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84 Cal.App.4th 315A, 100 Cal.Rptr.2d 173, 00 Cal. Daily Op.
Serv. 7782, 2000 Daily Journal D.A.R. 10,331 PLANNING AND CONSERVATION LEAGUE et al., Plaintiffs and
Appellants, v. DEPARTMENT OF WATER RESOURCES, Defendant and Appellant;
CENTRAL COAST WATER AUTHORITY, Defendant and Respondent. No. C024576. Court of Appeal, Third District, California. Sept. 15, 2000. SUMMARY The state Department
of Water Resources (DWR) and local water contractors agreed to revise long-term
contracts governing the supply of water under the State Water Project. The
revision included the elimination of the original contracts' provision for
reallocation of water among contractors in the event of permanent water
shortage and transfer of title to a water storage facility by the DWR. In
validation and mandamus proceedings, two citizens groups and a public agency
challenged those revisions and transfer, the designation of a joint powers
water agency as lead agency for preparation of the environmental impact report
(EIR) under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) ( Pub. Resources
Code, 21000 et seq.), and the adequacy of the EIR. The trial court determined
that the DWR, not the joint powers water agency, should have served as lead
agency in preparing the EIR, but that the error was harmless as the EIR was
sufficient. The trial court also dismissed the validation claim for failure to
name and serve indispensable parties. (Superior Court of Sacramento County, No.
95CS03216, Cecily Bond, Judge.) The Court of Appeal
reversed and remanded, directing the trial court to issue a writ of mandate
vacating the certification of the EIR and to retain jurisdiction until the DWR
should certify an EIR in accordance with CEQA. The court held that the trial
court correctly determined that the DWR, not the joint powers water agency, had
the statutory duty to serve as lead agency in preparing the EIR, but that the
trial court erred in finding the EIR sufficient. The court further held that
the EIR was defective in its failure to adequately consider a no project
alternative in regard to proposed elimination of the original contracts'
provision for reallocation of water among contractors in the event of permanent
water shortage. The absence of a thorough examination of the environmental
impacts of the original contractual solution to permanent water shortages
deprived both public agencies and the public of *893 information
essential to understanding the environmental consequences of the provision's
elimination, including the effect on land planning decisions. The court also
held that the trial court erred in dismissing the validation action, since
there are no indispensable parties in a validation proceeding beyond the public
agency whose action is challenged (Code Civ. Proc., 860 et seq.). (Opinion by
Raye, J., with Blease, Acting P. J., and Hull, J., concurring.) COUNSEL Antonio Rossmann and
Roger B. Moore for Plaintiffs and Appellants. Thomas J. Graff for
Environmental Defense Fund as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Plaintiffs and
Appellants. Daniel E. Lungren and Bill Lockyer, Attorneys General, Roderick E. Walston, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Charles W. Getz IV and Richard M. Frank, Assistant Attorneys General, and Marian E. Moe, Deputy Attorney General, for Defendant and Appellant. Hatch & Parent
and Susan F. Petrovich for Defendant and Respondent. RAYE, J. In this case we
consider the sufficiency of the environmental review of the Monterey Agreement,
a statement of principles to be incorporated into an omnibus revision of the
long-term contracts between the Department of Water Resources (DWR) and local
water contractors governing the supply of water under the State Water Project
(SWP). The Monterey Agreement was the culmination of negotiations among DWR and
six local water contractors to settle disputes arising under article 18 of the
long-term contracts. The agreement contemplated revisions in the methodology of
allocating water among contractors and changes in the operation of certain SWP
facilities, including the transfer of the Kern Fan Element, one of eight
elements comprising a subsurface reservoir, the Kern Water Bank, from DWR to
designated contractors. The contractors agreed to have one of their own, the
Central Coast Water Authority (CCWA), serve as the lead agency under the California
Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). (Pub. Resources Code, 21000 et seq.) In the underlying
mandamus and validation proceedings, two citizens groups and a public agency
challenged the selection of CCWA as the lead *898 agency and the
sufficiency of the EIR (environmental impact report) it prepared, and
challenged the transfer of the Kern Fan Element. [FN1] Plaintiffs'
amended complaint sought declaratory and injunctive relief against DWR and CCWA
with regard to the Monterey Agreement, which, when implemented in December
1995, altered DWR's allocation of water from the SWP to various local water
agencies. FN1 Plaintiffs and appellants include the Planning and
Conservation League (PCL), the Citizens Planning Association of Santa Barbara
County, Inc. (CPA) and Plumas County Flood Control and Water Conservation
District (Plumas). DWR and CCWA are referred to collectively as defendants in
this opinion, although we note CCWA did not perfect a timely cross-appeal. CCWA
is a joint powers agency formed in 1991 among nine-member water agencies within
Santa Barbara County. We agree with the
trial court that DWR, not CCWA, has the statutory duty to serve as lead agency
in assessing the environmental consequences of projects involving the SWP. We
conclude the trial court erred by finding CCWA's EIR sufficient despite its
failure under CEQA to discuss implementation of article 18, subdivision (b), as
a "no project" alternative. The error mandates preparation of a new
EIR under the direction of DWR. Finally, we conclude the trial court
erroneously dismissed the challenge to DWR's transfer of title to a storage
facility (the validation cause of action) and execution of amended contracts
for failure to name and serve indispensable parties. Facts In 1951, the
California Legislature authorized construction of a state water storage and
delivery system. (Cal. Dept. Water Resources, Management of the Cal. State
Water Project, Bull. No. 132-95 (Nov. 1996) p. xxiii.) [FN2] Eight years
later, the Legislature authorized the submission for voter approval of a $1.75
billion general obligation bond issue to build the SWP. The voters subsequently
approved the measure and construction thereafter commenced. (Wat. Code, 12930
et seq.; DWR, Bull. No. 132-93 (Sept. 1994) p. 15.) FN2
We take judicial notice of the
annual SWP management bulletins published by DWR. (Baldwin v. County of Tehama
(1994) 31 Cal.App.4th 166, 178, fn. 8 [36 Cal.Rptr.2d 886]; Johnson Rancho
County Water Dist. v. State Water Rights Board (1965) 235 Cal.App.2d 863, 873
[45 Cal.Rptr. 589].) These bulletins hereafter will be referred to as
"DWR, Bulletin No." DWR's request to take judicial notice of environmental documents prepared after the EIR was certified in this case is denied. Such documentation is irrelevant to the issues before us. The SWP was designed
to become a complex system of reservoirs, dams, power plants, pumping plants,
canals and aqueducts to deliver 4.23 million *899 acre-feet (maf) of
water annually. [FN3] (DWR, Bull. No. 132-93, supra, p. 52.) The initial
facilities, consisting of 22 dams and reservoirs, 14 pumping plants, 4
hydroelectric power plants, 3 pumping-generating plants, and 550 miles of
aqueducts and pipelines, delivered about one-half of the forecast goal. (Id. at
pp. 17, 18.) FN3 "An acre-foot is 43,560 cubic feet. Colloquially, it
is an irrigation- based measurement equalling the quantity of water required to
cover an acre of land to a depth of one foot." (Brydon v. East Bay Mun.
