DocketNumber: A149501
Citation Numbers: 223 Cal. Rptr. 3d 637, 16 Cal. App. 5th 187, 2017 WL 4586837, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 889
Judges: Miller
Filed Date: 9/15/2017
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*190In this mandamus proceeding, plaintiff Placerville Historic Preservation League *639(League) challenged the certification of an environmental impact report prepared by defendant Judicial Council of California (Judicial Council) in connection with the relocation of courthouse operations in the City of Placerville (City). The project considered in the EIR would consolidate trial court operations from two buildings, one of which is a historic building in downtown Placerville, into a single new building on the outskirts of the City. Although the draft EIR addressed the possible economic impact of moving judicial activities from the downtown courthouse, it concluded the impact was not likely to be severe enough to cause urban decay in downtown Placerville. In their mandamus action, the League contended this conclusion was not supported by substantial evidence, given the importance of the courthouse to downtown commerce. The trial court rejected the argument, and we affirm.
BACKGROUND
The Trial Court Facilities Act of 2002 shifted responsibility for California trial court facilities from individual counties to *191the state Judicial Council. (Stats. 2002, ch. 1082, § 4, p. 6976; Gov. Code, § 70321.) As part of the transfer, the Legislature created the State Court Facilities Construction Fund, to be used for the "alteration, renovation, and construction" of county courthouses, and directed the Judicial Council to establish priorities for construction and recommend projects to the Legislature. ( Gov. Code, §§ 70371, 70376, 70391, subds. (l)(2), (3).)
One of the projects ultimately pursued was the replacement of the El Dorado County courthouse. El Dorado County (County) is largely rural, stretching from the central Sierra Nevada foothills in the west to the state's eastern border, including the south shore of Lake Tahoe. The County's court facilities are located in the City, 45 miles northeast of Sacramento and with a population of just over 10,000.
In October 2014, the Judicial Council issued a draft EIR for the project, which was largely concerned with the environmental and traffic impacts of the new construction necessitated by the project. With respect to the Main Street Courthouse, which would be retired as a courthouse, the Judicial Council noted it qualified as a "historical resource" for purposes of the California Environmental Quality Act ( Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq. ) (CEQA). As such, any material impairment of the building would constitute a "substantial adverse change" in the environment. ( Pub. Resources Code, § 21084.1 ; CEQA Guidelines, § 15064.5.)
The draft EIR also acknowledged that the withdrawal of judicial activities from the centrally located Main Street Courthouse could have an impact on downtown Placerville. Citing Bakersfield Citizens for Local Control v. City of Bakersfield (2004)
The Judicial Council concluded that urban decay, as so defined, was not a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the project. The draft EIR reasoned that "blight within the historic Main Street area of Placerville" was unlikely to occur from the retirement of the Main Street Courthouse because (1) the City and County both were committed to finding a new use for the building that would, in effect, replace the economic contribution of the courthouse to the downtown area, and (2) there were "numerous retail, commercial, and *193office uses independent of the courthouse *641operations."
At least one commenter on the draft EIR was concerned with the impact on the economy of downtown Placerville. Kirk Smith, an owner of property located on Main Street, believed that ending judicial functions in the Main Street Courthouse "would create an absolutely horrendous blight to Placerville's Main Street, all but turning this historic community into a ghost town given the economic dependency of local merchants on the courthouse for their livelihoods." In an "informal poll" of local merchants, Smith was told that from 5 percent to 20 percent of the commerce of the responding businesses resulted from courthouse activities. Among the affected businesses specifically mentioned by Smith were "not just restaurants and bars," but also a news stand and hardware store. One restaurant owner believed that ending judicial activities in the courthouse would put him out of business. Smith noted that no economic study had been performed with respect to the economic impact of the proposed project and expressed concern that the City and County would lack the resources to keep the courthouse open.
Following the close of the comment period on the draft EIR, a group of local businesspersons relayed further concerns about the economic impact of the withdrawal of judicial activities from the Main Street Courthouse and asked the Judicial Council to consider the construction of an annex to the *194building. A petition to this effect signed by some 60 persons was submitted.
The Judicial Council noted these comments in a staff report recommending certification of the EIR. The report stated, "[b]oth economic and historic impacts were analyzed in the preparation of the EIR. Impacts with potential are noted in the EIR (historic) and were determined to be less-than-significant with mitigation. However, separate from the CEQA process, the Judicial Council is working with both the city and county to develop a re-use strategy for the building that will support the downtown businesses and local residents." In other words, the memorandum concluded the residents' comments did not require modification of the draft EIR's discussion of urban decay. The Judicial Council certified the Final EIR on June 10, 2015.
One month later, the League, a group of County citizens with "a particular interest in the protection of El Dorado County's environment," filed this petition for a writ of mandate vacating the Judicial Council's certification of the EIR. The petition alleged four deficiencies in the EIR, but only one of them, the failure to treat the potential for urban decay resulting from the relocation of courthouse operations from the Main Street Courthouse as a significant environmental effect of the project, was ultimately argued to the trial court.
