office development. Downtown stations, especially because they are congested, do not 17 typically support park-and-ride demand.” FTA 3967. 18 Further, as to the No Parking Option, the VTA explained that “[t]he proposed 19 Diridon/Arena Station provides excellent intermodal transfer opportunities between many rail and 20 bus transit lines. The station also offers many opportunities for future high-density transit-oriented 21 developments. VTA’s position is that it will be more cost-effective to encourage transit 22 connections and development opportunities, rather than build a parking structure. By providing no 23 parking, there is no expectation of finding parking at the Diridon/Arena Station. If parking spill 24 over were to occur, the City of San Jose could consider a parking management plan that could 25 include a number of strategies including a permit program.” Id. 26 In mid-2007, the VTA requested the FTA’s approval to begin the NEPA process again for 27 6 1 the Extension Program. FTA 26. Thus, on September 21, 2007, the FTA published a Notice of 2 Intent to prepare an environmental impact statement for the Extension Program in the Federal 3 Register. Id. 4 d. 2010: Final EIS and Phase I ROD. 5 In March 2009, a Draft EIS (“2009 Draft EIS”) was released for comment. FTA 4149– 6 4276. A year later, in March 2010, the VTA and FTA published a Final EIS (“2010 Final EIS”) 7 that examined the environmental impact of three different alternatives: the Berryessa Extension 8 Project (“BEP”), which would extend BART roughly ten miles and complete Phase I of the 9 Extension Program; the Silicon Valley Rapid Transit Project (“SVRTP”), which would extend 10 BART roughly sixteen miles and complete Phases I and II of the Extension Program; and a no 11 build alternative. FTA 4717. 12 Insofar as the Final EIS examined the SVRTP alternative, the 2010 Final EIS contemplated 13 that Diridon Station would be built with an “eight-level parking structure for approximately 1,300 14 spaces.” FTA 4997. However, the Final EIS explained that in 2030, unconstrained parking 15 demand at Diridon Station was projected to be for 2,585 parking spaces. Id. The 2010 Final EIS 16 explained that “[c]onstruction of additional single purpose user parking facilities would not be 17 consistent with the City of San Jose’s Master Plan for the Diridon area, which includes high- 18 density residential and commercial redevelopment.” Id. Accordingly, the 2010 Final EIS 19 contemplated numerous mitigation proposals to handle the excess unconstrained parking demand, 20 such as a transit area plan that could encourage transit-supportive access to the area and non-auto 21 travel, as well as leasing options. Id. 22 However, the FTA ultimately recommended that the VTA proceed with the BEP 23 alternative, not the SVRTP. FTA 2717. The BEP alternative did not include Diridon Station, and 24 included only a ten-mile extension of BART from Warm Springs to Berryessa. Id. Accordingly, 25 on June 24, 2010, the FTA issued the ROD for the BEP, which comprised the Phase I Project of 26 the full Extension Program. Id. The remaining six miles of the Extension Program, including the 27 7 1 construction of Diridon Station, was relegated to the Phase II Project. 2 4. The Phase II Project 3 The VTA turned to the Phase II Project of the Extension Program several years later. In 4 2013, the VTA sent letters to several other state agencies that updated the agencies on the Phase II 5 Project under consideration. FTA 37564–67. The VTA explained that under the new version of 6 the Phase II Project under consideration, there were two potential BART locations at Diridon 7 Station: a Diridon Station East Option and a Diridon Station West Option. FTA 37564. 8 Moreover, the VTA explained that “[n]o parking is proposed for either the East or West options at 9 Diridon Station.” Id. 10 a. 2015–2016: Environmental Scoping Report and 2016 Draft SEIS/SEIR. 11 In May 2015, the FTA and the VTA issued an Environmental Scoping Report as to the 12 Phase II Project of the Extension Program. FTA 8168–8571. In the description of the Phase II 13 Project, the Environmental Scoping Report stated that “[f]our stations are proposed as part of this 14 Phase II Project: three in San Jose (Alum Rock, Downtown San Jose, and Diridon Stations), and 15 one in Santa Clara (Santa Clara Station).” FTA 8175. The Environmental Scoping Report 16 indicated that only Alum Rock Station and Santa Clara Station would have parking structures. Id. 17 Diridon Station would only have a “‘kiss-and-ride’ (passenger drop-off) facilit[y].” Id. The 18 Environmental Scoping Report summarized key issues that were raised at three in-person scoping 19 meetings as well as in the form of comments received by VTA in the mail or through email. FTA 20 8184. Several “key issues” concerned the prospect of parking at Diridon Station. For instance, 21 the Environmental Scoping Report listed “Consider parking structures at Diridon Station,” and 22 “Do not provide parking at Diridon Station” as comments that had been raised in connection with 23 the Environmental Scoping Report. FTA 8186–87. 24 In December 2016, the VTA and FTA then issued a Draft Supplemental EIS/EIR (“2016 25 Draft SEIS/SEIR”). FTA 8572–9219. The 2016 Draft SEIS/SEIR proposed that the Phase II 26 Project consist of a 6-mile BART extension from Berryessa Station into Santa Clara, with three 27 8 1 stations in San Jose (Alum Rock/28th Street, Downtown San Jose, and Diridon Station), and a 2 station and a maintenance facility in Santa Clara. FTA 29, 8572–9219. 3 The 2016 Draft SEIS/SEIR also included a Transit Oriented Joint Development (“TOJD”) 4 alternative proposed by the VTA for several stations. FTA 27–28, 8604. The TOJD would 5 involve VTA working with a private developer to develop mixed-use developments at each of the 6 BART stations. FTA 8722. The proposed TOJD was not part of the NEPA Build Alternative, 7 because it was an independent action by VTA, and no federal action was involved. FTA 27–28. 8 However, the 2016 Draft SEIS/SEIR analyzed the TOJD component as part of the cumulative 9 impact analysis under NEPA. FTA 27. 10 The 2016 Draft SEIS/SEIR contemplated two BART station location options for Diridon 11 Station: the Diridon Station South Option and the Diridon Station North Option. FTA 8706–09. 12 Under either option,“[n]o park-and-ride parking would be provided.” FTA 8706, 8708. 13 b. 2018: 2018 Final SEIS/SEIR. 14 A Final Supplemental EIS/EIR was published in February 2018 (“Final SEIS/SEIR”) and 15 explained that several purposes of the Extension Program were to: (1) “[i]mprove public transit 16 service”; (2) “[s]upport transportation solutions” that “reduc[e] reliance on single auto commute 17 trips”; and (3) [s]upport local and regional land use plans.” FTA 20738. The Final SEIS/SEIR 18 included several changes to Diridon Station’s configuration and concepts. FTA 20662, 20803. 19 With respect to parking, the Final SEIS/SEIR noted that for Diridon Station, under either the 20 North and South Options, “No [park-and-ride] parking would be provided,” and no parking 21 structures would be built. FTA 20796, 20804. 22 The Final SEIS/SEIR examined the impact of the Extension Program on the area 23 surrounding Diridon Station. The Final SEIS/SEIR noted that “Diridon Station is an existing 24 multi-modal transportation center located within the City of San Jose’s downtown urban core.” 25 FTA 20987. The BART station at Diridon Station area was projected to function “more as a 26 destination station in the AM commute direction, as patrons travel to nearby activity centers, than 27 9 1 as an origin station.” Id. 2 The 2018 Final SEIS/SEIR discussed parking impacts. For instance, the 2018 Final 3 SEIS/SEIR concluded that the Extension Program would not interfere with activities at the SAP 4 Center notwithstanding the fact that Diridon Station would not provide parking. FTA 20980. The 5 Final SEIS/SEIR also indicated that ridership modeling showed that without parking at Diridon 6 Station, auto-based BART trips would shift to Alum Rock and Santa Clara Stations, which would 7 provide parking. FTA 20846. Moreover, based on the ridership modeling, building a parking 8 structure at Diridon Station would lead to a nominal increase in overall ridership, 19 passengers or 9 0.0004 percent. Id. The Final SEIS/SEIR opined that the benefits to overall BART ridership did 10 not outweigh the cost of construction. Id. 11 In response to public comments, the Final SEIS/SEIR explained how short-term impacts 12 were addressed under NEPA, and how such impacts would be mitigated. FTA 22131–40. Some 13 comments asserted that Phase II should be re-designed to provide parking for BART riders using 14 Diridon Station. FTA 22136. The Final SEIS/SEIR indicated that access to Diridon Station 15 would be “almost entirely (91 percent) by walk/bicycle, heavy and light rail transit, and bus.” FTA 16 20985. The Final SEIS/SEIR also acknowledged that the 2010 EIS had assumed that 44 percent 17 of the ridership would access Diridon Station via park-and-ride. FTA 22138. However, the 2018 18 Final SEIS/SEIR argued that new policies and background conditions had resulted in changed 19 assumptions about ridership and parking demand. Id.; FTA 20847–48. 20 With respect to the SAP Center’s concern about the permanent loss of parking, the Final 21 SEIS/SEIR argued that Alum Rock Station and Santa Clara Station could provide parking for SAP 22 Center attendees during events, and that parking at those two stations be similar in the number and 23 distance as those parking resources at other event facilities. FTA 20987–90, 22140–42. The Final 24 SEIS/SEIR also indicated that it expected many patrons to use BART to access the SAP Center, 25 thereby reducing parking demand. FTA 22142. The Final SEIS/SEIR pointed to other event 26 centers that rely on nearby transit, such as Oakland Coliseum and Oracle Arena, among others, 27 10 1 which the Final SEIS/SEIR argued supports the conclusion that parking demand at the SAP Center 2 would likely be reduced through the availability of BART. FTA 22141. The Final SEIS/SEIR 3 also relied on a 2017 Parking Inventory by Kimley Horn (the “2017 Parking Inventory”), which 4 found that there are “approximately 14,450 publicly-available parking spaces located within 0.5 5 mile of Diridon Station.” FTA 20987–88, 36634–39. 6 The Final SEIS/SEIR ultimately concluded that the Phase II Project would not have 7 adverse long-term or indirect parking impacts. Id. Based on the Final SEIS/SEIR, the FTA and 8 the VTA approved the Phase II Project with no parking component at Diridon Station. On June 4, 9 2018, FTA issued a ROD under NEPA for the Phase II Project, based on the SEIS portion of the 10 Final SEIS/SEIR. FTA 25–187. 11 B. Procedural History 12 On July 6, 2018, Sharks Sports filed the instant complaint, which alleges two causes of 13 action: (1) failure to adequately assess and disclose environmental impacts under NEPA and the 14 APA; and (2) failure to supplement the Final SEIS/SEIR. ECF No. 1 (“Compl.”).4 15 On September 21, 2018, the parties stipulated to extend the deadline for the FTA to 16 respond to the complaint to October 24, 2018. ECF No. 17. On October 18, 2018, the parties 17 stipulated to further extend the FTA’s deadline to respond to the complaint to February 6, 2019. 18 ECF No. 27. 19 On January 16, 2019, upon the request of the FTA and with the non-opposition of Sharks 20 Sports, the Court then administratively stayed the instant case pending the government shutdown. 21 ECF No. 38. The Court lifted the stay on February 6, 2019. ECF No. 41. The Court also granted 22 the parties’ stipulation to continue the case schedule, which included continuing the FTA’s 23 deadline to respond to the complaint to April 10, 2019. Id. On April 3, 2019, upon the request of 24 25 4 Several months before the instant case, on May 3, 2018, Sharks Sports filed a parallel lawsuit in 26 California Superior Court for the County of Santa Clara, Sharks Sports & Entertainment LLC v. Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority, No. 18-CV-327687 (Cal. Sup. Ct. 2018), which 27 alleges violations of the CEQA. That parallel lawsuit is ongoing. 11 1 the parties, the Court again continued the case schedule, which included continuing the FTA’s 2 deadline to respond to the complaint to June 12, 2019. ECF No. 47. The FTA filed an answer on 3 June 11, 2019. ECF No. 52. On July 26, 2019, the FTA then filed an amended answer. ECF No. 4 53. 5 On September 23, 2019, the FTA served the administrative record on Sharks Sports and 6 lodged a copy with the Court. ECF No. 62. On December 6, 2019, Sharks Sports then filed a 7 motion to compel supplementation and completion of the administrative record. ECF No. 68. On 8 January 31, 2020, United States Magistrate Judge Susan van Keulen denied in part the motion to 9 compel supplementation and completion of the administrative record, and ordered the parties to 10 meet and confer as to the remaining requests. ECF No. 79. Magistrate Judge van Keulen ordered 11 that “any remaining dispute must be presented to the undersigned in a joint letter brief filed no 12 later than noon on February 7, 2020.” Id. at 19 (emphasis in original). On February 13, 2020, 13 Sharks Sports moved for relief from Judge van Keulen’s January 31, 2020 order based on the 14 exclusion of certain deposition testimony and emails, ECF No. 83, and this Court denied the 15 motion for relief on February 19, 2020, ECF No. 84. 