Utility Dist. (1994) 24 Cal.App.4th 178, 182, fn. 1 [29 Cal.Rptr.2d 128].) DWR is a major
developer of water resources in the state. (DWR, Bull. No. 132- 93, supra, p.
15.) DWR builds and operates the facilities and manages the SWP. (DWR, Bull.
No. 132-93, supra, p. 15.) At the inception of the project, DWR entered into
individual contracts with 29 agricultural and urban water suppliers throughout
the state. These contractors received entitlements to an annual amount of water
in return for which they repay a proportionate share of the financing and
maintenance of the SWP facilities. Under the SWP, water contractors "are
obligated to pay for their contractual entitlements of water" from the
project, "whether the water is delivered or not." (Pending Federal
Actions (Apr. 1998) 8 Cal. Water Law & Pol'y Rptr. 144.) Key provisions in the
initial long-term contracts are substantially the same. DWR committed to build
those facilities which, when completed, would enable it to deliver to all
contractors the total entitlements of over 4 maf of water. Nevertheless, the parties
anticipated a possible shortage in the water supply. Article 18 of the
contracts outlines the reallocation of water among contractors in years of
temporary shortage and also addresses the prospect of long-term shortfalls.
Because these provisions play a central role in this case, we quote the
relevant portions of subdivisions (a) and (b) at length. "(a) In any year
in which there may occur a shortage due to drought or other temporary cause in
the supply of project water available for delivery to the contractors, with the
result that such supply is less than the total of the annual entitlements of
all contractors for that year, the State shall, before reducing deliveries of
project water to all contractors, reduce the delivery of project water to each contractor
using such water for agricultural purposes by a percentage, not to exceed fifty
percent (50%) in any one year or a total of one hundred percent (100%) in any
series of seven consecutive years, of that portion of the contractor's annual
entitlement for the respective year which is to be put to agricultural use as
determined by the State ...." *900 Subdivision (a) is referred to
as "the agriculture first deficiency." Although agricultural
contractors suffer first during a temporary shortage under subdivision (a),
they are entitled to makeup water first in times of surplus. Subdivision (b)
contemplates a more serious threat to the long-term water supply. It states in
relevant part: "In the event that the State is unable to construct
sufficient additional conservation facilities to prevent a reduction in the
minimum project yield, or if for any other reason there is a reduction in the
minimum project yield, which, notwithstanding preventive or remedial measures
taken or to be taken by the State, threatens a permanent shortage in the supply
of project water to be made available to the contractors: [] (1) The annual
entitlements and the maximum annual entitlements of all contractors, except to
the extent such entitlements may reflect established rights under the area of
origin statutes, [FN4] shall, by amendment of Table A included in
Article 6(b), and of Article 7(b), respectively, be reduced proportionately by
the State to the extent necessary so that the sum of the revised maximum annual
entitlements of all contractors will then equal such reduced minimum project
yield ...." FN4 Area of origin statutes at Water Code sections 10505.5 and
11460 reserve water in the counties where watershed originates as needed for
local growth. By the late 1980's
and early 1990's, the pressures on the SWP grew acute. Supplies were severely
diminished as a result of a seven-year drought. Laws and regulations designed
to protect the environment also limited the supply of water. Disputes arose
among agricultural and urban contractors and DWR about how the limited amount
of water should be distributed. In its search for
additional water supplies, DWR investigated the plausibility of establishing a
water bank in Kern County. The Kern Water Bank is a subsurface reservoir
designed to store surplus water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (the
Delta) in the groundwater basin during wet years for extraction during dry
years. (DWR, Bull. No. 132-93, supra, p. 11.) One of eight elements comprising
the Kern Water Bank is the Kern Fan Element. (Id. at p. 170.) In 1986, DWR
purchased the Kern Fan Element, planning to construct recharge basins,
extraction wells and conveyance facilities. The improvements were expected to
increase storage capacity to about 1 maf. (Id. at p. 11.) After completion of a
supplemental environmental impact report, however, DWR halted all design work,
preparation of contracts and feasibility work because of problems in the Delta
and the adverse environmental impacts of the Kern projects. (Id. at pp. 11-12.) In 1991, as
California entered a fifth year of drought, DWR organized a drought water bank
allowing for large scale water transfers to ameliorate the *901 overall
water shortage. DWR prepared an extensive EIR to meet its CEQA charge. In spite
of the lengthy drought, DWR was able to meet contractors' requests for delivery
in each year except 1994. Nevertheless, urban
and agricultural contractors disputed DWR's implementation of article 18 of
their long-term contracts. The agricultural contractors contended that the
shortages were not due to the drought, but rather to DWR's failure to complete
the facilities originally envisioned as the SWP. The urban contractors held
secret negotiations concerning article 18. Each urban contractor was obligated
to execute a confidentiality agreement before participating in the meetings
held to discuss revision of article 18. The threat of litigation loomed. The warring factions
agreed to negotiate a settlement of the article 18 controversy. The primary
objective was to avoid litigation. Agricultural and urban contractors met with
DWR in Monterey in the fall of 1994 to "search for an answer to a
single-but critical-problem in managing the SWP: How to allocate the water
supply equitably during times of shortage." (DWR, Bull. No. 132-95, supra,
p. 5.) "Soon after discussions began, the parties determined that the
water allocation problem was far too complex to be effectively approached as a
single-issue problem. Article 18 negotiations grew into an omnibus revision of
the SWP long-term contracts and their administration-an endeavor to update
management of the SWP." (Id. at p. 7.) After two months of
negotiations, DWR and agricultural and urban contractors agreed to a statement
of 14 principles, which came to be known as the Monterey Agreement. One of the
major goals of the Monterey Agreement was to "[i]ncrease water management
flexibility, providing more tools to local water agencies to maximize existing
facilities." (DWR, Bull. No. 132-95, supra, p. 7.) To accomplish this
goal, DWR would: " transfer
control of the Kern Water Bank property to the agricultural contractors, " provide for
permanent sales of water among contractors, " provide more
flexibility in using certain reservoirs for local use, " implement a
simpler program for interruptible water supplies, " provide new
rules for transportation of non-SWP water to contractors, and provide new rules
for storing water outside a contractor's service area. *902 "As part of this
agreement, 45,000 acre feet of annual entitlement belonging to two agricultural
contractors will be retired. In addition, voluntary entitlement transfers of
about 130,000 acre-feet from agricultural to urban users will likely
proceed." (DWR, Bull. No. 132-95, supra, at p. 8.) The Monterey
Agreement afforded many benefits to individual contractors by increasing their
own water supply reliability through: " water
transfers, " water banking, " storage
outside service areas, " transport of
nonproject water, permanent sales of water among contractors, " annual
turn-back programs, " use of Kern
Water Bank property by agricultural contractors for water banking, and " access by
urban water contractors to Kern Water Bank use." (DWR, Bull. No. 132-95,
supra, at pp. 8-9.) DWR showcases the Monterey Agreement as "evidence of a
partnership spirit among the agricultural and urban contractors and the
Department." (Id. at p. 9.) For the settlement to become effective, the 14
principles of the Monterey Agreement had to be translated into legally binding
contract amendments, and the two largest water contractors, Kern County Water
Agency (KCWA) and Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, had to
execute the amended contracts. They have done so. Those contractors who
participated in the Monterey negotiations, together with DWR, determined that
implementation would have potential adverse environmental impacts necessitating
the preparation of an environmental impact report and the inclusion of the
public in the environmental review process. They agreed to appoint the CCWA to
serve as lead agency under CEQA. A programmatic EIR
was completed and certified by CCWA in October of 1995. DWR, as a responsible
agency, issued findings and adopted the EIR two months later. On December 13,
1995, DWR executed the Agreement for the Exchange of the Kern Fan Element of
the Kern Water Bank, by which *903 DWR agreed to divest and convey the
20,463 acres of state property known as the Kern Fan Element. The sufficiency of
the EIR was challenged by a water agency as well as citizens groups. PCL
petitioned the superior court for a writ of mandamus compelling DWR to serve as
lead agency and to properly prepare and certify a legally adequate EIR. A later
amendment, to which CPA and Plumas were added as plaintiffs, challenged DWR's
transfer of title to the Kern Fan Element and execution of amended contracts in
a reverse validation cause of action. DWR and CCWA brought
a summary adjudication motion on the validation cause of action, contending the
action must be dismissed because petitioners failed to name and serve
indispensable parties, the individual contractors. Several of those contractors
also brought motions to quash service. The trial court granted all motions and
entered judgment against plaintiffs on the CEQA claims. The court ruled that
although CCWA improperly served as the lead agency, the EIR was adequate and,
therefore, the CEQA violation was not prejudicial. Plaintiffs appealed.