The trial court rejected the argument and denied the petition in a thorough and well-reasoned written decision that hardly needs elaboration. The court reasoned that there was no evidence in the record to suggest that removing courthouse operations from downtown would lead to physical impacts on the *195downtown environment. As a result, "urban decay is not reasonably anticipated." To the contrary, the court agreed with the draft EIR that "there is every reason to believe the agencies will repurpose the building" to the ultimate benefit of the downtown area, and any impact from the intervening vacancy of the building was unlikely to result in physical decay of the downtown. Accordingly, the court concluded, there was no basis for contending that the EIR should have treated the risk of urban decay as a significant environmental effect of the project.
DISCUSSION
A. Legal Background .
"CEQA embodies a central state policy to require state and local governmental entities to perform their duties 'so that major consideration is given to preventing environmental damage.' [Citations.] [¶] CEQA prescribes how governmental decisions will be made when public entities, including the state itself, are charged with approving, funding-or themselves undertaking -a project with significant effects on the environment." ( Friends of the Eel River v. North Coast Railroad Authority (2017)
" 'The EIR has been aptly described as the "heart of CEQA." [Citations.] Its purpose is to inform the public and its responsible officials of the environmental consequences of their decision before they are made.' " ( *643Eel River , supra , 3 Cal.5th at p. 713,
Given its exclusive focus on environmental impacts, CEQA ordinarily does not require an EIR to address the economic and social effects of a *196proposed project. (Guidelines, § 15064, subd. (e); Joshua Tree, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 684,
"The standard of review applicable to an agency's decision under CEQA depends on the nature of the action being reviewed and when in the multi-tiered process it occurred." ( Sierra Club v. County of Sonoma (2017)
B. Urban Decay as a Significant Environmental Impact of the Project .
The League contends that the Judicial Council erred in concluding that urban decay was not a reasonably foreseeable indirect effect of the project. Because this is essentially a factual question, we apply the substantial evidence standard of review to the Judicial Council's conclusion. (E.g., North Coast, supra, 216 Cal.App.4th at p. 637,
Substantial evidence supports the Judicial Council's conclusion that the type of physical deterioration embodied in the term "urban decay" is not a reasonably foreseeable consequence of withdrawing judicial functions from the Main Street Courthouse and relocating them to a new building outside the downtown district. Initially, there is no reason to presume that urban decay would be a consequence of the project. As defined by CEQA, urban decay is a relatively extreme economic condition. In a dynamic urban environment, including that of a small city such as Placerville, change is commonplace. In the absence of larger economic forces, urban decay is not the ordinary result. On the contrary, businesses and other activities come and go for reasons of their own, without necessarily affecting the overall health of the economy. As noted above, one commenter told the Judicial Council that 38 businesses had closed in the downtown area in the past 3 years. This suggests the district possesses the economic vitality to tolerate significant turnover without suffering the type of physical deterioration characteristic of urban decay.
Nor was there evidence to suggest that the economic contribution of the Main Street Courthouse was critical to the health of downtown Placerville. There is no doubt that judicial activities in the courthouse, particularly the presence of court employees and lawyers and the periodic assembly of jurors, contribute to the economy of downtown Placerville. As the League states, "Jurors and employees [of the courthouse] frequently spend their lunches and downtime walking and browsing downtown businesses and eating at the local restaurants." There is no evidence, however, that these activities are of such importance to the downtown that their relocation will result in the type of economic loss necessary to cause urban decay. As the draft EIR reasoned, many businesses in the downtown area are independent of the courthouse's activities.
Finally, any dislocation caused by the elimination of judicial activities in the Main Street Courthouse is likely to be temporary. As the draft EIR
*198explained, officials *645of both the City and County view the Main Street Courthouse as important to the downtown and are committed to finding an appropriate new use for the historic building, and the Judicial Council is working to assist those efforts. Given this commitment, there is every reason to believe that, after a period of transition, the building will resume its role as a source of downtown commerce.
The League contends the Judicial Council's reliance on the likely re-use of the Main Street Courthouse was improper because it was not adopted as a mitigation measure. This is not an entirely fair representation of the record. As discussed above, reuse of the building in a manner that would not impair its value as a historical resource was adopted as a mitigation measure. Yet apart from this, the League's argument puts the cart before the horse. The question before the Judicial Council was whether, under the circumstances presented in downtown Placerville, urban decay was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the relocation of judicial activities. One of those circumstances was the commitment of the City and the County to find a new use for the courthouse and the consequent likelihood that such a new use would be found. Based in part on that likelihood, the draft EIR concluded that urban decay was not reasonably foreseeable and therefore was not a significant indirect environmental effect for purposes of CEQA. Because there was no significant impact to mitigate, there was no occasion, and no legal basis, for adopting courthouse re-use as a mitigation measure. The League fails to cite any prior decision holding that a lead agency must adopt as a mitigation measure the circumstances that make an impact not reasonably foreseeable, as a condition of concluding that the impact is not significant.