16 On February 21, 2020, Sharks Sports filed a motion for summary judgment. ECF No. 86 17 (“Sharks Mot.”). On March 27, 2020, the FTA filed a cross-motion for summary judgment and 18 opposition to Sharks Sports’ motion for summary judgment. ECF No. 89 (“FTA Mot.”). On 19 April 17, 2020, Sharks Sports filed an opposition to the FTA’s cross-motion for summary 20 judgment and reply in support of Sharks Sports’ motion for summary judgment. ECF No. 92 21 (“Sharks Opp’n”). Finally, on May 1, 2020, the FTA filed a reply in support of the FTA’s cross- 22 motion for summary judgment and surreply in opposition to Sharks Sports’ motion for summary 23 judgment. ECF No. 94. 24 On April 15, 2020, after both of the foregoing cross-motions for summary judgment had 25 already been filed and two days before Sharks Sports’ final summary judgment brief was due, the 26 parties filed a joint case management statement. ECF No. 90. In that joint case management 27 12 1 statement, Sharks Sports stated for the first time that Sharks Sports lacked the ability to read the 2 travel demand raw data because Sharks Sports “believe[d] that the information is inaccessible 3 without Hexagon’s program necessary to read the information.” Id. at 3. Sharks Sports asserted 4 that Sharks Sports had been “unable to review the information and must either [sic] be able to do 5 so as soon as possible so the relevant information can be filed to complete the record.” Id. 6 The Court construed Sharks Sports’ statement as a renewed motion to compel completion 7 or supplementation of the administrative record. ECF No. 91 at 2. The Court explained that 8 Sharks Sports’ request was “extremely untimely.” Id. The Court noted that “Judge van Keulen 9 clearly ordered the parties to present ‘any remaining dispute’ related to the data in question to the 10 Court by ‘no later than noon on February 7, 2020.’ ECF No. 79 at 19 (emphasis in original).” 11 Id. Notwithstanding this instruction, Sharks Sports “utterly failed” to raise the issue for two 12 months. Id. The Court noted that even when Sharks Sports did raise the issue, Sharks Sports only 13 did so “in the context of a mandatory joint case management statement, not in a formal motion.” 14 Id. Sharks Sports “provide[d] no justification for the lengthy delay.” Id. 15 The Court also explained that Sharks Sports’ request would be “highly prejudicial.” Id. at 16 3. The Court noted that Sharks Sports “filed a motion for summary judgment on February 21, 17 2020. Defendants filed a cross-motion for summary judgment and opposition on March 27, 2020. 18 Plaintiff’s reply and opposition [were] due tomorrow, on April 17, 2020. After that, the sole 19 remaining filing on the cross-motions for summary judgment, Defendant’s reply, [was] due on 20 May 1, 2020.” Id. (citations omitted). Accordingly, Sharks Sports’ “request would require 21 fundamental modifications to the briefing schedule at the eleventh hour, when summary judgment 22 briefing [was] already almost entirely complete.” Id. The Court therefore denied Sharks Sports’ 23 renewed motion and noted that “Judge van Keulen concurs in the Court’s ruling on this issue.” Id. 24 II. LEGAL STANDARD 25 A. National Environmental Policy Act 26 NEPA is a procedural statute that is designed to ensure that agencies consider both the 27 13 1 environmental impacts of a proposed action, and reasonable alternatives, before proceeding with a 2 federal action. 42 U.S.C. §§ 4321 et seq. NEPA aims to foster informed decision making and 3 public participation by making relevant environmental information available to both the agency 4 and the interested public. See Robertson v. Methow Valley Citizens Council, 490 U.S. 332, 349 5 (1989). To that end, NEPA does not mandate particular results, but establishes procedural 6 requirements for assessing the significant environmental impacts of a decision. Winter v. Nat. 7 Res. Def. Council, Inc., 555 U.S. 7, 23 (2008) (citing Robertson, 490 U.S. at 349–50). 8 In reviewing agency decisions under NEPA, the court’s role is “simply to ensure that the 9 agency has adequately considered and disclosed the environmental impact of its actions and that 10 its decision is not arbitrary or capricious.” Baltimore Gas & Elec. Co. v. Natural Res. Def. 11 Council, 462 U.S. 87, 97-98 (1983); see Cascadia Wildlands v. Bureau of Indian Affairs, 801 F.3d 12 1105, 1110 (9th Cir. 2015). The reviewing court looks to ensure that an environmental impact 13 statement has taken a “hard look” at the environmental impacts of the proposed action and has 14 considered a reasonable range of alternatives that achieve the agency’s purpose and need for 15 action. Westlands Water Dist. v. U.S. Dep’t of Interior, 376 F.3d 853, 865 (9th Cir. 2004) (citing 16 City of Carmel-by-the-Sea v. U.S. Dep’t of Transp., 123 F.3d 1142, 1155 (9th Cir. 1997)); 40 17 C.F.R. § 1502.14. The Court considers whether “the decision was based on consideration of the 18 relevant factors and whether there has been a clear error of judgment.” Westlands Water Dist., 19 376 F.3d at 865. The Court performs a limited review, and the Court cannot substitute its 20 judgment for that of the agency. Ecology Ctr. v. Castaneda, 574 F.3d 652, 656 (9th Cir. 2009). 21 The Ninth Circuit has described the standard of review as “highly deferential, presuming 22 the agency action to be valid and affirming the agency action if a reasonable basis exists for its 23 decision.” Ctr. for Biological Diversity v. Bureau of Land Mgmt., 833 F.3d 1136, 1146 (9th Cir. 24 2016) (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court’s role is to determine whether the agency 25 “examine[d] the relevant data and articulate[d] a satisfactory explanation for its action, including a 26 ‘rational connection between the facts found and the choice made.’” Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of 27 14 1 U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983). The agency’s action “need 2 only be a reasonable, not the best or most reasonable, decision.” River Runners for Wilderness v. 3 Martin, 593 F.3d 1064, 1070 (9th Cir. 2010) (per curiam) (citation omitted). Judicial review is 4 generally limited to the administrative record. San Luis & Delta-Mendota Water Auth. v. Locke, 5 776 F.3d 971, 992 (9th Cir. 2014). 6 B. Summary Judgment under the Administrative Procedure Act 7 Under the APA, it is the plaintiff’s burden to show that the challenged agency action was 8 “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 9 706(2)(A); U.S. Dep’t of Transp. v. Pub. Citizen, 541 U.S. 752, 763 (2004); Kleppe v. Sierra Club, 10 427 U.S. 390, 412 (1976). Judicial review under the arbitrary and capricious standard is “very 11 narrow and highly deferential to the agency,” with a presumption in favor of finding the agency 12 action valid. Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n v. Burford, 871 F.2d 849, 855 (9th Cir. 1989). 13 A reviewing court must simply determine whether the agency decision is “founded on a 14 rational connection between the facts found and the choices made.” River Runners for Wilderness, 15 593 F.3d at 1070. A court may “reverse a decision as arbitrary and capricious only if the agency 16 relied on factors Congress did not intend it to consider, entirely failed to consider an important 17 aspect of the problem, or offered an explanation that runs counter to the evidence before the 18 agency or is so implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of 19 agency expertise.” Lands Council v. McNair, 537 F.3d 981, 987 (9th Cir. 2008) (en banc) 20 (quotations omitted), overruled on other grounds by Winter, 555 U.S. 7. The task of a reviewing 21 court is simply “to insure a fully informed and well-considered decision,” not necessarily the 22 decision the court would have reached as a “member of the decision-making unit of the agency.” 23 Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, 435 U.S. 519, 558 (1978). If the 24 record before the agency does not support the agency action, the appropriate remedy is to remand. 25 Fla. Power & Light Co. v. Lorion, 470 U.S. 729, 744 (1985) (citations omitted). 26 III. JUDICIAL NOTICE 27 15 1 Sharks Sports aseeks judicial notice of two documents: (1) Policy Advisory Board Meeting 2 Minutes, dated April 25, 2007, and (2) the City of San Jose 2019 General Plan Amendments, Long 3 Range Impact Analysis, dated August 29, 2019. ECF No. 86-1. The Court DENIES the requests 4 for judicial notice. 5 As for the Policy Advisory Board Meeting Minutes, the Court previously denied Sharks 6 Sports’ request to complete or supplement the administrative record with this document. ECF No. 7 79 at 12–13. Specifically, Sharks Sports failed to provide any “evidence that FTA considered the 8 document, either directly or indirectly.” Id. at 12. Sharks Sports also “failed to meet the standard 9 for supplementing the record with this document.” Id. “[A] party cannot circumvent the rules 10 governing record supplementation by asking for judicial notice rather than supplementation.” 11 Native Ecosys. Council v. Weldon, 848 F. Supp. 2d 1207, 1228 (D. Mont. 2012). 12 As for the City of San Jose 2019 General Plan Amendments, Long Range Impact Analysis, 13 dated August 29, 2019, Sharks Sports seeks to use the document to show “that automobile drive 14 alone use will remain constant in San Jose through 2040.” ECF No. 86-1 ¶ 4. However, the 15 document postdates the Final SEIS/SEIR and ROD in the instant case, and therefore could not 16 have been considered by the FTA. Parties may not use “post-decision information as a new 17 rationalization either for sustaining or attacking the Agency’s decision.” Center for Biological 18 Diversity v. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Serv., 450 F.3d 930, 943 (9th Cir. 2006) (internal quotation 19 marks and citation omitted). 20 IV. DISCUSSION 21 The Bay Area Rapid Transportation (“BART”) serves the San Francisco Bay Area counties 22 of Alameda, Contra Costa, San Francisco, and San Mateo. FTA 20735. As of February 2018, 23 when the Final SEIS/SEIR was drafted, BART consisted of an approximately 104-mile, 44-station 24 regional rail system that extended from Millbrae, north to San Francisco International Airport, 25 north to San Francisco, then over the San Francisco Bay to Oakland, and finally south to Fremont. 26 Id. 27 16 1 As noted, the instant case concerns the VTA’s Bay Area Rapid Transportation Silicon 2 Valley Program (“Extension Program”). The Extension Program consists of a 16-mile transit 3 extension from BART’s Warm Springs Station in southern Fremont into Santa Clara County 4 through the cities of Milpitas, San Jose, and Santa Clara. FTA 25. The Extension Program is 5 divided into two phases: the Phase I Berryessa Extension Project (“Phase I Project”) and the 6 BART Silicon Valley Phase II Extension Project (“Phase II Project”). Id. 7 The Phase I Project consists of an approximately 10-mile extension of the BART system 8 from Warm Springs Station in southern Fremont into the Berryessa neighborhood of San Jose, in 9 eastern Santa Clara County. FTA 20736. The Phase II Project would extend the BART system 10 from the Phase I terminus in the Berryessa neighborhood of San Jose for approximately 6 miles 11 through central San Jose and terminate in the City of Santa Clara. FTA 20737. The alignment 12 would include an approximately 5-mile tunnel, or subway, through downtown San Jose. Id. 13 Completion of the Extension Program would “ring” the Bay Area, as BART would run from 14 Millbrae, through San Francisco, Oakland, Fremont, and San Jose, to Santa Clara. FTA 20665. 15 Caltrain already provides service between downtown San Jose and downtown San Francisco 16 through Santa Clara, Millbrae, and San Francisco International Airport. FTA 20734. 17 The Phase II Project would create four new BART stations as part of the extension: Alum 18 Rock/28th Street, Downtown San Jose, Diridon, and Santa Clara. Id. Diridon Station already 19 exists and is a “multi-modal transportation center within the City of San Jose’s downtown urban 20 core.” FTA 20987. Diridon Station is currently “served by several transit modes including VTA’s 21 Light Rail and express and local bus service, ACE, Amtrak, Capitol Corridor, and regional bus 22 lines to Alameda and Santa Cruz County.” Id. The Extension Program would make Diridon 23 Station a BART station as well. 24 The instant case primarily concerns the FTA’s treatment of parking impacts at the new 25 BART station proposed to be constructed at Diridon Station as part of the Phase II Project of the 26 Extension Program. 27 17 1 According to Sharks Sports, the FTA violated NEPA and the APA because: (1) the FTA 2 improperly held that parking impacts are not environmental impacts under NEPA; and (2) the 3 FTA’s decision not to provide parking at Diridon Station was predetermined. Sharks Sports 4 further contends that the content of the Final SEIS/SEIR violated NEPA and the APA because: (3) 5 the Final SEIS/SEIR failed to take a “hard look” at numerous types of parking impacts; (4) the 6 Final SEIS/SEIR violated NEPA’s “scientific integrity” requirement; (5) the Final SEIS/SEIR 7 failed to disclose and analyze contradictory studies; (6) the Final SEIS/SEIR failed to apply NEPA 8 analysis to the TOJD; (7) the FTA failed to supplement the Final SEIS/SEIR in response to new 9 information; and (8) the Final SEIS/SEIR does not analyze a reasonable range of alternatives. 