We dismissed the appeal of the order quashing service as untimely. The Supreme
Court affirmed our dismissal. (Planning & Conservation League v. Department
of Water Resources (1998) 17 Cal.4th 264 [70 Cal.Rptr.2d 635, 949 P.2d 488]
(Planning & Conservation League I).) We now have before us the appeal of
the judgment, including the dismissal of the validation claim, and a
cross-appeal challenging the trial court's ruling that the lead agency
designation was improper. Discussion I. Lead Agency Under CEQA, a "lead agency" is responsible for determining whether an EIR is required for a project and, if so, for preparing the EIR and including it in any report on the project. (Friends of Cuyamaca Valley v. Lake Cuyamaca Recreation & Park Dist. (1994) 28 Cal.App.4th 419, 426 [33 Cal.Rptr.2d 635].) The lead agency, with responsibility for the process by which the EIR is written, approved and certified, plays a crucial role. The importance of the
lead agency throughout the fluid environmental review process was highlighted
in Kings County Farm Bureau v. City of *904 Hanford (1990) 221
Cal.App.3d 692 [270 Cal.Rptr. 650]. "The lead agency must independently
participate, review, analyze and discuss the alternatives in good faith."
(Id. at p. 736.) Moreover, the agency's opinion on matters within its expertise
is of particular value. (Ibid.) As the process continues, "the lead agency
may determine an environmentally superior alternative is more desirable or
mitigation measures must be adopted." (Id. at p. 737.) In sum, the lead
agency plays a pivotal role in defining the scope of environmental review, lending
its expertise in areas within its particular domain, and in ultimately
recommending the most environmentally sound alternative. The trial court found
that CCWA should not have been designated as the lead agency for the purpose of
preparing the EIR for the implementation of the Monterey Agreement. The court
explained: "Public Resources Code Section 21067 provides the statutory
definition of the term 'lead agency' under CEQA: ' the public agency which has
the principal responsibility for carrying out or approving a project which may
have a significant effect upon the environment.' (Emphasis added.) In this
case, the record clearly shows that CCWA does not have the principal
responsibility for carrying out or approving the implementation of the Monterey
Agreement. The text of the Agreement itself shows that the principal part of
the implementation process will consist of negotiating and executing a series
of amendments to the existing State Water Project contracts between DWR and the
29 contracting agencies. [Fn. omitted.] CCWA is, at most, a party to one of
those contracts, [fn. omitted] and thus cannot actually execute the amendments.
Also, there is no evidence in the record which would show that CCWA will be
responsible for negotiating the amendments with the contracting agencies. The
text of the Agreement and the evidence in the record suggest that it will be
primarily the task of DWR to carry on the negotiations and execute the amended
agreements. [] Similarly, many of the remaining provisions of the Monterey Agreement
reveal on their face that they must be implemented primarily, if not solely, by
DWR and/or other contractors. In fact, the record shows that the only asserted
justification for naming CCWA as the lead agency was that it recently had gone
through the environmental review process on another project and had expertise
in that process. [Fn. omitted.] Thus, the record does not support the
designation of CCWA as lead agency." Defendants insist
that all parties present for the negotiation of the Monterey Agreement have an
ongoing responsibility to encourage the remaining contractors to sign amended
contracts and to participate in various aspects of the implementation of the
agreement. They emphasize that no one party has the unilateral right to control
the implementation. According to defendants, therefore, DWR does not have
principal responsibility for approving and carrying out the project, and the
various public agencies involved were free to elect any one of their number to
act as lead agency. We disagree. *905 CEQA defines a lead
agency as "the public agency which has the principal responsibility for
carrying out or approving a project which may have a significant effect upon
the environment." (Pub. Resources Code, 21067.) By contrast, a
"responsible agency" means " 'a public agency, other than the
lead agency, which has responsibility for carrying out or approving a project.'
" (City of Redding v. Shasta County Local Agency Formation Com. (1989) 209
Cal.App.3d 1169, 1174 [257 Cal.Rptr. 793], quoting Pub. Resources Code, 21069.)
" 'Where a project is to be carried out or approved by more than one
public agency, one public agency shall be responsible for preparing an EIR or
negative declaration for the project. This agency shall be called the lead agency.'
" (209 Cal.App.3d. at p. 1174, quoting Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, 15050,
subd. (a).) The CEQA guidelines
(Guidelines) (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, 15000 et seq.) set forth the criteria
for identifying which agency shall act as the lead agency where two or more
public agencies are involved in the process. Section 15051, subdivision (d),
provides: "Where the provisions of subsections (a), (b), and (c) leave two
or more public agencies with a substantial claim to be the lead agency, the
public agencies may by agreement designate an agency as the lead agency. An
agreement may also provide for cooperative efforts by two or more agencies by
contract, joint exercise of powers, or similar devices." Defendants rely on
the Guidelines as authority for the execution of their agreement to allow CCWA
to act as lead agency. Their argument depends on the validity of their thesis:
"Because this 'project' could not be carried out without the joint action
of DWR and the contractors, both DWR and the contractors, as a group, (particularly
those whose execution was a prerequisite to the effectiveness of the Monterey
Amendment) constituted 'public agencies' with shared principal responsibility
for carrying out or approving the project." Defendants urge us to
apply a deferential standard of review to the public agencies' joint decision
to allow CCWA to act as lead agency. Defendants praise the agencies for
avoiding litigation of the lead agency question but ignore the more salient
facts and the fundamental principles of appellate review. While applauding the
settlement success of the seven parties who negotiated the Monterey Agreement,
defendants forget the 23 water contractors and the members of the public who
were not invited to the table. In comments to the draft EIR, various parties
objected to DWR's delegation of *906 its responsibilities to CCWA and
their exclusion from the process whereby DWR and all but six contractors agreed
to CCWA's appointment as lead agency. On appeal, defendants ask us to apply the
same deferential standard of review as decisions reached after public review of
an EIR. The
"interpretation and applicability of a statute is a question of law
requiring an independent determination by the reviewing court." (East
Peninsula Ed. Council, Inc. v. Palos Verdes Peninsula Unified School Dist.