The League also characterizes the likelihood of re-use as an "unenforceable and illusory 'commitment,' " but the lack of a binding requirement for re-use does not undercut the reasoning of the draft EIR. The issue before the Judicial Council was whether the occurrence of urban decay was "reasonably foreseeable," not whether its non-occurrence was a certainty. One reason the EIR concluded urban decay was not reasonably foreseeable was the likely replacement of judicial activities in the courthouse building by other uses. While this re-use was by no means guaranteed , it was likely because it would be a benefit to the City and public officials were committed to realizing that *199benefit. This well-grounded probability is sufficient to support the Judicial Council's conclusion that urban decay is not reasonably foreseeable.
The League also points to the evidence contained in the comments submitted by local residents with respect to the impact of relocation. While these comments provide credible grounds for concern that relocation will constitute a hardship for some local businesses, this is an insufficient basis to support a conclusion that relocation threatens urban decay. The most persuasive evidence was Smith's informal survey, in which some of the respondents claimed to derive from 5 percent to 20 percent of *646their business from courthouse activities. However, without further information about the nature of the survey, including the manner in which participants were selected and the proportion of businesses participating, as well as the number responding that there would be no effect on their businesses, this is little more than anecdotal evidence. It suggests that some businesses will lose revenue, but it does not provide a sufficient basis to infer the long-term detriment necessary to result in physical deterioration. The other comments provided less actual information. While these comments reflected the opinions of a small number of local merchants, those opinions do not constitute actual evidence of the possibility of urban decay because they were not based on any objective study of the economic conditions prevailing in the downtown area. (See Pub. Resources Code, § 21082.2, subd. (c) ["Argument, speculation, unsubstantiated opinion or narrative, evidence ... or evidence of social or economic impacts which do not contribute to, or are not caused by, physical impacts on the environment, is not substantial evidence"]; see Joshua Tree , supra , 1 Cal.App.5th at pp. 690-691,
The League relies heavily on Bakersfield , but in that case there was substantial, competent evidence of a risk of urban decay from implementing two projects under consideration, a pair of retail shopping centers, each featuring a 220,000-square-foot Wal-Mart discount and grocery store as its anchor tenant. ( 124 Cal.App.4th at p. 1194,
Attempting to turn this lack of information to its advantage, the League argues the Judicial Council's finding was not supported by substantial evidence precisely because no economic study of the impact of relocation was performed. In any endeavor of this type, financial resources are limited, and the lead agency has the discretion to direct those resources toward *647the most pressing concerns. " 'A project opponent or reviewing court can always imagine some additional study or analysis that might provide helpful information. It is not for them to design the EIR. That further study ... might be helpful does not make it necessary.' " ( North Coast , supra , 216 Cal.App.4th at p. 640,
It is important to note that much of the case law in this area has developed in circumstances similar to those in Bakersfield , in which the city authorized the construction of two enormous stores that could make superfluous a range of smaller stores and thereby create a risk of widespread business failures. That is not the situation here. The Judicial Council proposes to relocate certain governmental functions that, as a by-product of their presence, produced some commercial activity. Unlike the circumstances in Bakersfield , the new construction will not result in a competitor to siphon business from downtown. Just as important, the relocation will leave behind a building that can be filled with other activities producing a level of commerce similar to *201that removed by the relocation, thereby mitigating the impact of the relocation. These factors provide substantial evidence to support the draft EIR's conclusion that urban decay is not a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the project.
DISPOSITION
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
We concur:
Richman, Acting P.J.
Stewart, J.
We take judicial notice of these geographic and demographic facts from the official website of El Dorado County, at www.edcgov.us/Government/Pages/About_Us.aspx.
The draft EIR is vague about the exact distance between downtown and the location of the new courthouse, but the parties appear to accept that the distance is less than two miles.
The regulations governing compliance with CEQA, commonly known as the "CEQA Guidelines," are published at California Code of Regulations, title 14, section 15000 et seq. We will cite individual CEQA Guidelines in the form "Guidelines, § xxxxx."
Shortly before the draft EIR was issued, the City Council had begun to implement this plan by taking applications for a "Blue Ribbon Committee" to "explore reuse options for the Historic Main Street Courthouse." To assist the new committee, in March 2015 the Judicial Council issued a request for proposals regarding a "Re-Use Strategy" for the courthouse.
This definition of "urban decay" was taken from, and approved in, Joshua Tree Downtown Business Alliance v. County of San Bernardino (2016)
The League contends there was no evidence to support this statement, but the argument misunderstands the EIR process. There is no requirement of an evidentiary hearing prior to the issuance of a draft EIR. (Citizens Opposing a Dangerous Environment v. County of Kern (2014)
In an e-mail submitted to the Judicial Council after the close of the comment period, Smith stated that the range of business dependence upon the courthouse was 5 percent to 30 percent, and he claimed "most" businesses fell within this range. The basis for these claims was not stated.
Although these comments were submitted after the close of the period for comment on the draft EIR, the Judicial Council elected to accept them, as do we. (Guidelines, § 15207 [lead agency has the discretion to respond to late comments].)
As the trial court's decision explored at length, City and County policies, including the county general plan, recognize the importance of Placerville and its historic downtown and favor its development and promotion. This pre-existing commitment to Placerville bolsters confidence that both entities will find a meaningful new use for the courthouse, rather than permitting it to fall into disuse and disrepair.