10 The Court begins by addressing an argument in Sharks Sports’ opposition concerning the 11 travel demand raw data that was produced in the instant case. The Court then turns to Sharks 12 Sports’ arguments that the FTA failed to consider parking impacts to be environmental impacts 13 under NEPA, and that the FTA predetermined the issue of parking at Diridon Station. The Court 14 then addresses each of Sharks Sports’ arguments as to the sufficiency of the Final SEIS/SEIR in 15 turn. 16 A. Sharks Sports’ Arguments About the Travel Demand Raw Data Fail. 17 As an initial matter, Sharks Sports complains about the manner in which the travel demand 18 raw data was produced in the instant case. According to Sharks Sports, “the Court’s order 19 required the full model be included in the AR,” but the FTA “failed to produce the ‘VTA’ 2015 20 Travel Demand Model in a readable format.” Sharks Opp’n at 3. Sharks Sports appears to refer to 21 the travel demand raw data that underlies the specific outputs contained within the Final 22 SEIS/SEIR. Id. at 3 n.1 (explaining that Plaintiff cannot “review the data” that underlies outputs 23 in Final SEIS/SEIR). Sharks Sports claims that “what was produced was a flash drive of 24 gobblygook [sic] with no way to extract the data.” Id. at 6. 25 As discussed in the foregoing, Sharks Sports mischaracterizes the situation. United States 26 Magistrate Judge van Keulen ordered the parties to “promptly meet and confer in good faith” as to 27 18 1 whether the cited travel demand raw data “should be added to the administrative record.” ECF 2 No. 79 at 19. Judge van Keulen explained that “[t]he Court expects the parties to reach agreement 3 on these issues; however, any remaining dispute must be presented to the undersigned in a joint 4 letter brief filed no later than noon on February 7, 2020.” Id. (emphasis in original). 5 On April 15, 2020, after both of the foregoing cross-motions for summary judgment had 6 already been filed and two days before Sharks Sports’ final summary judgment brief was due, the 7 parties filed a joint case management statement. ECF No. 90. In that joint case management 8 statement, Sharks Sports stated for the first time that Sharks Sports lacked the ability to read the 9 travel demand raw data that the FTA had produced pursuant to Judge van Keulen’s order because 10 Sharks Sports “believe[d] that the information is inaccessible without Hexagon’s program 11 necessary to read the information.” Id. at 3. Sharks Sports asserted that Sharks Sports had been 12 “unable to review the information and must either [sic] be able to do so as soon as possible so the 13 relevant information can be filed to complete the record.” Id. 14 The Court construed Sharks Sports’ statement as a renewed motion to compel completion 15 or supplementation of the administrative record. ECF No. 91 at 2. The Court explained that 16 Sharks Sports’ request was “extremely untimely.” Id. The Court noted that “Judge van Keulen 17 clearly ordered the parties to present ‘any remaining dispute’ related to the data in question to the 18 Court by ‘no later than noon on February 7, 2020.’ ECF No. 79 at 19 (emphasis in original).” 19 Id. Notwithstanding this instruction, Sharks Sports “utterly failed” to raise the issue for two 20 months. Id. The Court noted that even when Sharks Sports did raise the issue, Sharks Sports only 21 did so “in the context of a mandatory joint case management statement, not in a formal motion.” 22 Id. Sharks Sports “provide[d] no justification for the lengthy delay.” Id. 23 The Court also explained that Sharks Sports’ April 15, 2020 request would be “highly 24 prejudicial.” Id. at 3. The Court noted that Sharks Sports “filed a motion for summary judgment 25 on February 21, 2020. Defendants filed a cross-motion for summary judgment and opposition on 26 March 27, 2020. Plaintiff’s reply and opposition [were] due tomorrow, on April 17, 2020. After 27 19 1 that, the sole remaining filing on the cross-motions for summary judgment, Defendant’s reply, 2 [was] due on May 1, 2020.” Id. (citations omitted). Accordingly, Sharks Sports’ “request would 3 require fundamental modifications to the briefing schedule at the eleventh hour, when summary 4 judgment briefing [was] already almost entirely complete.” Id. The Court therefore denied Sharks 5 Sports’ renewed motion and noted that “Judge van Keulen concurs in the Court’s ruling on this 6 issue.” Id. 7 Sharks Sports’ continued attempt to invoke its inability to read the travel demand raw data 8 fails for at least five reasons. First, according to Sharks Sports, the travel demand raw data must 9 be extracted “so it can be reviewed and relevant portions placed in the AR.” Sharks Opp’n at 6–7. 10 However, the FTA never considered the travel demand raw data. ECF No. 90 at 6 (“FTA 11 considered the tables in the Final SEIS/SEIR (part of the AR), not the underlying raw data used to 12 create those tables.”); see also Sharks Mot. at 6 (noting that using the raw data, “Hexagon [] 13 provided specific outputs in response to specific agency questions”). To the extent that Sharks 14 Sports seeks to challenge the outputs of the travel demand raw data that are located in the Final 15 SEIS/SEIR, Sharks Sports had all of the information necessary to do so. In fact, Sharks Sports did 16 challenge outputs of the travel demand raw data in the administrative process. FTA 22696 17 (complaining that “the travel demand model used for the 2016 DEIS . . . predicts daily boardings 18 and alightings at the Diridon Station in 2035 would be only 13,771”). 19 Second, to the extent that Sharks Sports seeks to use the data to produce different outputs 20 that the FTA never considered, this would entail review of information outside the administrative 21 record that postdates the creation of the Final SEIS/SEIR. See Center for Biological Diversity, 22 450 F.3d at 943 (noting that the review of “post-decision information as a new rationalization 23 either for sustaining or attacking the Agency’s decision” is generally improper). 24 Third, Sharks Sports’ argument is untimely. As noted, “Judge van Keulen clearly ordered 25 the parties to present ‘any remaining dispute’ related to the data in question to the Court by ‘no 26 later than noon on February 7, 2020.’ ECF No. 79 at 19 (emphasis in original).” Id. 27 20 1 Notwithstanding this instruction, Sharks Sports utterly failed to raise the issue until April 15, 2 2020, more than two months after the deadline. Id. Moreover, those two months were critical to 3 the case. Sharks Sports filed their motion for summary judgment on February 21, 2020, and the 4 FTA filed its cross-motion for summary judgment and opposition to Sharks Sports’ motion for 5 summary judgment on March 27, 2020. Sharks Sports provided no justification for the lengthy 6 delay, and Sharks Sports has still yet to do so. 7 Fourth, even when Sharks Sports did raise the issue, Sharks Sports only did so in a 8 statement in a mandatory joint case management statement, and not in a formal motion. ECF No. 9 90. In fact, Sharks Sports has never filed a motion on this issue. Sharks Sports therefore never 10 properly raised the issue. 11 Fifth, although Sharks Sports seeks to make the issue a centerpiece of Sharks Sports’ 12 opposition, Sharks Sports failed to raise the issue in its opening motion for summary judgment. 13 Sharks Sports therefore waived the argument. See, e.g., Banga v. Experian Info. Sols., Inc., No. C 14 09-04867 SBA, 2013 WL 1209946, at *3 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 25, 2013) (“Because this argument was 15 not raised in Plaintiff's opening brief, the Court disregards it.”); see also Zango, Inc. v. Kaspersky 16 Lab, Inc., 568 F.3d 1169, 1177 n.8 (9th Cir. 2009) (“[A]rguments not raised by a party in an 17 opening brief are waived.”). 18 Sharks Sports’ dilatory conduct entirely undercuts their argument about the importance of 19 the travel demand raw data. For the reasons stated above, Sharks Sports’ argument about the need 20 to read the travel demand raw data is not well-taken.5 The Court now considers Sharks Sports’ 21 arguments that the FTA improperly held that parking impacts are not environmental impacts under 22 23 5 The Court also rejects Sharks Sports’ argument that certain tables in the Final SEIS/SEIR are 24 attributed to the VTA and not to Hexagon Transportation Consultants. Sharks Opp’n at 3 n.1. As an initial matter, the argument is unclear because the specific table Sharks Sports cites is indeed 25 attributed to “Hexagon Travel Consultants.” FTA 20953. Moreover, Sharks Sports itself conceded in its motion for summary judgment that “Hexagon [] provided specific outputs in 26 response to specific agency questions,” such as a Diridon Station parking structure’s impact on BART ridership. Sharks Mot. at 6. Thus, Sharks Sports conceded that Hexagon Transportation 27 Consultants generated the tables. 21 1 NEPA. 2 B. The Final SEIS/SEIR Recognized that Parking Impacts May Be Environmental Impacts. 3 As an initial matter, Sharks Sports argues that parking impacts are covered by NEPA, and 4 that “the [FTA’s] reversal of policy to treat parking as not an environmental impact in the 5 SEIS/SEIR requires an explanation.” Sharks Mot. at 13–14 (emphasis omitted). To the extent 6 that Sharks Sports argues that the FTA categorically determined that parking impacts cannot 7 constitute environmental impacts, Sharks Sports is mistaken. In the Final SEIS/SEIR and 8 throughout the Extension Program, the FTA recognized that “transit projects can affect the 9 availability and location of parking spaces and can be a local concern.” FTA 22840. Therefore, 10 “[p]otential parking impacts include consequences of, or impacts from, new parking lots 11 constructed to serve transit facilities, changes in parking demand as a result of transit facility 12 construction/service expansion, and changes to on- and off-street parking during construction and 13 operation of a project.” Id. 14 As further discussed infra, in Japanese Village, LLC v. Fed. Transit Admin., 843 F.3d 445 15 (9th Cir. 2016), the Ninth Circuit noted that “[t]here are no NEPA thresholds for determining the 16 significance of parking impacts, and [the plaintiff] has not cited any cases in which a court has 17 found an EIS inadequate for failure to consider increased demand on an existing parking 18 structure.” Id. at 462. Notwithstanding this fact, the Final SEIS/SEIR in the instant case assumed 19 that transit projects like the Phase II Project of the Extension Program may cause adverse parking 20 impacts of the kind Sharks Sports articulates. 21 Hence, to the extent that Sharks Sports argues that the Final SEIS/SEIR categorically 22 declined to consider parking impacts as possible adverse impacts under NEPA, that argument 23 fails. The Court now turns to Sharks Sports’ argument that the FTA’s decision not to include 24 parking at Diridon Station was predetermined. 25 C. The FTA’s Decision Not to Include Parking at Diridon Station Was Not 26 Predetermined. 27 22 1 Sharks Sports argues that the FTA engaged in “pretext and bad faith” when the FTA 2 approved the Final SEIS/SEIR with no parking structure at Diridon Station. Sharks Mot. at 15– 3 16. The FTA, on the other hand, asserts that Sharks Sports’ argument is based on a 4 misrepresentation of the administrative record. FTA Mot. at 23–24. The Court agrees with the 5 FTA. 6 As noted, Sharks Sports claims that the FTA’s treatment of parking at Diridon Station 7 represents “pretext and bad faith,” and Sharks Sports cites the United States Supreme Court’s 8 recent decision in Dept. of Commerce v. New York, 139 S. Ct. 2551 (2019). In that case, the 9 Supreme Court rejected the Department of Commerce’s explanation for the reinstatement of a 10 citizenship question in the census questionnaire. Id. at 2575. Specifically, the Supreme Court 11 determined that the stated explanation for the inclusion of the citizenship question, a desire to 12 gather data to enforce the Voting Rights Act, was “incongruent with what the record reveals about 13 the agency’s priorities and decisionmaking process.” Id. Accordingly, the Supreme Court 14 remanded the case back to the Department of Commerce to provide another explanation. Id. 15 The relevance of Dept. of Commerce v. New York to the instant case appears to be tenuous. 16 In the instant case, Sharks Sports does not point to any official explanation for the lack of parking 17 structure at Diridon Station that serves as a pretext for an unspoken explanation. Instead, Sharks 18 Sports primarily asserts that “the decision to eliminate parking and to move station parking into 19 the project description was made in 2013.” Sharks Mot. at 16. Thus, the thrust of Sharks Sports’ 20 “pretext and bad faith” argument appears to be that the FTA predetermined the issue of parking at 21 Diridon Station. 22 The Ninth Circuit has held that “the comprehensive ‘hard look’ mandated by Congress and 23 required by the statute must be timely, and it must be taken objectively and in good faith, not as an 24 exercise in form over substance, and not as a subterfuge designed to rationalize a decision already 25 made.” Metcalf v. Daley, 214 F.3d 1135, 1142 (9th Cir. 2000). An agency may therefore violate 26 NEPA and the APA when the agency “mak[es] an irreversible and irretrievable commitment of 27 23 1 resources” before the preparation of an environmental impact statement. Id. at 1143. However, 2 “unusual facts and circumstances” must be present for a court to find predetermination. Metcalf, 3 214 F.3d at 1145; see also Crenshaw Subway Coal. v. Los Angeles Cty. Metro. Transportation 4 Auth., No. CV 11-9603 FMO (JCX), 2015 WL 6150847, at *18 (C.D. Cal. Sept. 23, 2015) 5 (explaining that “evidence of predetermination must meet a high standard”). 