(1989) 210 Cal.App.3d 155, 165 [258 Cal.Rptr. 147].) (1c) Here, the facts are
undisputed. Plaintiffs do not contest defendants' assertion that it takes two
parties to enter a contract. DWR must negotiate amended contracts with each of
the water contractors, and the greater the extent to which CCWA and the other
five contractors that negotiated the Monterey Agreement help facilitate the
negotiations, the more likely all the principles of the agreement will be
implemented. But this reality does not alter the rules of appellate review. We
are presented with a question of law requiring de novo review. Neither the language
of the statute nor the facts of this case support a so- called "shared
principal responsibility." Public Resources Code section 21067 plainly
requires the public agency with principal responsibility to assume the role as
lead agency. CCWA, a regional water contractor, does not have principal
responsibility for implementing the Monterey Agreement, although it may have a
substantial stake in seeing it implemented. By contrast, DWR, the state agency
charged with the statutory responsibility to build, manage and operate the SWP,
clearly retains the principal responsibility to execute amended long-term
contracts, to convey the Kern Fan Element and to facilitate the water transfers
allowed under the Monterey Agreement. It is DWR that
"manage[s]" the SWP, "the largest state-built, multipurpose
water project in the country. Approximately 20 million of California's 32
million residents receive at least part of their water from SWP, and SWP water
is used to irrigate approximately 600,000 acres of farmland." (DWR, Bull.
No. 132-93, supra, p. 15.) It is incongruous to assert that any of the regional
contractors simply by virtue of a private settlement agreement can assume DWR's
principal responsibility for managing the SWP. Under these circumstances, those
at the negotiating table were not at liberty to anoint a local agency to act in
place of DWR. In City of Sacramento
v. State Water Resources Control Bd. (1992) 2 Cal.App.4th 960 [3 Cal.Rptr.2d
643] (City of Sacramento), the appointment of the wrong lead agency required
our reversal. We wrote: "Despite plaintiffs' contention that DFA's
responsibility over pesticide regulation does not *907 extend to
regulating discharges into state waters, the statutory scheme described above
establishes concomitant responsibility in DFA and the Regional Board for
protecting state waters from pesticide pollution. The Regional Board's
responsibility is to protect state waters from all forms of pollution, while
DFA's responsibility is limited to pesticide pollution. However, DFA's
responsibility extends beyond water pollution to include the total environment.
Thus, because the underlying purpose of an EIR is to analyze and inform
regarding adverse effects to the environment as a whole (Pub. Resources Code,
21061), DFA is in the best position to make such an assessment." (Id. at
p. 973.) Similarly, DWR has a
statewide perspective and expertise. The allocation of water to one part of the
state has potential implications for distribution throughout the system. DWR is
painfully familiar with the problems plaguing the Delta and the possible
impacts of the Delta Accord, an agreement between the federal and state
governments, on the Kern Fan Element. As in City of Sacramento, it is the
"logical choice for lead agency" because it has principal
responsibility for implementation of an agreement that substantially
restructures distribution of water throughout the state. So significant is the
role of the lead agency that CEQA proscribes delegation. This prohibition was
articulated in Kleist v. City of Glendale (1976) 56 Cal.App.3d 770, 779 [128
Cal.Rptr. 781]: "Neither the CEQA nor the state guidelines authorize the city
council to delegate its review and consideration function to another body.
Delegation is inconsistent with the purpose of the review and consideration
function since it insulates the members of the council from public awareness
and possible reaction to the individual members' environmental and economic
values. Delegation is inconsistent with the purposes of the EIR itself." We thus agree with
the trial court that CCWA should not have been designated as the lead agency.
Plaintiffs argue on appeal as they did before the trial court that appointment
of the wrong lead agency taints the entire EIR process, is inherently
prejudicial and compels a fresh start with an appropriate lead agency. The
trial court disagreed, concluding that it would instead assess whether the
improper designation caused the "omission of vital information from the
environmental review process." It found the EIR adequate; the improper
designation of CCWA as lead agency amounted to harmless error. We will conclude
the EIR is defective in at least one critical respect and order the preparation
of a new EIR under the direction of DWR. *908 II. The EIR A. Introduction Shortage precipitates
conflict. In this state, when water is the commodity in short supply, the
conflict threatens the most basic interests of competing stakeholders. Those
who negotiated the existing long-term contracts anticipated water shortfalls
and incorporated article 18 as a mechanism for resolving both temporary and
permanent shortages. Under the Monterey Agreement, the temporary solution
embodied in article 18, subdivision (a), was completely renegotiated and the
permanent solution embodied in article 18, subdivision (b), simply was
eliminated. [FN5] The issue posed by CEQA is whether the EIR adequately
addressed the environmental impacts of eliminating article 18, subdivision (b)'
s solution to a permanent water shortage. FN5 The original long-term contracts between DWR and the water
contractors were predicated on the state's contractual obligation to build out
the SWP so as to deliver 4.23 maf of water to the contractors annually. Each of
the contractors is allocated a percentage of the 4.23 maf in table A of the
long-term contracts. The allocation is referred to as an entitlement.
Therefore, cumulatively, the contractors are "entitled" to 4.23 maf
of water annually. The SWP, however, has never been completed and the state cannot deliver 4.23 maf of water annually. The entitlements represent nothing more than hopes, expectations, water futures or, as the parties refer to them, "paper water." Actual, reliable water supply from the SWP is more in the vicinity of 2 to 2.5 maf of water annually. Consequently, there is a huge gap between what is promised and what can be delivered. Ironically, while the
desire to settle article 18 disputes was the driving force behind the Monterey
negotiations, the draft EIR failed to consider the impact of implementing
article 18, subdivision (b). That failure generated the most comments to the
draft EIR. The draft assumed, under its limited description of the no project
alternative, that "[n]o changes in SWP water allocations occur." But
many commenters disagreed and urged CCWA to broaden the discussion of the
so-called no project alternative. One commenter wrote: "The DEIR must
analyze this 'no project' alternative if we are to take any of it seriously.
The analysis must include a parametric analysis of alternative levels of a
lowered project yield tested by use of DWR's simulation model to establish
which level of yield provides for the maximum reliability of deliveries given
some tolerable threshold for failure to meet requests (i.e. with what frequency
will Article 18(a) be allowed to be invoked and with what consequences.) [] All
this can be accomplished without modification of the existing contracts." Another commenter
explained: "The No Project Alternative discussion must be expanded
considerably to include measures that could be implemented under existing
contracts that may address some or all of the project *909 objectives.
In particular, Article 18(b) of existing SWP contracts, which would be
eliminated by implementation of the Monterey Agreement, provides a means of
addressing the water allocation concerns that prompted the Monterey Agreement.