6 Several decisions cited by Sharks Sports describe some “unusual facts and circumstances” 7 in which courts have found predetermination in the past. For instance, the Metcalf court held that 8 an agency improperly predetermined an issue when the agency entered into a binding contract 9 with a Native American tribe before the agency prepared an environmental impact statement, 10 which necessarily committed the agency to a particular outcome. Metcalf, 214 F.3d at 1145 11 (“Here, before preparing an EA, the Federal Defendants signed a contract which obligated them 12 both to make a proposal to the IWC for a gray whale quota and to participate in the harvest of 13 those whales.”). Similarly, in International Snowmobile Manufacturers Ass’n v. Norton, 340 F. 14 Supp. 2d 1249 (D. Wy. 2004), a high-ranking federal official made numerous “prejudicial” public 15 comments before the conclusion of the agency’s decision making process. Id. at 1260. The court 16 found that these public comments, taken together, “indicate[d] a prejudged political conclusion.” 17 Id. at 1261. 18 Here, again, Sharks Sports’ theory is that “the decision to eliminate parking and to move 19 station parking into the project description was made in 2013.” Sharks Mot. at 16. However, 20 Sharks Sports fails to point to any “irreversible and irretrievable commitment of resources” that 21 would align the instant case with the “unusual facts and circumstances” outlined above. Metcalf, 22 214 F.3d at 1145. Indeed, Sharks Sports only points to two documents in the administrative 23 record. Neither document provides evidence of predetermination. 24 First, Sharks Sports cites a November 20, 2013 letter from the VTA (not the FTA) to other 25 federal and state agencies, in which the VTA invited the other agencies to participate in the 26 environmental review process for the Phase II Project of the Extension Program. That letter 27 24 1 indicated that the VTA and FTA had decided to “consider” a new version of the Phase II Project 2 with no parking “proposed” at Diridon Station. FTA 37564–567 (describing “Current Project 3 under Consideration” and stating that “[n]o parking is proposed for either the East or West options 4 at Diridon Station”). Consideration of a proposal does not amount to an “irreversible or 5 irretrievable commitment of resources.” Metcalf, 214 F.3d at 1145 (explaining that an agency’s 6 decision to “begin consideration of an action” or “lend support to [a] proposal” does not amount to 7 predetermination). 8 Second, Sharks Sports cites the Environmental Scoping Report for the Final SEIS/SEIR. 9 Similarly, however, the cited portion of the Environmental Scoping Report only states that the 10 scope of the Phase II Project had evolved such that there was no longer parking “proposed” at 11 Diridon Station. FTA 8175 (noting that “[p]arking structures are proposed at the Alum Rock and 12 Santa Clara Stations” but not at other stations). The Environmental Scoping Report merely 13 describes the scope of the proposed Phase II Project. The decision to set the scope of a proposed 14 project, without more, does not amount to an “irreversible or irretrievable commitment of 15 resources.” Metcalf, 214 F.3d at 1145. 16 Hence, neither document constitutes evidence that the FTA irreversibly and irretrievably 17 committed to forgo the provision of parking at Diridon Station. Id. at 1142. Thus, Sharks Sports 18 has not shown that the FTA’s decision not to provide a parking structure at Diridon Station was 19 predetermined. The Court now addresses Sharks Sports’ arguments about the content of the Final 20 SEIS/SEIR. 21 D. The Final SEIS/SEIR Does Not Violate NEPA. 22 Next, Sharks Sports makes a host of arguments that the content of the Final SEIS/SEIR 23 was defective, and thereby violated NEPA and the APA. As noted, according to Sharks Sports: 24 (1) the Final SEIS/SEIR failed to take a “hard look” at numerous types of parking impacts; (2) the 25 Final SEIS/SEIR violated NEPA’s “scientific integrity” requirement; (3) the Final SEIS/SEIR 26 failed to disclose and analyze contradictory studies; (4) the Final SEIS/SEIR failed to apply NEPA 27 25 1 analysis to the TOJD; (5) the FTA failed to supplement the Final SEIS/SEIR in light of new 2 information; (6) the Final SEIS/SEIR failed to consider a reasonable range of alternatives. The 3 Court considers these arguments in turn. 4 1. The FTA Took a “Hard Look” at Parking Impacts. 5 Sharks Sports argues that the FTA failed to take a “hard look” at various parking impacts 6 at Diridon Station. Sharks Mot. at 15. By contrast, the FTA asserts that the Final SEIS/SEIR 7 followed the steps required by Ninth Circuit precedent. FTA Mot. at 15. The Court agrees with 8 the FTA. 9 NEPA is a procedural statute that is designed to ensure that agencies “are fully aware of 10 the impact of their decisions on the environment.” Oregon Envt’l Council v. Kunzman, 817 F.2d 11 484, 492 (9th Cir. 1987). Thus, an agency need only take a “hard look” at a decision and need not 12 ensure that environmental concerns trump all others. Robertson v. Methow Valley Citizens 13 Council, 490 U.S. 332, 353 (1989) (holding that NEPA requires neither that actions be taken to 14 mitigate adverse effects of federal actions, nor that an environmental impact statement include an 15 explanation of what measures will be employed to mitigate adverse environmental impacts). In 16 order to determine whether the FTA took a “hard look” at parking impacts under the Final 17 SEIS/SEIR, the Court must apply a “rule of reason” standard to “determine whether the [Final 18 SEIS/SEIR] contains a reasonably thorough discussion of the significant aspects of the probable 19 environmental consequences.” League of Wilderness Defenders-Blue Mountains Biodiversity 20 Proj. v. United States Forest Serv., 689 F.3d 1060, 1076 (9th Cir. 2012) (citation omitted). “This 21 standard ‘requires a pragmatic judgment whether the EIS’s form, content[,] and preparation foster 22 both informed decision-making and informed public participation.’” Id. (quoting Native 23 Ecosystems Council v. United States Forest Serv., 418 F.3d 953, 960 (9th Cir. 2005)) (alteration in 24 original). 25 Sharks Sports contends that the Final SEIS/SEIR failed to take a “hard look” at numerous 26 types of parking impacts. First, and at the greatest length, Sharks Sports contends that the “FTA 27 26 1 failed to take a ‘hard look’ at the parking spillover impacts caused by the Project.” Sharks Mot. at 2 2. Second, Sharks Sports argues that the direct impact of the Phase II Project on 715 existing 3 parking spaces around Diridon Station “is completely unstudied, and has been entirely ignored.” 4 Id. at 19. Third, Sharks Sports argues that the Final SEIS/SEIR failed to examine “indirect 5 impacts” based on a potential lack of parking around Diridon Station. Id. at 20. Fourth, Sharks 6 Sports argues that the Final SEIS/SEIR failed to examine “Arena-specific impacts.” Id. at 23–24. 7 The Court considers these arguments in turn. 8 a. The FTA Took a Hard Look at Spillover Parking. 9 Sharks Sports contends that the “FTA failed to take a ‘hard look’ at the parking spillover 10 impacts caused by the Project” at Diridon Station. Sharks Mot. at 2. In other words, Sharks 11 Sports worries that because Diridon Station does not have BART-provided parking, BART riders 12 who access Diridon Station “will take parking from existing parking used by the Arena, Caltrain 13 and other businesses and residences in the Diridon area.” Sharks Mot. at 1. Sharks Sports claims 14 that the SEIS/SEIR failed to take a hard look at this issue. Id. 15 A recent Ninth Circuit decision provides clear guidance on this question. Indeed, in 16 Japanese Village, LLC v. Fed. Transit Admin., 843 F.3d 445 (9th Cir. 2016), the Ninth Circuit 17 considered a NEPA challenge to an agency’s consideration of spillover parking. In Japanese 18 Village, the plaintiff, a business called Japanese Village, argued that the environmental impact 19 statement that accompanied a light rail extension project ran afoul of NEPA because the 20 environmental impact statement “failed to adequately consider the increased demand that the new 21 Little Tokyo transit station will place on Japanese Village’s existing parking structure.” Id. at 461. 22 The plaintiff worried that “[b]ecause the new transit station will not provide additional parking and 23 will be located only 16 feet from Japanese Village’s parking structure, . . . the parking used by its 24 employees and customers will be overrun by rail commuters.” Id. Indeed, Sharks Sports 25 concedes that the discussion of spillover impact in Japanese Village “is a succinct statement of the 26 Sharks’ concerns” in the instant case. Sharks Opp’n at 17. 27 27 1 The Ninth Circuit rejected the NEPA challenge. The Ninth Circuit explained that “[t]here 2 are no NEPA thresholds for determining the significance of parking impacts,” and that the Ninth 3 Circuit was unaware of any cases in which a court has “found an EIS inadequate for failure to 4 consider increased demand on an existing parking structure.” 843 F.3d at 463. According to the 5 Ninth Circuit, the FTA satisfied NEPA because the FTA “estimated the number of parking spaces 6 that could be lost in Little Tokyo due to the Project, but they also estimated the number of spaces 7 that they expect the area to gain from other development.” Id. Further, the FTA “discussed how 8 increased use of public transit would at least partially offset the need for additional parking,” and 9 also “discussed possible mitigation measures.” Id. In light of the foregoing, the Ninth Circuit 10 concluded that the FTA “provided at least some analysis of the Project’s parking impacts and 11 likely mitigating factors,” and therefore held that “[t]he record indicates that [the FTA] took the 12 requisite ‘hard look’ at the parking impacts of the proposed Project before it was approved.” Id. 13 The FTA took very similar steps in the Final SEIS/SEIR. First, the Final SEIS/SEIR 14 considered the loss of parking spaces caused by the construction of the BART Station at Diridon 15 Station, as well as the creation of new parking spaces at nearby BART stations. FTA 20987 16 (“Construction of the Diridon Station would permanently remove approximately 715 existing off- 17 street publicly-available parking spaces that are across the street from and also support the SAP 18 Center.”); FTA 20990 (“The Alum Rock/28th Street and Santa Clara Stations would provide up to 19 1,700 parking spaces.”). Specifically, the Final SEIS/SEIR noted that roughly 715 parking spaces 20 would be eliminated by Diridon Station, but the Final SEIS/SEIR stated that two new BART 21 stations, the Alum Rock and Santa Clara Stations, “would provide up to 1,700 parking spaces,” 22 which would more than offset the loss of parking spaces. Id. The Final SEIS/SEIR also 23 considered the 2017 Parking Inventory, which found that there are “approximately 14,450 24 publicly-available parking spaces located within 0.5 mile of Diridon Station.” FTA 2098–88, 25 36634–39. The Final SEIS/SEIR concluded that the loss of 715 spaces “would impact 4.9 26 percent” of the 14,450 spaces. FTA 20988. The Final SEIS/SEIR concluded that in light of the 27 28 1 “large number of other public parking opportunities available in the area,” the loss of these 2 approximately 715 spaces would not be an adverse impact. Id. 3 Second, according to the Final SEIS/SEIR, “parking will be continually reviewed as part of 4 the San Jose Diridon Integrated Station Concept Plan.” FTA 20990. The Final SEIS/SEIR stated 5 that “[t]his plan would address the provision and location of parking in the area, including parking 6 demand for BART and High-Speed Rail.” Id. Moreover, in the meantime, the “VTA would 7 closely monitor parking activity at all stations and institute control measures where necessary.” 8 Id. According to the Final SEIS/SEIR, “[p]ossible measures include parking charges, parking 9 time, and location restrictions to prevent long-term parking in neighborhoods, and/or other actions. 10 VTA would also continue to work with the Cities of San Jose and Santa Clara and other transit 11 agencies to implement appropriate parking policies to manage non-BART-related parking demand 12 adjacent to these stations.” Id. 13 Third, the Final SEIS/SEIR opined that the increased availability of public transportation 14 would reduce parking demand in the Diridon Station area. For instance, the Final SEIS/SEIR 15 explained that “[t]he convenience of having a BART station across the street would [] encourage a 16 transit access alternative for those attending SAP Center events and reduce the number of vehicles 17 traveling to SAP Center events.” FTA 20980. For instance, the Final SEIS/SEIR examined other 18 public transportation stations near other California event centers, and offered a “conservative” 19 estimate of the number of SAP Center patrons who would likely use public transportation to 20 access the SAP Center and thereby reduce spillover parking. FTA 22141. The Final SEIS/SEIR 21 also noted that “Diridon Station is an existing multi-modal transportation center located within the 22 City of San Jose’s downtown urban core.” FTA 20987. Diridon Station is currently “served by 23 several transit modes including VTA’s Light Rail and express and local bus service, ACE, 24 Amtrak, Capitol Corridor, and regional bus lines to Alameda and Santa Cruz County,” and the 25 Final SEIS/SEIR projected that almost 91 percent of access to Diridon Station would be by 26 walk/bicycle, heavy and light rail transit, and bus. FTA 20985, 20987. “Diridon Station is 27 29 1 projected to function more as a destination station in the AM commute direction, as patrons travel 2 to nearby activity centers, than as an origin station.” FTA 22140. This projection also pointed 3 toward lower parking demand since, “[a]s a destination station, the parking demand at Diridon 4 Station would be less than at stations that primarily function as origins in the AM commute 5 direction.” Id. 6 Fourth, the Final SEIS/SEIR considered the existence of local policies that “discourage[d] 7 drive-alone trips to BART stations” and thereby reduced parking demand. FTA 20985. For 8 instance, on June 9, 2016, the BART Board of Directors adopted a new BART Station Access 9 Policy. Pursuant to that policy, for instance, BART now expressly aims to “[r]educe the access 10 mode share of the automobile by enhancing multi-modal access to and from BART stations in 11 partnership with communities and access providers.” FTA 53871. Moreover, the Final 12 SEIS/SEIR concluded that under the BART Station Access Policy, Diridon Station would likely 13 fall into the category of an “urban” station, which, based on BART’s station typology, would also 14 suggest less parking demand. FTA 20985; FTA 22735 (providing definition of “urban” BART 15 station). 16 Fifth, and finally, the Final SEIS/SEIR cited ridership modeling and mode-of-access 17 modeling concerning the projected use of Diridon Station. FTA 20846; FTA 20953. The 18 ridership modeling indicated that providing a 500-unit parking structure at Diridon Station would 19 only result in an increased overall ridership of 19 passengers across BART. FTA 20846. Thus, 20 the ridership modeling indicated that “without parking at Diridon Station, auto-based BART trips 21 would shift to Alum Rock/28th Street and Santa Clara Stations, which provide parking.” Id. 22 Further, the mode-of-access modeling concluded that “no more tha[n] 0.5 percent or 68 average 23 weekday BART riders are projected to access the Diridon Station by automobile and then park- 24 and-ride in 2035.”6 FTA 22855. 25 26 6 Sharks Sports repeatedly asserts that the mode-of-access model “stated the parking demand at Diridon was zero.” Sharks Mot. at 6 (emphasis omitted). That assertion is belied by the 27 administrative record. FTA 22855 (explaining that output from mode-of-access modeling “does 30 1 In light of the foregoing, and in the Court’s “pragmatic judgment,” the Court concludes 2 that the Final SEIS/SEIR contains the requisite “hard look” at spillover parking around Diridon 3 Station. As discussed, the Final SEIS/SEIR considered the Extension Program’s impact on 4 existing parking, the availability of new parking, various factors that would reduce the demand for 5 parking, and modeling that projected the mode-of-access and ridership at Diridon Station. The 6 Ninth Circuit held that agency actions like the foregoing dictated that the FTA took a “hard look” 7 at parking impacts under NEPA in Japanese Village, and that holding applies with full force here. 8 843 F.3d at 461–63. 9 Sharks Sports argues that the Final SEIS/SEIR’s analysis of spillover parking is 10 nevertheless inadequate. The thrust of Sharks Sports’ argument is that there is only one possible 11 way to analyze spillover parking: analysis of “unconstrained” parking demand. Sharks Mot. at 7 12 (“An unconstrained study is the only way to obtain accurate forecasts and determine what 13 mitigation is needed.”). Analysis of unconstrained parking demand would examine how many 14 BART riders would park at Diridon Station if there were an infinite supply of BART parking 15 spaces available. Sharks Opp’n at 4. 16 However, the Court “must be ‘at its most deferential’ when reviewing scientific judgments 17 and technical analyses within the agency’s expertise under NEPA.” Native Ecosystems Council, 18 697 F.3d at 1051 (quoting Northern Plains Resource Council, Inc. v. Surface Transp. Bd., 668 19 F.3d 1067, 1075 (9th Cir. 2011)). The appropriate way to project spillover parking at Diridon 20 Station is such a technical analysis. Here, for instance, the FTA’s ridership model showed “that 21 without parking at Diridon Station, auto-based BART trips shifted to the Alum Rock/28th Street 22 and Santa Clara Stations, which provide parking.” FTA 20986. Indeed, the ridership model 23 indicated that with or without a parking structure at Diridon Station, “the overall systemwide 24 ridership among the four stations [constructed in the Phase II Project of the Extension Program] 25 remained relatively the same.” Id. A logical inference from this result is that BART riders who 26 27 not mean 0 percent”). 31 1 would have parked at Diridon Station if parking were provided would be very willing to travel to 2 another BART station for parking in the absence of a Diridon Station parking structure. This, in 3 turn, would minimize spillover parking around Diridon Station.7 That is precisely the conclusion 4 at which the Final SEIS/SEIR arrived based on the ridership model. Id. 5 Moreover, the Japanese Village court held that the FTA had taken a hard look at spillover 6 parking even though there was apparently no unconstrained parking demand analysis performed in 7 that case. 843 F.3d at 462 (discussing the “most directly responsive” portion of environmental 8 impact statement and deeming it sufficient under NEPA, notwithstanding lack of unconstrained 9 analysis). Sharks Sports makes other arguments that are foreclosed by Japanese Village. For 10 instance, Sharks Sports contests the FTA’s assumption that increased public transit would prevent 11 spillover parking, and argues that “[t]here is nothing in the AR examining how public transit 12 would offset the need for parking at Diridon.” Sharks Opp’n at 20. The Japanese Village court 13 rejected the plaintiff’s near-identical argument that the FTA in that case was merely 14 “‘philosophiz[ing]’ that improved transit service may reduce the need for parking.” 843 F.3d at 15 462. Similarly, Sharks Sports asserts that the Final SEIS/SEIR’s discussion of possible mitigation 16 for spillover parking is inadequate. However, the Final SEIS/SEIR explained that parking activity 17 would be monitored, and that control measures such as parking charges and time and location 18 restrictions, would be instituted. FTA 20990. Similarly, the Japanese Village court repeatedly 19 relied on the fact that “Metro plans to ‘conduct an annual parking capacity study of the Little 20 Tokyo area during construction to determine if there is sufficient parking availability.’” 843 F.3d 21 at 462–63. 22 Sharks Sports argues that Japanese Village is distinguishable for several reasons. First, 23 Sharks Sports points to the fact that in Japanese Village, the FTA conducted a “160-page 24 25 7 By contrast, if the ridership model had showed that overall ridership dropped significantly 26 without a parking structure at Diridon Station, this would suggest that a large number of BART riders would be unwilling to travel to other BART stations, which would in turn point to the 27 potential for high spillover parking. 32 1 transportation analysis study, which included extensive discussion about the impact on parking,” 2 as well as a “Station Planning Toolkit.” Id. at 461; Sharks Sports Opp’n at 17. However, the 3 Ninth Circuit did not base its holding on the existence of these materials, and it is not clear to what 4 extent they were relevant to the specific issue of spillover parking. Instead, the Ninth Circuit 5 focused almost entirely on “a paragraph in Chapter 4 of the FEIS,” which the Ninth Circuit held to 6 be “most directly responsive to Japanese Village’s concern about off-street parking.” 843 F.3d at 7 462. In light of the Ninth Circuit’s analysis, the Final SEIS/SEIR contains a sufficiently thorough 8 discussion of parking impacts at Diridon Station. See, e.g., FTA 20985–89 (discussing parking 9 impacts at Diridon Station); see also Cal. Coastal Commission v. U.S. Dept. of the Navy, 22 F. 10 Supp. 3d 1081, 1103 (S.D. Cal. 2014) (“The primary difficulty with the CCC’s arguments is that 11 the Navy has considered and analyzed the impacts of traffic, parking, and visual resources.”). 12 Second, Sharks Sports seeks to distinguish Japanese Village because of the contention that “the 13 scientific integrity standard is profoundly at issue” in the instant case. The Court addresses Sharks 14 Sports’ arguments about scientific integrity infra Section III.C.2. However, the Court notes that if 15 Sharks Sports’ contention that unconstrained parking demand comprises the sole accurate way of 16 measuring spillover parking were correct, the defendant in Japanese Village would have also 17 presumably violated NEPA’s “scientific integrity” mandate. 18 Accordingly, and in sum, the Court concludes that the FTA took a hard look at spillover 19 parking under NEPA. The Court now turns to direct parking impacts. 20 b. The FTA Took a Hard Look at Direct Parking Impacts. 21 Sharks Sports argues that the direct impact of the Phase II Project on 715 existing parking 22 spaces around Diridon Station “is completely unstudied, and has been entirely ignored.” Sharks 23 Mot. at 19. 24 Contrary to Sharks Sports’ statement, the Final SEIS/SEIR clearly discussed direct impacts 25 on existing parking at Diridon Station. Indeed, the Final SEIS/SEIR acknowledged that due to the 26 BART extension, “[c]onstruction of the Diridon Station would permanently remove approximately 27 33 1 715 existing off-street publicly-available parking spaces.” FTA 22140–42. 2 However, the Final SEIS/SEIR also cited a 2017 Parking Inventory by Kimley Horn (the 3 “2017 Parking Inventory”), which found that there are “approximately 14,450 publicly-available 4 parking spaces located within 0.5 mile of Diridon Station.” FTA 20988. The approximately 5 14,450 parking spaces consist of 2,605 on-street parking spaces and 11,845 off-street spaces. Id. 6 The parking inventory includes “several public parking facilities and several large, privately 7 owned parking facilities with public access.” FTA 20987. Indeed, Caltrain provides parking “on 8 three surface lots” near the Diridon Station, including one parking lot owned by the VTA. Id. In 9 addition, “a large parking lot is immediately west of the SAP Center for patrons of this facility.” 10 Id. 11 Given the overall parking inventory, the Final SEIS/SEIR concluded that the loss of 715 12 parking spaces “would impact 4.9 percent” of the approximately 14,450 parking spaces. FTA 13 20988. Moreover, the addition of roughly 1,700 new parking spaces at the nearby Alum Rock and 14 Santa Clara BART Stations would offset the direct loss in parking spaces. FTA 20990. The Final 15 SEIS/SEIR thus concluded that the loss of these approximately 715 parking spaces would not be 16 an adverse impact because the existing parking capacity in the area is sufficient to accommodate 17 non-BART parking. FTA 20988. 18 Sharks Sports takes issue with two aspects of the foregoing. First, Sharks Sports argues 19 that the 2017 Parking Inventory overstated the approximate supply of parking around Diridon 20 Station was therefore illegitimate and “unscientific.” Sharks Opp’n at 19. The Court rejects this 21 argument infra Section III.C.2. Second, and notwithstanding the foregoing, Sharks Sports 22 summarily asserts that “715 spaces are the size of a block of surface parking. That loss is 23 obviously very significant.” Id. Sharks Sports may disagree with the substantive conclusion of 24 the Final SEIS/SEIR. However, under NEPA, the Court “considers whether ‘the decision was 25 based on consideration of the relevant factors and whether there has been a clear error of 26 judgment.’” Westlands Water Dist., 376 F.3d at 865. Sharks Sports makes no argument to 27 34 1 explain why, in light of the inventory of approximate spaces and the addition of 1,700 nearby 2 parking spaces, the FTA made a clear error of judgment in concluding that the loss of 715 parking 3 spaces would not be an adverse impact under NEPA. 4 Accordingly, the Court concludes that the FTA took a sufficiently hard look at direct 5 parking impacts under NEPA. The Court now turns to indirect parking impacts. 6 c. The FTA Took a Hard Look at Indirect and “Arena-Specific” Parking Impacts. 7 Sharks Sports argues that the Final SEIS/SEIR “did not address that the lack of adequate 8 parking during construction and long-term will result in indirect impacts including: congestion, 9 traffic safety, vehicle emissions etc.” Sharks Mot. at 20. Sharks Sports also claims that the Final 10 SEIS/SEIR failed to address “Arena-specific” parking impacts that would uniquely affect the SAP 11 Center. Id. at 21–24. 