[] ... Under current economic, political, and environmental circumstances,
there is no prospect or expectation that the SWP can deliver anywhere near the
total project entitlement. Article 18(b) mandates that DWR reduce all
entitlements proportionately. The EIR incorrectly states that under the
No-Project Alternative no changes in SWP water allocation will occur. Since
changes in SWP water allocation must occur if Article 18(b)'s alternative
criteria are satisfied, the EIR must be revised to include the implementation
of Article 18(b) as part of the analytical baseline for the Monterey
Agreement." Several commenters
urged CCWA to analyze the article 18, subdivision (b), option. "Article
18(b) of the contracts is invoked and all entitlements are adjusted to reflect
actual, reliable water supplies deliverable under the contracts. (The new
entitlement figures must incorporate reduced extractions resulting from recent
legislative, administrative, and legal decisions. In that they may be further
reduced in the future by the same processes, the new entitlement figures should
be determined with careful attention to environmental constraints.)"
Nearly all the commenters registered the failure of the EIR to discuss the
reaffirmation in principle 12 of the Monterey Agreement to build out the SWP facilities
while deleting the article 18, subdivision (b), option to reduce entitlements
and thereby eliminate the pressure on the system to build more facilities. In
the final EIR, principle 12, like article 18, subdivision (b), was deleted. Plaintiffs agree with
the commenters, insisting the EIR's failure to explore article 18, subdivision
(b), under the rubric of a no project alternative renders the EIR inadequate.
According to plaintiffs, the absence of a thorough examination of the
environmental impacts of article 18, subdivision (b)'s solution to permanent
water shortages deprived both the public agencies charged with renegotiating
their contracts and the public of information essential to understanding the
environmental consequences of the provision's elimination. Defendants, on the
other hand, contend it was not reasonably likely the section would be invoked
in the foreseeable future and thus there was no need to speculate about the
environmental consequences of such an event. Defendants endorse the trial court's
findings that the history of water deliveries in the state, even during drought
years, and the likelihood of litigation rendered it unlikely entitlements would
be reduced under article *910 18, subdivision (b). [FN6]
Alternatively, defendants claim the discussion of article 18, subdivision (b),
in the final EIR as an infeasible alternative satisfied plaintiffs' concerns
and CEQA's mandate. We disagree with defendants on both counts. FN6 As expressed by the trial court, "[Plaintiffs] have
not shown that enforcement of Article 18(b) is foreseeable, or even likely,
under any circumstances. To the contrary, the Court is persuaded by the
arguments of the [defendants] that attempted enforcement of Article 18(b) would
lead to disputes among the contractors, and probably to lengthy and difficult
legal proceedings. The Court has reviewed provisions of Article 18(b) and
agrees with [defendants] that invocation of its terms is far from automatic.
Particularly in view of the history of deliveries of water in recent years,
which is set forth in the record, the Court does not find that enforcement of
Article 18(b) is reasonably foreseeable if the Monterey Agreement is not
implemented. Accordingly, the EIR is not deficient for failing to include that
assumption in its discussion of the 'no project' alternative." B. CEQA and the "No Project" Alternative "CEQA is a
comprehensive scheme designed to provide long-term protection to the
environment. [Citation.] In enacting CEQA, the Legislature declared its
intention that all public agencies responsible for regulating activities
affecting the environment give prime consideration to preventing environmental
damage when carrying out their duties. [Citations.] CEQA is to be interpreted
'to afford the fullest possible protection to the environment within the
reasonable scope of the statutory language.' [Citation.]" (Mountain Lion
Foundation v. Fish & Game Com. (1997) 16 Cal.4th 105, 112 [65 Cal.Rptr.2d
580, 939 P.2d 1280].) Both the mandate and
the mechanism of CEQA are carefully crafted and well ingrained into the law of
this state. (County of Amador v. El Dorado County Water Agency (1999) 76
Cal.App.4th 931, 943 [91 Cal.Rptr.2d 66].) The environmental impact report,
with all its specificity and complexity, is the mechanism prescribed by CEQA to
force informed decision making and to expose the decision making process to
public scrutiny. (No Oil, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles (1974) 13 Cal.3d 68, 86
[118 Cal.Rptr. 34, 529 P.2d 66]; Galante Vineyards v. Monterey Peninsula Water
Management Dist. (1997) 60 Cal.App.4th 1109, 1123 [71 Cal.Rptr.2d 1].) The EIR
is, as the courts have said repeatedly, the " 'heart of CEQA,' "
"an 'environmental "alarm bell," ' " and a "document
of accountability." (Laurel Heights Improvement Assn. v. Regents of
University of California (1988) 47 Cal.3d 376, 392 [253 Cal.Rptr. 426, 764 P.2d
278] (Laurel Heights).) "Whenever a
project may have a significant and adverse physical effect on the environment,
an EIR must be prepared and certified. ( 21100, subd. (a); cf. Bozung v. Local
Agency Formation Com. (1975) 13 Cal.3d 263, 277-279 *911 [118 Cal.Rptr.
249, 529 P.2d 1017]; City of Livermore v. Local Agency Formation Com. (1986)
184 Cal.App.3d 531, 538 [230 Cal.Rptr. 867].) An EIR provides the public and
responsible government agencies with detailed information on the potential
environmental consequences of an agency's proposed decision. (See generally, No
Oil, supra, 13 Cal.3d at p. 81; Sundstrom v. County of Mendocino (1988) 202
Cal.App.3d 296, 307 [248 Cal.Rptr. 352].)" (Mountain Lion Foundation v.
Fish & Game Com., supra, 16 Cal.4th 105, 113 [65 Cal.Rptr.2d 580, 939 P.2d
1280].) (1e) "CEQA also requires the public agency to consider feasible
alternatives to the project which would lessen any significant adverse
environmental impact. ( 21002, 21081; City of Poway v. City of San Diego (1984)
155 Cal.App.3d 1037, 1045-1046 [202 Cal.Rptr. 366] (hereafter City of Poway).)
One alternative is 'no project.' (See Guidelines, 15126, subd. (d)(2) ['no
project' alternative to be considered along with proposed project's
environmental impact]; Dusek v. Redevelopment Agency (1985) 173 Cal.App.3d
1029, 1043 [219 Cal.Rptr. 346].)" (Id. at p. 123.) CEQA requires that
the no project alternative discussed in an EIR address "existing
conditions" as well as "what would be reasonably expected to occur in
the foreseeable future if the project were not approved, based on current plans
and consistent with available infrastructure and community services."
(Guidelines, 15126, subd. (d)(4), now 15126.6, subd. (e)(2).) The existing
conditions, supplemented by a reasonable forecast, are characterized as the no
project alternative. The description must be straightforward and intelligible,
assisting the decision maker and the public in ascertaining the environmental
consequences of doing nothing; requiring the reader to painstakingly ferret out
the information from the reports is not enough. (Environmental Planning &
Information Council v. County of El Dorado (1982) 131 Cal.App.3d 350, 357 [182 Cal.Rptr.
317]; Dusek v. Redevelopment Agency, supra, 173 Cal.App.3d 1029, 1043.) C. Scope of Review CEQA compels process.
It is a meticulous process designed to ensure that the environment is
protected. Because the EIR is the heart and soul of CEQA, we must assure that
CCWA's EIR facilitated the environmental review process as envisioned by CEQA.