12 As to the indirect impacts of lack of parking, based on the FTA’s analysis of spillover 13 parking and direct parking impacts at Diridon Station, the Final SEIS/SEIR concluded that “no 14 indirect traffic or air quality impacts would be caused by cars circling and looking for parking at 15 [Diridon] station.” FTA 20989. Similarly, the Final SEIS/SEIR analyzed the traffic-specific 16 impacts at “Event Centers,” including the SAP Center. FTA 20979–80. Again, the Final 17 SEIS/SEIR explained that based on the FTA’s analysis of spillover parking and direct parking 18 impacts at Diridon Station, “the number of vehicles on the adjacent roadways associated with the 19 BART Extension operations would not be substantial.” FTA 20981. Moreover, the Final 20 SEIS/SEIR explained that “[t]he convenience of having a BART station across the street would [] 21 encourage a transit access alternative for those attending SAP Center events and reduce the 22 number of vehicles traveling to SAP Center events.” FTA 20980. Indeed, the Final SEIS/SEIR 23 examined other public transportation stations near other California event centers, and offered a 24 “conservative” estimate of the number of SAP Center patrons who would likely use public 25 transportation to access the SAP Center and thereby reduce spillover parking. FTA 22141. In 26 sum, the FTA concluded that “[t]here would be no adverse effects under NEPA.” FTA 20980. 27 35 1 Sharks Sports repeatedly asserts that the FTA’s conclusions are incorrect, but Sharks 2 Sports provides no meaningful argument that the FTA’s conclusions reflect a clear error in 3 judgment. Westlands Water Dist., 376 F.3d at 865. Moreover, the Final SEIS/SEIR provides the 4 reasonably thorough discussion that NEPA requires. See City of Carmel-By-The-Sea v. U.S. Dep’t 5 of Transp., 123 F.3d 1142, 1150 (9th Cir. 1997) (“We review an Environmental Impact Statement 6 under the ‘rule of reason’ to determine whether it contains ‘a reasonably thorough discussion of 7 the significant aspects of the probable environmental consequences.’” (citation omitted)). 8 As for the indirect impact of “lack of adequate parking during construction,” the Final 9 SEIS/SEIR concluded that short-term adverse parking impacts could arise from the construction 10 related to the Phase II Project of the Extension Program. FTA 22133. Accordingly, the Final 11 SEIS/SEIR adopted three mitigation measures in connection with those short-term adverse 12 impacts. FTA 21454–58, 21481. With the adoption of the three mitigation measures, the Final 13 SEIS/SEIR concluded that “construction of the Diridon Station South and North Options . . . 14 would result in no adverse effect on parking.” FTA 21482. 15 Sharks Sports critiques the second mitigation measure, “TRA-CNST-B,” pursuant to 16 which the Final SEIS/SEIR commits to the adoption of “Construction Management Transportation 17 Plans” and “Traffic Control Plans” to coordinate construction-related issues associated with the 18 Phase II Project of the Extension Program. Sharks Sports contends that “[t]he SEIS/SEIR does 19 not identify any specific details about this future [Construction Management Transportation Plan] 20 or even suggest metrics of its effectiveness.” Sharks Mot. at 20. 21 On the contrary, the Final SEIS/SEIR outlines five “critical components” that the 22 Construction Management Transportation Plans will contain, and also discusses how the 23 Construction Management Transportation Plans will be organized and implemented. FTA 21456– 24 57. The Final SEIS/SEIR also assesses the effectiveness of the mitigation measure. For instance, 25 the Final SEIS/SEIR states that the mitigation measure will “reduce vehicular traffic impacts” 26 caused by construction near Diridon Station. FTA 21474. The mitigation measure would also 27 36 1 “provide safe travel corridors for pedestrians and bicyclists within and through construction areas 2 or provide detour routes with wayfinding signage.” Id. The Final SEIS/SEIR ultimately estimates 3 that the impact of the TRA-CNST-B, alongside the other two mitigation measures adopted for 4 construction at Diridon Station, will be sufficient to reduce the impact of construction to non- 5 adverse levels. This discussion is sufficiently detailed for the purposes of NEPA. See, e.g., S. 6 Fork Band Council of W. Shoshone Of Nevada v. U.S. Dep’t of Interior, 588 F.3d 718, 727 (9th 7 Cir. 2009) (noting that mitigation measure must be discussed with “sufficient detail to ensure that 8 environmental consequences have been fairly evaluated” and must include “an assessment of 9 whether the proposed mitigation measures can be effective”). 10 Accordingly, the Court concludes the FTA took a hard look at indirect and “Arena- 11 specific” parking impacts. In sum, based on the application of the “rule of reason” standard, the 12 Court concludes that the Final SEIS/SEIR “contains a reasonably thorough discussion of the 13 significant aspects” of the parking impacts cited by Sharks Sports required to satisfy NEPA’s hard 14 look requirement. League of Wilderness, 689 F.3d at 1076 (citation omitted). The Court now 15 turns to Sharks Sports’ argument that the Final SEIS/SEIR violates NEPA’s “scientific integrity” 16 requirement. 17 2. The Final SEIS/SEIR Did Not Violate NEPA’s “Scientific Integrity” Requirement. 18 Sharks Sports repeatedly argues that the Final SEIS/SEIR violated NEPA’s “scientific 19 integrity” requirement. First, Sharks Sports complains that the Final SEIS/SEIR lacks 20 “scientifically accurate” parking demand modeling. Sharks Mot. at 14–15. Second, Sharks Sports 21 argues that the Final SEIS/SEIR improperly relied on an “unscientific parking ‘inventory.’” Id. at 22 11. 23 NEPA regulations require that an agency ensure the “scientific integrity” of the discussions 24 and analyses contained in an environmental impact statement, and also that the agency explicitly 25 refer to “the scientific and other sources relied upon for conclusions in the [EIS].” 40 C.F.R. § 26 1502.24. The Court must be “most deferential when the agency is making predictions[] within its 27 37 1 area of special expertise.” The Lands Council v. McNair, 537 F.3d 981, 993 (9th Cir. 2008) 2 (internal quotation marks omitted). “At the same time, courts must independently review the 3 record in order to satisfy themselves that the agency has made a reasoned decision based on its 4 evaluation of the evidence.” Earth Island Inst. v. U.S. Forest Serv., 442 F.3d 1147, 1160 (9th Cir. 5 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted), overruled on other grounds by Winter, 555 U.S. 7 6 (2008). The Court first applies the foregoing standard to the FTA’s mode-of-access modeling. 7 The Court then applies the standard to the 2017 Parking Inventory cited by the Final SEIS/SEIR. 8 a. The Final SEIS/SEIR Mode-of-Access Modeling Did Not Violate the Scientific Integrity Standard. 9 As noted, the Final SEIS/SEIR performed several forms of modeling in the course of the 10 discussion of parking impacts at Diridon Station. One such form of modeling comprised mode-of- 11 access modeling, which projected the proportion of BART riders who would access Diridon 12 Station through various forms of transportation, such as walking, biking, and driving. FTA 20953. 13 Sharks Sports argues that the mode-of-access modeling violated NEPA’s scientific 14 integrity requirement because the modeling included unwarranted assumptions about rider 15 behavior. Of relevance to the instant case, the Final SEIS/SEIR stated that “no more tha[n] 0.5 16 percent or 68 average weekday BART riders are projected to access the Diridon Station by 17 automobile and then park-and-ride in 2035.” FTA 22855. This projection in turn depended on the 18 assumption that BART riders would generally not access Diridon Station through park-and-ride in 19 the absence of “BART-specific auto park-and-ride facilities.” FTA 20985. This form of analysis 20 is called a “constrained” model. FTA 22856. 21 The use of a constrained mode-of-access model does not violate NEPA’s scientific 22 integrity requirement. See Baltimore Gas & Elec. Co. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 462 U.S. 87, 23 98 (1983) (explaining that agencies may rely “on assumptions which involve substantial 24 uncertainties” under NEPA). As an initial matter, all predictive models must make simplifying 25 assumptions for the purposes of prediction. This is just as true for the methodology favored by 26 Sharks Sports as it is for the methodology deployed in the Final SEIS/SEIR. FTA 2321 (noting 27 38 1 that “travel forecasts should rightly be viewed as order of magnitude estimates, or ranges” and that 2 “individuals’ actual future travel behavior could differ somewhat from predicted behavior”). 3 As noted, Sharks Sports repeatedly argues that “[a]n unconstrained study is the only way to 4 obtain accurate forecasts and determine what mitigation is needed.” Sharks Mot. at 7. As the 5 FTA recognized, however, an unconstrained study would apply the inaccurate assumption that 6 there were infinite parking spaces available for BART riders who wished to park-and-ride at 7 Diridon Station, such that anyone who wished to park at Diridon Station could automatically do 8 so. FTA Opp’n at 7. However, supply and demand for BART-provided parking are interrelated. 9 An assumption of the kind favored by Sharks Sports would therefore likely overstate the number 10 of BART riders who would park-and-ride at Diridon Station and also run counter to BART policy. 11 FTA 20982 (“When the parking demand equals or exceeds capacity, commuters are encouraged to 12 use other modes to get to BART stations.”). 13 Here, the FTA explained at length why it believed that a constrained model provided a 14 more appropriate projection of rider behavior. The Final SEIS/SEIR focused on the changing 15 character of the area surrounding Diridon Station. First, the Final SEIS/SEIR noted that “BART 16 has implemented new policies to discourage drive-alone trips to BART stations.” FTA 22139. 17 Indeed, the Final SEIS/SEIR cited changes to the BART Station Access Policy. Id. Pursuant to 18 that policy, for instance, BART now expressly aims to “[r]educe the access mode share of the 19 automobile by enhancing multi-modal access to and from BART stations in partnership with 20 communities and access providers.” FTA 53871. The BART Station Access Policy also includes 21 a typology of BART stations. FTA 22139. One category of BART stations within this typology is 22 “urban stations,” for which BART will neither encourage nor invest in parking. FTA 53874. The 23 Final SEIS/SEIR opined that the Diridon Station would likely qualify as an urban station under 24 BART’s typology, and indeed that “[t]he Diridon Station design would be similar to other BART 25 system Downtown stations where parking is not provided.” FTA 20980. 26 Second, the Final SEIS/SEIR cited the “Envision San Jose 2040 General Plan, Commercial 27 39 1 Downtown Land Use Plan Policies, and Transportation Policies,” which the city of San Jose 2 adopted in 2011. FTA 20986. Those policies dictate that all land development “‘support 3 pedestrian and bicycle circulation, and increase transit ridership.’” Further, the policies “‘speak to 4 the urban, pedestrian-oriented nature of this area. As such, uses that serve the automobile should 5 be carefully controlled in accordance with the Downtown Land Use Policies.’” Id. Pursuant to 6 the policies, San Jose also “aim[s] to establish circulation policies that increase bicycle, pedestrian, 7 and transit travel, while reducing motor vehicle trips, to increase the City’s share of travel by 8 alternative transportation modes.” Id. In line with the foregoing, the Final SEIS/SEIR cited San 9 Jose land use policy LU-3.5, which requires developers to “[b]alance the need for parking to 10 support a thriving Downtown with the need to minimize the impacts of parking upon a vibrant 11 pedestrian and transit oriented urban environment.” Id. 12 Third, the Final SEIS/SEIR noted that “Diridon Station is projected to function more as a 13 destination station in the AM commute direction, as patrons travel to nearby activity centers, than 14 as an origin station.” FTA 22140. This projection indicated that “[a]s a destination station, the 15 parking demand at Diridon Station would be less than at stations that primarily function as origins 16 in the AM commute direction.” Id. 17 Fourth, the Final SEIS/SEIR noted that “Diridon Station is an existing multi-modal 18 transportation center located within the City of San Jose’s downtown urban core.” FTA 20987. 19 Diridon Station is currently “served by several transit modes including VTA’s Light Rail and 20 express and local bus service, ACE, Amtrak, Capitol Corridor, and regional bus lines to Alameda 21 and Santa Cruz County,” and the Final SEIS/SEIR projected that access to Diridon Station would 22 be “almost entirely (91 percent) by walk/bicycle, heavy and light rail transit, and bus.” FTA 23 20985, 20987. Thus, Diridon Station “is well-served by many multimodal options for SAP 24 customers and transit riders to access the station,” which would logically result in a lower number 25 of BART riders that would drive to Diridon Station in the absence of a BART-provided parking 26 structure. Id. 27 40 1 These background conditions, which the Final SEIS/SEIR explicitly invoked, logically 2 reduce the likelihood that BART riders will park-and-ride at Diridon Station in the absence of 3 BART-provided parking. Thus, these background conditions supported the FTA’s decision to 4 utilize constrained mode-of-access modeling and thereby conclude that with no BART-specific 5 parking facility at Diridon Station, “no more tha[n] 0.5 percent or 68 average weekday BART 6 riders are projected to access the Diridon Station by automobile and then park-and-ride in 2035.” 7 FTA 22855. 8 As noted, Sharks Sports contests the conclusions drawn from the foregoing analysis. For 9 instance, Sharks Sports contends that the Final SEIS/SEIR’s use of the BART Station Access 10 typology is incorrect, and that the Diridon Station would instead be more accurately characterized 11 as a “balanced intermodal station.” Sharks Mot. at 15. However, the Court’s role under NEPA is 12 not to resolve conflicting interpretations of the evidence. The Court’s role is merely to 13 “independently review the record in order to satisfy [itself] that the agency has made a reasoned 14 decision based on its evaluation of the evidence.” Earth Island Inst., 442 F.3d at 1160; see also 15 Marsh, 490 U.S. at 385 (noting that “the Corps conducted a reasoned evaluation of the relevant 16 information and reached a decision that, although perhaps disputable, was not ‘arbitrary or 17 capricious’”). The FTA provided a reasoned decision based on its analysis of the most likely 18 future conditions at Diridon Station. Although Sharks Sports may disagree with the FTA’s 19 conclusions, Sharks Sports fails to establish a NEPA violation. 20 Moreover, Sharks Sports argues that “hopes and dreams” about the area around Diridon 21 Station should play no role in the analysis. Sharks Opp’n at 3. However, since the Final 22 SEIS/SEIR aimed to project the number of BART riders who will park-and-ride at Diridon Station 23 in 2035, it is entirely reasonable for the Final SEIS/SEIR to consider forward-looking policies 24 explicitly designed to shape the nature of the area. See, e.g., FTA 54228, 54323–24 (noting “the 25 need to minimize the impacts of parking upon a vibrant pedestrian and transit oriented urban 26 environment” and intent to “[p]romote shared parking arrangements between private uses and the 27 41 1 provision of commonly accessible commercial or public parking facilities which can serve 2 multiple users in lieu of providing individual off-street parking on a property-by-property basis”). 3 Sharks Sports cites a sentence from a June 23, 2003 Travel Demand Forecast report 4 prepared in connection with the 2004 Draft EIS/EIR, in which Hexagon Transportation 5 Consultants, a transportation consultant for the VTA, stated that “projections of park and ride 6 demand can be either constrained based on the known number of parking spaces at each station or 7 unconstrained in order to study a more realistic projection of the demand for parking at each 8 station.” FTA 45929. However, even assuming this statement is true, the FTA correctly points 9 out that “NEPA does not contain a best science requirement.” E.g., Native Ecosys. Council v. 10 Erickson, 330 F. Supp. 3d 1218, 1239 (D. Mont. 2018). More importantly, however, the cited 11 statement was made in 2003, and therefore could not have taken into account the background 12 conditions and policies on which the SEIS/SEIR relied to conclude that constrained mode-of- 13 access modeling reflected the appropriate mode of analysis. Further, in Japanese Village, the 14 Ninth Circuit noted that “[t]here are no NEPA thresholds for determining the significance of 15 parking impacts, and [the plaintiff] has not cited any cases in which a court has found an EIS 16 inadequate for failure to consider increased demand on an existing parking structure.” 843 F.3d at 17 462. Yet if Sharks Sports’ scientific integrity argument were correct, every environmental impact 18 statement that implicated parking demand would run afoul of NEPA in the absence of an 19 unconstrained study. This does not align with the Ninth Circuit’s analysis. Id. at 463 (explaining 20 that the FTA satisfied NEPA when the FTA estimated the number of parking spaces to be lost, 21 estimated the number of parking spaces to be gained from other projects, discussed use of public 22 transportation of offset demand, and discussed possible mitigation measures). 23 Accordingly, the Court concludes that the mode-of-access modeling in the SEIS/SEIR did 24 not violate NEPA’s “scientific integrity” standard. The Court now proceeds to consider the 2017 25 Parking Inventory. 26 b. The 2017 Parking Inventory Did Not Violate the Scientific Integrity Standard. 27 42 1 As discussed above, the Final SEIS/SEIR included cited a 2017 Parking Inventory that was 2 designed to approximate “the number of available parking spaces in the vicinity of Diridon 3 Station.” FTA 20987–88. The purpose of the inventory was to assess the impact of the permanent 4 loss of the approximately 715 parking spaces at Diridon Station caused by the Phase II Project of 5 the Extension Program. Id. 6 Sharks Sports contends that that the 2017 Parking Inventory was not “scientifically valid.” 7 Sharks Mot. at 11. The Court disagrees. The thrust of Sharks Sports’ argument is that the 2017 8 Parking Inventory cited by the Final SEIS/SEIR “counted every space around Diridon Station 9 regardless of whether or not it was available.” Id. at 10 (emphasis omitted). Sharks Sports 10 contends that this fact rendered the parking inventory illegitimate. Id. Sharks Sports argues that 11 the Final SEIS/SEIR should have instead relied on a 2008 survey conducted by Hexagon 12 Transportation Consultants. Id. 13 As to Sharks Sports’ first point, the 2017 Parking Inventory sought to estimate the “total 14 existing parking supply surrounding the proposed Diridon BART station.” FTA 36634. The 2017 15 Parking Inventory therefore forthrightly acknowledged that “[d]istinctions were not made between 16 private and [public] lots, or reserved and publicly available parking spaces” for most of the 17 parking spaces inventoried. FTA 36635. Moreover, both the 2017 Parking Inventory itself and 18 the Final SEIS/SEIR recognized that the inventory was only meant to provide an approximation of 19 available spaces around Diridon Station. Id.; FTA 22133. The approach deployed by the 2017 20 Parking Inventory was a rational one. Shark Sports’ belief that a different methodology should 21 have been used to approximate parking availability around Diridon Station does not support a 22 NEPA violation. Native Ecosystems Council v. Weldon, 697 F.3d 1043, 1053 (9th Cir. 2012) 23 (“The mere fact that Native Ecosystems Council disagrees with the methodology does not 24 constitute a NEPA violation.”). 25 Indeed, the 2008 Hexagon Transportation Consultants parking survey that Sharks Sports 26 argues should have been used was roughly ten years old by the time the 2017 Parking Inventory 27 43 1 was conducted. The purpose of the 2008 survey was only to “identify underutilized parking 2 facilities in the Diridon Station area that could be leased by the Santa Clara Valley Transportation 3 Authority,” not to estimate the total amount of available parking around Diridon Station. FTA 4 51103. Thus, the 2008 survey focused on “nine publicly-owned parking facilities,” based on a list 5 “obtained from the City of San Jose.” Id.; see FTA 36634 (noting that 2017 inventory “study area 6 includes all public streets and public and private surface lots and parking garages”).8 In line with 7 the 2008 survey, Sharks Sports argues that a “properly performed scientific study evaluated 8 parking availability for future BART riders in the Diridon Station area.” Sharks Mot. at 10. It is 9 entirely unclear why the SEIS/SEIR should limit the inventory’s focus to parking spaces’ potential 10 availability to BART riders, however. The purpose of the 2017 Parking Inventory was to assess 11 the impact of removal of 715 parking spaces on the area generally. Sharks Sports fails to show 12 that the FTA’s decision to use the 2017 Parking Inventory instead of the 2008 survey conducted 13 for a different purpose violated NEPA’s scientific integrity requirement. 14 Accordingly, the Court concludes that the 2017 Parking Inventory cited by the Final 15 SEIS/SEIR did not violate NEPA’s “scientific integrity” standard. The Court now turns to the 16 Final SEIS/SEIR’s treatment of prior analyses. 17 3. The Final SEIS/SEIR Adequately Considered Prior Analysis. 18 Sharks Sports argues that the FTA’s decision not to provide a parking structure at Diridon 19 Station lacked a reasoned explanation in light of the “change in policy” it embodied, and also that 20 the FTA failed to adequately engage with prior parking studies. Sharks Mot. at 18–19; Sharks 21 Opp’n at 14–16. The Court disagrees. 22 As to the first argument, “[a]gencies enjoy ‘considerable discretion’ in defining the 23 purpose and need of a project.” HonoluluTraffic.com v. Fed. Transit Admin., 742 F.3d 1222, 1230 24 (9th Cir. 2014). The Final SEIS/SEIR explains that “purpose of the BART Extension” includes 25 26 8 For this reason, the inventory and survey are not “contradictory,” as Sharks Sports claims. 27 Sharks Opp’n at 16. 44 1 the improvement of public transit, the support of “local and regional land use plans,” and 2 facilitating the “efforts of the Cities of San Jose and Santa Clara.” FTA 20738. In turn, the City 3 of San Jose has promoted Downtown Urban Design Policies, which “speak to the urban, 4 pedestrian-oriented nature of this area.” FTA 20986. Moreover, San Jose disfavors “uses that 5 serve the automobile,” as they should be “carefully controlled” per the Downtown Land Use 6 Policies. Id. Likewise, BART has sought to prioritize cost-effective investments and 7 “generat[ing] the most riders with the least space.” FTA 53871. To the extent that an explanation 8 is required for changing the Extension Project’s proposal as to the presence of parking at Diridon 9 Station, the Final SEIS/SEIR provided one. 10 As to the second argument, according to Sharks Sports, “FTA ignored all the prior parking 11 studies and travel demand models showing that parking was an adverse environmental impact that 12 must be mitigated.” Sharks Mot. at 19. Sharks Sports points to three previous environmental 13 documents prepared in connection with the Extension Program: the 2004 Final EIR, the 2007 14 Final SEIR, and the 2010 Final EIS. FTA 1709 (2004 Final EIR); FTA 3699 (2007 Final SEIR); 15 FTA 4713 (2010 Final EIS). The 2004 Final EIR examined a version of Diridon Station that 16 would include 2,262 parking spaces, and calculated projected park-and-ride demand at Diridon 17 Station as 2,056 spaces as of 2025. FTA 1857. The 2007 Final EIS repeated that same projection 18 for the year 2030. FTA 4116. Finally, the 2010 Final EIS examined a version of Diridon Station 19 that would include 1,300 parking spaces, and calculated projected park-and-ride demand at 20 Diridon Station as 2,585 as of 2030. FTA 4996. The 2010 Final EIS therefore noted that 21 “[u]nconstrained parking demand for the Diridon/Arena Station . . . could exceed the capacity” of 22 the 1,300 parking-space structure proposed as part of the station. FTA 4997. The 2010 Final EIS 23 noted that “[c]onstruction of additional single purpose user parking facilities would not be 24 consistent with the City of San Jose’s Master Plan for the Diridon area, which includes high- 25 density residential and commercial development.” Id. Accordingly, the 2010 Final EIS 26 contemplated implementation of parking management strategies and leasing nearby parking 27 45 1 facilities to mitigate the potential impact. FTA 4998. 2 As an initial matter, the Final SEIS/SEIR references the previous analyses contained within 3 these earlier documents. In fact, as Sharks Sports concedes, “all the prior Environmental Reviews 4 are incorporated into the SEIS/SEIR.” Sharks Opp’n at 1. Further, the Final SEIS/SEIR 5 specifically listed “[p]arking impacts at Diridon Station” as an “area of controversy.” FTA 20677. 6 Moreover, in some ways, the previous environmental documents anticipate the decision that the 7 FTA ultimately made not to construct a parking structure at Diridon Station. For instance, the 8 2004 EIS/EIR explained that “autos used to access park-and-ride spaces are a flexible mode of 9 transportation. Individuals can often park at one BART station as conveniently as another—and 10 often do.” FTA 2321. This proposition supports the Final SEIS/SEIR’s conclusion that Alum 11 Rock and Santa Clara Stations can provide parking for Diridon Station. Indeed, earlier documents 12 specifically contemplated shifting the construction of parking spaces between BART stations in 13 order to jointly accommodate park-and-ride demand at other stations. FTA 1856 (noting that 14 “1,000 spaces shifted from the Alum Rock Station to Berryessa Station to address community 15 concerns about site impacts at the Alum Rock Station”). Further, of course, the 2007 Final EIR 16 expressly disclosed the No Parking Option at Diridon Station and explained that under such an 17 option, parking would be available at the Santa Clara Station. FTA 3157 (“Under this option, no 18 parking structure would be constructed and no surface parking would be provided. However, 19 additional parking would be provided at the Santa Clara Station.”). 20 Sharks Sports nevertheless contends that the Final SEIS/SEIR “fail[ed] to provide a 21 reasoned explanation” for departure from the conclusions of the previous documents. Id. at 15. 22 Sharks Sports cites several cases in support of this argument, but they are inapposite. For 23 instance, Sharks Sports cites Center for Biological Diversity v. Zinke, 900 F.3d 1053 (9th Cir. 24 2018). However, Zinke involved the Endangered Species Act and therefore involved the question 25 of whether the agency used the “best scientific and commercial data available,” as required by 16 26 U.S.C. § 1533(b)(1)(A). Id. at 1068. Moreover, in Zinke, the agency omitted any reference to 27 46 1 data from a study that contradicted the agency’s conclusion. Id.; see also Sierra Club v. Eubanks, 2 (E.D. Cal. 2004) (explaining that environmental impact that “failed to disclose that [cited studies] 3 contained conclusions potentially contrary to the efficacy of the Project” likely violated NEPA); 4 Sierra Club v. Bosworth, 199 F. Supp. 2d 971, 981 (N.D. Cal. 2002) (holding that environmental 5 impact statement violated NEPA “by failing to disclose scientific opinion that opposes post-fire 6 logging”). 