We are not at liberty to review the economics or politics of water policy. Our
task is extraordinarily limited and our focus is narrow. Did the EIR adequately
describe the existing conditions and offer a plausible vision of the
foreseeable future? "Consideration
of a filed EIR's adequacy is a judicial function. [Citation.] In a lawsuit
charging noncompliance with CEQA, judicial inquiry *912 is limited to
the question of abuse of discretion, which is established if the agency has not
proceeded as required by law or if its decision is not supported by substantial
evidence. [Citations.] The court does not pass upon the correctness of the
EIR's environmental conclusions, but only upon its sufficiency as an
informative document." (County of Inyo v. City of Los Angeles (1977) 71
Cal.App.3d 185, 189 [139 Cal.Rptr. 396].) "Noncompliance
with substantive requirements of CEQA or noncompliance with information
disclosure provisions 'which precludes relevant information from being
presented to the public agency ... may constitute prejudicial abuse of
discretion within the meaning of Sections 21168 and 21168.5, regardless of
whether a different outcome would have resulted if the public agency had
complied with those provisions.' ( 21005, subd. (a).) In other words, when an
agency fails to proceed as required by CEQA, harmless error analysis is
inapplicable. The failure to comply with the law subverts the purposes of CEQA
if it omits material necessary to informed decisionmaking and informed public
participation. Case law is clear that, in such cases, the error is prejudicial.
[Citations.] [] As we explained: 'The trial court may not exercise its
independent judgment on the omitted material by determining whether the
ultimate decision of the lead agency would have been affected had the law been
followed. The decision is for the discretion of the agency, and not the
courts.' [Citation.]" (County of Amador v. El Dorado County Water Agency,
supra, 76 Cal.App.4th at p. 946.) Our task is the same
as that of the trial court. We must review the public agency's actions to
determine whether it complied with CEQA. " 'The appellate court reviews
the administrative record independently; the trial court's conclusions are not
binding on it. [Citations.]' [Citation.]" (Stanislaus Natural Heritage
Project v. County of Stanislaus (1996) 48 Cal.App.4th 182, 192-193 [55
Cal.Rptr.2d 625].) D. Analysis There is an aura of
unreality surrounding the debate over article 18, subdivision (b). The original
long-term contracts set forth the amount of each signatory's entitlement to
water under its contract. Defendants acknowledge that the contract entitlements
for water from the SWP total about 4.2 maf annually. In DWR, Bulletin No.
132-90 (1990), DWR explained that "[t]he measure of the SWP's delivery
capability is founded on the concept of 'firm yield' operation. Defined in the
water supply contracts as 'minimum project yield', firm yield is the dependable
annual water supply that can be made available without exceeding allowable
reductions in agricultural deliveries (specified in the water supply contracts)
during extended dry periods.... The firm yield of existing SWP facilities is
approximately 2.4 maf *913 per year, based on the historical dry period
from 1928 through 1934." DWR forthrightly admits that "the State
Water Project (SWP) does not have the storage facilities, delivery
capabilities, or the water supplies necessary to deliver full amounts of entitlement
water." (DWR, Bull. No. 132-91 (1991) p. 100.) The average actual
deliveries under SWP over a 14-year period, from 1980-1993, were around 2.0
maf. There is then no
question that the SWP cannot deliver all the water to which contractors are
entitled under the original contracts. It does not appear that SWP has ever had
that ability. Nor do defendants suggest that full delivery of entitlement water
is likely within the life of the contracts. Nevertheless, defendants dispute
that a long-term shortage exists. Defendants argue that requests are the proper
measure of shortage. They emphasize that the SWP had been able to meet
contractors' actual requests for water every year except 1994, suggesting there
is no water shortage, let alone a permanent shortage. Defendants' notion of
permanent shortage is belied by the language of article 18, subdivision (b),
which speaks in terms of "entitlements," not requests. However, as we
have previously explained, it is not our task to resolve the contractual dispute.
Indeed, this challenge to the adequacy of an EIR is hardly the appropriate case
to resolve such a complex issue of contract law. Even assuming the plausibility
of defendants' interpretation of article 18, subdivision (b), and their related
factual assertion that requests are unlikely to outstrip supply, plaintiffs
posit an equally plausible construction, that article 18, subdivision (b), can
be invoked when entitlements and supply are chronically imbalanced. So long as
article 18, subdivision (b), can be plausibly construed in a manner that would
result in significant environmental consequences, its elimination should be
considered and discussed in the EIR. The legal uncertainty surrounding article
18, subdivision (b), and consequent threat of litigation is not a reason to
ignore the provision in assessing the environmental consequences of the
project. Litigation, almost by definition, is a speculative, risky business. It
is true that no one could know either how long the article 18, subdivision (b),
issue would linger in litigation or what the outcome would be. But the threat
of litigation cannot be allowed to derail environmental review. Defendants' arguments
miss the mark for a second, more fundamental, reason. Were article 18,
subdivision (b), to be invoked, annual entitlements set forth in table A of the
original contract would "be reduced proportionately by the State to the
extent necessary so that the sum of the revised maximum annual entitlements of
all contractors will then equal ... reduced *914 minimum project
yield." This would constitute a major alteration of table A. Nevertheless,
defendants suggest it would not appreciably affect actual water delivery
practices because few contractors ever request the full amount of their
entitlement. Though total entitlements and project yields have always been out
of balance, the SWP has nonetheless been able to meet contractor requests
except in a few drought years. What then are the
environmental consequences of removing article 18, subdivision (b), if contractors
continue to receive the same amount of water whether or not the provision is
invoked? The answer is that entitlements under table A-"paper water,"
so called because it exists only on paper-serve as the basis for land planning
decisions. [FN7] Projects that are given the clearance to proceed based
upon an entitlement to X acre-feet of water might not proceed if a contractor's
entitlement is reduced to (X-Y) acre-feet. FN7 Paper water always was an illusion.
"Entitlements" is a misnomer, for contractors surely cannot be
entitled to water nature refuses to provide or the body politic refuses to
harvest, store and deliver. Paper water represents the unfulfilled dreams of
those who, steeped in the water culture of the 1960's, created the expectation
that 4.23 maf of water could be delivered by a SWP built to capacity. And yet
those same dreamers had vision. While hoping for a completed SWP, they
incorporated the article 18, subdivision (b), mechanism to reduce entitlements
to meet a humbler, leaner reality. We agree with plaintiffs that inclusion of
article 51 in the amended contracts implies that DWR and the contractors have
forsaken their expectation that the SWP facilities will be built as planned and
will deliver 4.23 maf of water annually. Article 51 allows contractors a rebate
for the costs previously assessed for facilities that have never been built.