7 In the instant case, as noted, the previous analyses and parking demand figures cited by 8 Sharks Sports are incorporated into the Final SEIS/SEIR. Moreover, the FTA openly explained 9 why the Final SEIS/SEIR departed from the previous analyses. See FTA 22138–40 (listing 10 reasons for changed assumptions about park-and-ride demand). Specifically, the Final SEIS/SEIR 11 concluded that the previous analysis had not taken into account the urbanization of the area around 12 Diridon Station, along with related BART and San Jose policies. FTA 20985; see also FTA 13 22837–38 (explaining that updated analysis used new “land use assumptions and demographic 14 inputs” relative to previous analyses). The Final SEIS/SEIR also indicated that BART riders 15 could use the parking provided at Alum Rock or Santa Clara Stations. FTA 20986. Separately, 16 the Final SEIS/SEIR explained that the slight increase in total ridership did not warrant the cost of 17 construction of a parking structure at Diridon Station. FTA 20985. 18 In sum, the Court concludes that the Final SEIS/SEIR adequately disclosed and addressed 19 the prior analysis of parking demand that Sharks Sports cites. The Court now turns to Sharks 20 Sports’ argument about transit-oriented joint development. 21 4. Transit-Oriented Joint Development is Not Sufficiently Intertwined with the Project to Require Analysis Under NEPA. 22 Sharks Sports contends that the transit-oriented joint development (“TOJD”) that is part of 23 the Phase II Project of the Extension Program is “sufficiently intertwined” with the federally 24 funded project to require analysis under NEPA. Sharks Mot. at 22. The FTA responds that the 25 TOJD is not funded by federal dollars and is not sufficiently intertwined with the rest of the Phase 26 II Project of the Extension Program. FTA Mot. at 20. The Court agrees with the FTA. 27 47 1 As an initial matter, Sharks Sports contends that the ROD in the instant case contradicts 2 itself by stating that the TOJD is not included in the NEPA analysis but also that the TOJD is 3 included in the “NEPA cumulative impact analysis.” Sharks Mot. at 22. The ROD does not 4 contradict itself. Indeed, the FTA treated the TOJD as outside the scope of the federal project in 5 the ROD. Although the ROD notes that the TOJD is analyzed under the “NEPA cumulative 6 impact analysis” in section 7.1.4 of the SEIS/SEIR, the same sentence makes clear that the TOJD 7 is not part of the NEPA project. FTA 273 (“While not a component of the NEPA BART 8 alternative, . . . .”). The Final SEIS/SEIR contains cumulative impact analysis of both the BART 9 extension alone and the BART extension with TOJD under NEPA and CEQA. FTA 21916–48. 10 The mere fact that the Final SEIS/SEIR performed some analysis of the TOJD under a NEPA 11 standard does not mean that the FTA considered the TOJD to be part of the federal project or that 12 the TOJD is automatically intertwined with the federal project. 13 The TOJD is not sufficiently intertwined with the federal project to require NEPA analysis. 14 NEPA requires a federal agency to prepare an environmental impact statement for “all major 15 Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment.” 42 U.S.C. § 16 4332(2)(C). “Major federal actions” have been defined to include, among other things, “projects 17 and programs entirely or partly financed, assisted, conducted, regulated, or approved by federal 18 agencies.” 40 C.F.R. § 1508.18(a). To determine whether a non-federal project is “sufficiently 19 intertwined” with a federal project to constitute a federal action that requires review under NEPA 20 “will generally require a careful analysis of all facts and circumstances surrounding the 21 relationship.” Laub v. U.S. Dep’t of the Interior, 342 F.3d 1080, 1092 (9th Cir. 2003) (internal 22 quotation marks and citation omitted). Although “[t]here are no clear standards for defining the 23 point at which federal participation transforms a state or local project into major federal action[,] . 24 . . ‘[m]arginal’ federal action will not render otherwise local action federal.” Rattlesnake Coal. v. 25 U.S. Envtl. Prot. Agency, 509 F.3d 1095, 1101 (9th Cir. 2007) (quoting Almond Hill Sch. v. U.S. 26 Dep’t of Agric., 768 F.2d 1030, 1039 (9th Cir. 1985)). Further, the agency’s “determination of the 27 48 1 appropriate scope of the environmental review process is entitled to deference.” Wetlands Action 2 Network v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 222 F.3d 1105, 1115 (9th Cir. 2000). 3 Here, the TOJD was a proposed independent action by VTA alone and was placed outside 4 the scope of the federal SEIS. FTA 272–73, 20631–32. The TOJD has “independent utility” and 5 may be constructed simultaneously with or after the Extension Program “dependent on the 6 availability of funding and subject to market forces.” FTA 20632. The TOJD is included in the 7 Final SEIS/SEIR and other documents for analysis under the CEQA only. See, e.g., FTA 20990– 8 21025 (analyzing traffic impact of the BART extension with TOJD under CEQA only). 9 Sharks Sports makes only conclusory statements that the development of Diridon Station 10 was “sufficiently intertwined” with the TOJD, which is insufficient to overcome the deference due 11 to the agency’s determination that the TOJD is outside the scope of the environmental review. 12 Wetlands Action Network, 222 F.3d at 1115. By way of example, in Laub, the plaintiffs pointed to 13 language in a framework agreement, specific coordination requirements, cost-sharing 14 arrangements, and to make a sufficient showing to require a fact-intensive analysis of the 15 relationship between the federal and state involvement. 342 F.3d at 1092. 16 Here, in a single unadorned sentence, Sharks Sports states that “there are coordination 17 requirements, cost divisions between TOJD and the BART Project and a single plan for both 18 projects,” with no citations to the record. Sharks Opp’n at 25. Sharks Sports has failed to make a 19 “sufficient showing” to overcome the deference owed to the FTA’s determination that the TOJD is 20 not a federal project. 342 F.3d at 1092. The Court now turns to Sharks Sports’ argument that the 21 FTA should have performed supplemental analysis. 22 5. NEPA Does Not Require Supplemental Analysis. 23 Sharks Sports argues that the FTA violated NEPA by not releasing “additional significant 24 new information, including deciding [sic] to use tunneling methodology” and also by failing to 25 supplement the Final SEIS/SEIR regarding the “foreseeable, significant adverse impacts of the 26 selected alternative.” Sharks Mot. at 23. Sharks Sports alleges that the decision to use tunneling 27 49 1 methodology to construct the BART extension along Santa Clara Street rather than a “cut and 2 cover” operation was made after the publication of the SEIS/SEIR in 2018. Compl. ¶¶ 48, 49. 3 The FTA counters that the 2016 Draft SEIS/SEIR and the Final SEIS/SEIR each analyzed both 4 “single-bore and twin-bore tunneling methodologies” as potential options for construction of the 5 BART extension. FTA Mot. at 25. The FTA therefore argues that it was proper to analyze both 6 methodological options in the Final SEIS/SEIR and defer to the VTA to select the final option. Id. 7 The Court agrees with the FTA. 8 “NEPA requires supplementation of any NEPA analysis in response to ‘significant new 9 circumstances or information relevant to environmental concerns and bearing on the proposed 10 action or its impacts.’” Tri-Valley CAREs v. U.S. Dep’t of Energy, 671 F.3d 1113, 1130 (9th Cir. 11 2012) (citing 40 C.F.R. § 1502.9(c)(1)(ii)). Yet “an agency need not supplement an EIS every 12 time new information comes to light after the EIS is finalized.” Marsh v. Or. Nat. Res. Council, 13 490 U.S. 360, 373 (1989). 14 Here, the Final SEIS/SEIR presented a detailed description of both the single-bore and 15 twin-bore tunneling methodologies. FTA 21409–18. Additionally, the Final SEIS/SEIR 16 discussed adverse effects and mitigation strategies for vehicular traffic, bicyclists, pedestrians, bus 17 traffic, light rail, air quality, construction noise, and socioeconomic impacts under each excavation 18 option. FTA 20697–99. 19 Because the FTA adequately analyzed both options in the Final SEIS/SEIR, Sharks Sports’ 20 arguments that the FTA failed to release information and failed to supplement the Final 21 SEIS/SEIR fail. Even if the decision of which tunneling method came after the publication of the 22 Final SEIS/SEIR, information regarding the methodologies, possible adverse effects, and 23 mitigation strategies was already available in the record. NEPA does not require the FTA to re- 24 analyze an option that the FTA already analyzed. See Tri-Valley CAREs, 671 F.3d at 1130 25 (“Because the DOE determined in its supplemental report that the SA did not show a seriously 26 different picture of the likely environmental harms stemming from the proposed project, we must 27 50 1 defer to the DOE’s finding that a supplemental REA was not required.” (internal quotation marks 2 and citation omitted)). Moreover, Sharks Sports did not respond to the FTA’s motion for 3 summary judgment on this issue, thereby seemingly conceding the issue. See, e.g., Foster v. City 4 of Fresno, 392 F.Supp.2d 1140, 1147 n.7 (E.D. Cal. 2005) (“At any rate, failure of a party to 5 address a claim in an opposition to a motion for summary judgment may constitute a waiver of 6 that claim.”). 7 Accordingly, the Court concludes that the FTA did not violate NEPA by not performing 8 further supplemental analysis. The Court now turns to Sharks Sports’ argument that the Final 9 SEIS/SEIR failed to consider a reasonable range of alternatives. 10 6. The SEIS/SEIR Considered a Reasonable Range of Alternatives. 11 Sharks Sports argues that the FTA, which considered three options in the Final SEIS/SEIR 12 (no project, BART only, and BART & TOJD), did not analyze a “reasonable range” of 13 alternatives. Sharks Mot. at 23. The FTA counters that agencies are not required to consider 14 infinite alternatives, and that the fact that the Final SEIS/SEIR is supplemental means that the 15 document incorporates the previous alternatives from earlier environmental reviews, some of 16 which included a parking structure at Diridon Station. FTA Mot. at 21. 17 Sharks Sports cites Crenshaw, 2015 WL 6150847, at *16 (C.D. Cal. Sept. 23, 2015). 18 Sharks Mot. at 23. In that case, the plaintiff presented a specific alternative that the defendant had 19 not considered in planning its rail project: an “underground alignment” between two streets. 20 Crenshaw, 2015 WL 6150847, at *16. The court addressed the question of “whether the [omitted 21 alternative] was reasonable” and found that the suggested alternative was not reasonable. Id. 22 (citing Citizens for a Better Henderson v. Hodel, 768 F.2d 1051, 1057 (9th Cir. 1985)). Here, 23 however, Sharks Sports does not list any specific alternative that should have been considered but 24 was not. 25 NEPA does not require agencies to consider “every conceivable permutation” of a project. 26 Westlands Water Dist., 376 F.3d at 871. Nor does NEPA require agencies to “discuss 27 51 1 alternatives similar to alternatives actually considered.” Bering Strait Citizens for Responsible 2 Res. Dev. v. U.S. Army Corps of Eng’rs, 524 F.3d 934, 955 (9th Cir. 2008). Moreover, Sharks 3 Sports did not respond to the FTA’s motion for summary judgment on this issue, thereby 4 seemingly conceding the issue. See, e.g., Foster, 392 F.Supp.2d at 1147 n.7 (“At any rate, failure 5 of a party to address a claim in an opposition to a motion for summary judgment may constitute a 6 waiver of that claim.”). 7 Accordingly, the Court concludes that the Final SEIS/SEIR considered a reasonable range 8 of alternatives. 9 7. The Final SEIS/SEIR Did Not Violate NEPA or the APA. 10 In short, the Court concludes that the Final SEIS/SEIR did not violate NEPA or the APA. 11 The Final SEIS/SEIR took a sufficiently “hard look” at each of the parking impacts raised by 12 Sharks Sports. Moreover, the Final SEIS/SEIR did not violate NEPA’s scientific integrity 13 requirement, and the Final SEIS/SEIR adequately disclosed and addressed previous analyses of 14 parking issues. As to the remaining arguments, Sharks Sports fails to show that the TOJD should 15 have been analyzed under NEPA, that the Final SEIS/SEIR required additional supplementation, 16 and that the Final SEIS/SEIR did not consider a reasonable range of alternatives. Accordingly, 17 Sharks Sports fails to show that the Final SEIS/SEIR violated NEPA or the APA. 18 V. CONCLUSION 19 For the foregoing reasons, the Court DENIES Sharks Sports’ motion for summary 20 judgment. The Court GRANTS the FTA’s motion for summary judgment. 21 IT IS SO ORDERED. 22 23 24 Dated: August 8, 2020 25 ______________________________________ LUCY H. KOH 26 United States District Judge 27 52

Document Info

Docket Number: 5:18-cv-04060

Filed Date: 8/8/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/20/2024