Indeed, fiscal and environmental pressures militate against completion of the
project. Commenters to the
draft EIR spoke directly to the issue of land use planning. One commenter
pointed out, "Potential environmental effects exist because local land use
jurisdictions within SWP Contractors' service areas vary considerably in their
planning responses to the availability of project water. Some planning jurisdictions
assume that most or all of their SWP entitlement will be available for new
development. Others more reasonably assume that they will receive water in
proportion to the project's actual yield. Thus, where land use planning
determinations can be made on the basis of entitlement rather than real water,
development can outpace the availability of water, leading to detrimental
environmental consequences, excessive groundwater pumping, and pressure to
develop additional water supplies. [] While the proposed program alters the
manner in which SWP water is allocated, particularly in times of shortage, it
does not reduce entitlements to reflect actual water availability. Moreover,
the EIR provides no discussion of the environmental consequences associated with
land use planning based on project entitlement rather than actual yield." *915 Others reflected the
same concern about planning predicated on paper water. One wrote:
"[R]eduction of SWP entitlements to acknowledge permanent shortage (or,
more accurately, realistic yield) will allow for more accurate forecasting by
agricultural and urban water users, and more accurate planning efforts by
regulatory authorities and business interests." Similarly, another
commented: "Clearly implementation of Article 18(b) would reallocate water
based on the existing 'minimum project yield'. DWR has stated in past Bulletin
132s' that the 'firm yield' of the SWP is 2.4 MAF. The current Delta Standards
must be figured in to get a reliable number to make up this 'minimum project
yield'. This would be a benefit to everyone. [] Cities and Counties could plan
development based on a reliable water supply. Agriculture (Ag.) would be able
to plan and get financing for crops based on 'wet' water not 'paper' promises
(ie [sic] contractual obligations)." We are not, as defendants suggest,
accepting these concerns, opinions and viewpoints as facts. CEQA does not
require scientific certainty before an issue requires study. The comments merely
corroborate the common sense notion that land use decisions are appropriately
predicated in some large part on assumptions about the available water supply.
There is certainly the possibility that local decision makers are seduced by
contractual entitlements and approve projects dependent on water worth little
more than a wish and a prayer. The invocation of article 18, subdivision (b),
as well as the possibility that article 18, subdivision (b), might be invoked
could therefore affect planning decisions. The trial court's rationale
upholding the sufficiency of the no project discussion, a rationale mirrored in
defendants' arguments, thus evades the essential analysis required under CEQA.
Neither the threat of litigation nor the debate over whether a permanent
shortage exists is crucial to the environmental issues posed by CEQA. Quite
simply, the question was not whether article 18, subdivision (b), was likely to
be implemented in the near future, but what environmental consequences were
reasonably foreseeable by retaining or eliminating article 18, subdivision
(b)'s solution to a permanent water shortage. Members of the
public, under the auspices of CEQA, urged CCWA to study the environmental
impacts of the no project alternative, including the impact on land use
planning. CCWA simply failed to fulfill its mandate to present a complete
analysis of the environmental consequences of implementing article 18,
subdivision (b). Two cases from Stanislaus County are instructive. In San Joaquin
Raptor/Wildlife Rescue Center v. County of Stanislaus (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 713
[32 Cal.Rptr.2d 704], the Court of Appeal found *916 the EIR legally
inadequate because it did not include a sufficient description of the existing
environmental setting of the site and the surrounding area, it ignored a
necessary element of the development project and it failed to explore
alternative sites and cumulative impacts. The court reversed the judgment
denying the petition for a writ of mandate and remanded the case to the
superior court. (5b) The court stated: " '[T]he ultimate decision of
whether to approve a project, be that decision right or wrong, is a nullity if
based upon an EIR that does not provide the decisionmakers, and the public,
with the information about the project that is required by CEQA.' (Santiago
County Water Dist. v. County of Orange (1981) 118 Cal.App.3d 818, 829 [173
Cal.Rptr. 602].) The error is prejudicial 'if the failure to include relevant
information precludes informed decision-making and informed public
participation, thereby thwarting the statutory goals of the EIR process.'
[Citation.]" (San Joaquin Raptor/Wildlife Rescue Center v. County of
Stanislaus, supra, 27 Cal.App.4th at pp. 721-722.) Similarly, in
Stanislaus Natural Heritage Project v. County of Stanislaus, supra, 48
Cal.App.4th 182, the Court of Appeal reversed the judgment denying the petition
for a writ of mandate asking the superior court to set aside the certification
of the EIR. The Court of Appeal found the program EIR deficient because it
failed to address the procurement and impacts of a permanent water supply. The
court explained: "The County in essence approved an EIR for a 25- year
project when water for the project had not been assured beyond the first 5
years of the 15-year first phase of the project. The County knew neither the
source of the water the project would use beyond the first five years, nor what
significant environmental effects might be expected when the as yet unknown
water source (or sources) is ultimately used." (Id. at p. 195.) The court concluded:
"In our view, the County's approval of the project under these
circumstances defeated a fundamental purpose of CEQA: to 'inform the public and
responsible officials of the environmental consequences of their decisions
before they are made.' [Citations.] The CEQA EIR process 'protects not only the
environment but also informed self-government.' " (Stanislaus Natural
Heritage Project v. County of Stanislaus, supra, 48 Cal.App.4th at p. 195.)
Although neither Stanislaus County case suffered the same defect as the EIR
before us, both EIR's failed their essential mission under CEQA to present a
full disclosure of the potential environmental impacts of the proposal. In the
same way, CCWA's EIR is deficient. (1g) By failing to provide a thorough
examination of the no project alternative, CCWA has undermined the most basic
charge under CEQA-to inform the decision maker. *917 E. Explanation of Article 18, subdivision (b) as an
Infeasible Alternative Defendants attempt to
save the EIR with a second explanation. They contend that implementation of
article 18, subdivision (b), was adequately explained in the final EIR as an
alternative and rejected because it did not meet the objectives of the Monterey
Agreement. The brief discussion in the final EIR fails to meet several criteria
set forth in CEQA. "CEQA and the
Guidelines are replete with references to the need for a discussion of project
alternatives." (Laurel Heights, supra, 47 Cal.3d at p. 400; Pub. Resources
Code, 21001, subd. (g), 21002.1, subd. (a), 21061, 21100, subd. (b)(4); Guidelines,
former 15126, subd. (d) and (d)(3).) An EIR must "[d]escribe a range of
reasonable alternatives to the project, or to the location of the project,
which would feasibly attain most of the basic objectives of the project ... and
evaluate the comparative merits of the alternatives." (Guidelines, former
15126, subd. (d), now 15126.6, subd. (a).) The discussion must "focus on
alternatives capable of eliminating any significant adverse environmental
effects or reducing them to a level of insignificance, even if these
alternatives would impede to some degree the attainment of the project
objectives, or would be more costly." (Guidelines, former 15126, subd.
(d)(3).) "The sufficiency of the information contained in an EIR is
reviewed in the light of what is reasonably feasible." (Kings County Farm
Bureau v. City of Hanford, supra, 221 Cal.App.3d 692, 733.) The discussion of
alternatives must be judged against a rule of reason. (Citizens of Goleta
Valley v. Board of Supervisors (1990) 52 Cal.3d 553, 565 [276 Cal.Rptr. 410,
801 P.2d 1161].) Responding to the
onslaught of criticism of the draft EIR for failing to discuss implementation
of article 18, subdivision (b), CCWA responded to the public comments by
evaluating article 18, subdivision (b), as an alternative. The response states:
"These comments misinterpret the overall purposes of the Monterey
Agreement and the effects of attempting to implement Article 18(b) in lieu of
implementing the Agreement. Implementation of Article 18(b) was found not to be
a feasible alternative." The response discloses a fundamental
misconception of the public's comments and the difference between a no project
description and an evaluation of feasible alternatives. A no project
description is nonevaluative. It provides the decision makers and the public
with specific information about the environment if the project is not approved.
It is a factually based forecast of the environmental impacts of preserving the
status quo. It thus provides the decision makers with a base *918 line against
which they can measure the environmental advantages and disadvantages of the
project and alternatives to the project. By contrast, the
discussion of alternatives is evaluative. Measured by the rule of reason, the
feasibility of various alternatives is considered. But the essential ingredient
in determining feasibility is the assessment of the alternative in relation to
the objectives of the project. This is the threshold flaw in the response to
the comments urging consideration of the implementation of article 18,
subdivision (b). The public was not asking for an evaluation as to whether
article 18, subdivision (b), would meet DWR and the contractors' objective to
avoid litigation. In CEQA vocabulary, the public did not request an
alternatives analysis with the lens focused on the objectives of the project.
What the public requested, and CEQA demanded, was an objective recitation of
the environmental impact of implementing the existing contractual mechanism for
eliminating paper water. The response failed to provide the public agencies
that would use the EIR to decide whether or not to amend their contracts, and
their constituencies, with a straightforward analysis of the environmental
consequences of implementing article 18, subdivision (b). "The vice of
this 'mulligan stew' approach to environmental document drafting is that it
jumbles several important concepts, each having a different meaning and each
entitled to separate consideration." (Friends of the Old Trees v.
Department of Forestry & Fire Protection (1997) 52 Cal.App.4th 1383, 1404
[61 Cal.Rptr.2d 297].) Moreover, even as an
alternative, the discussion of article 18, subdivision (b), is deficient. Only
a cursory analysis is provided in three short paragraphs wherein the drafters
explain other contractual provisions that would minimize the effect of
implementing article 18, subdivision (b), as follows: "[Article 18,
subdivision (b)] is closely linked with Articles 6(c), 16(b), 18(d) and 21 of
the water supply contracts. Article 6(c) requires the State, subject to the
availability of funds, to make all reasonable efforts, consistent with certain
prerequisites, to complete the project facilities in such a manner that the
contractors' Table A entitlements can be provided. Article 16(b) requires the
State to make all reasonable efforts to perfect and protect water rights
necessary to protect water supply commitments. These obligations would not be
terminated or modified if the State declared a permanent shortage under Article
18(b). This is made clear by Article 18(d) which allows reinstatement of
reductions that occur in Table A entitlements under Article 18(b). Thus,
implementation of Article 18(b) would not eliminate the possibility that, in
the future, the State would construct additional facilities or take other
actions to increase the yield of the project. "In addition,
implementation of Article 18(b) would not reduce the amount of water which the
State would have available from storage or from *919 natural flows
through the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to deliver to the contractors. The
amount of water available is not dependent on the Table A entitlements, but on
natural hydrologic variations and the capacities of the existing project
facilities. If Table A entitlements were adjusted, less entitlement water would
be delivered and more surplus water would be available pursuant to Article 21.
The total amount of water available to all contractors would remain essentially
unchanged. "Because of the
continuing existence of Articles 6(c), 18(d), and 21, declaring a permanent
shortage under Article 18(b) would not have the water supply or future project
construction results postulated by several Commenters." This response does
little more than acknowledge the paper commitment to build SWP facilities and
the obvious fact that the hopes and dreams upon which the entitlements are
based do not create a greater annual supply of water. None of the commenters
suggested that implementation of article 18, subdivision (b), altered the
contractual and political commitment to complete the SWP. They did, however,
suggest that the elimination of paper water would impact land planning
decisions that might reduce the need for as many SWP facilities. Under that
scenario, article 18, subdivision (d), might not be invoked nor would surplus
water under article 21 be tapped and exhausted. We need not venture
into speculation. But CEQA does compel reasonable forecasting. (Laurel Heights,
supra, 47 Cal.3d at pp. 398-399; Chaparral Greens v. City of Chula Vista (1996)
50 Cal.App.4th 1134, 1144 [58 Cal.Rptr.2d 152].) Here, there were repeated
requests for DWR to provide forecasts based on simulation models it used in the
preparation of other EIR's. This EIR lacks any projections relating to land
planning, demand for water or other environmental impacts of reducing
entitlements pursuant to article 18, subdivision (b). The discussion is
confined solely to a synopsis of other contractual provisions and a summary
dismissal of the essence of the public's articulated concern about deleting
article 18, subdivision (b). Hence, the response
to article 18, subdivision (b), as an infeasible alternative missed the
essential concern expressed by interested members of the public. The Supreme
Court provided an apt critique of a public agency similarly misdirected. In
Laurel Heights, supra, 47 Cal.3d 376, the court wrote: "The Regents miss
the critical point that the public must be equally informed. Without meaningful
analysis of alternatives in the EIR, neither the courts nor the public can fulfill
their proper roles in the CEQA process. We *920 do not impugn the
integrity of the Regents, but neither can we countenance a result that would
require blind trust by the public, especially in light of CEQA's fundamental
goal that the public be fully informed as to the environmental consequences of
action by their public officials. 'To facilitate CEQA's informational role, the
EIR must contain facts and analysis, not just the agency's bare conclusions or
opinions.' [Citations.] An EIR must include detail sufficient to enable those
who did not participate in its preparation to understand and to consider
meaningfully the issues raised by the proposed project." (Id. at pp.
404-405.) Perhaps the
deficiencies in the EIR relate to the provincial experience of the lead agency,
a topic we addressed earlier. We conclude the EIR failed to meet the most
important purpose of CEQA, to fully inform the decision makers and the public
of the environmental impacts of the choices before them. A new EIR must,
therefore, be drafted. In view of our
earlier conclusion that DWR must serve as lead agency under CEQA, we need not,
as we ordinarily would, address the other alleged deficiencies in this EIR.
(Pub. Resources Code, 21005, subd. (c).) We need not hypothesize on the remaining
issues because DWR, with its expertise on the statewide impacts of water
transfers, may choose to address those issues in a completely different and
more comprehensive manner. III. Validation Cause of Action A. Introduction Plaintiffs' fifth
cause of action in the first amended complaint seeks to invalidate DWR's
transfer of the Kern Fan Element and amendment of water supply contracts
pursuant to the Monterey Agreement as violations of the nonalienation mandate
of Water Code section 11464. Section 11464 expressly provides that "[n]o
water right, reservoir, conduit, or facility for the generation, production,
transmission, or distribution of electric power, acquired by the department
shall ever be sold, granted, or conveyed by the department so that the
department thereby is divested of the title to and ownership of it." The
trial court granted defendants' motion for summary adjudication of the
validation cause of action, ruling that the state water contractors, whose
motions to quash service of summons had been granted, were indispensable
parties to the validation action. We will conclude the
trial court's ruling quashing service deprived the court of in personam
jurisdiction of the water contractors; they could not be *921 joined as
parties in the validation proceedings. However, "A validating proceeding
differs from a traditional action challenging a public agency's decision
because it is an in rem action whose effect is binding on the agency and on all
other persons." (Millbrae School Dist. v. Superior Court (1989) 209
Cal.App.3d 1494, 1497 [261 Cal.Rptr. 409].) Consequently, the ruling on the
motion to quash did not, and could not, resolve the issue presented by the
motion for summary adjudication, viz., whether the court had in rem
jurisdiction to determine the validity of DWR's actions after all interested
parties were given proper notice. The very purpose of
an in rem action is to provide a binding judgment against the world. A motion
to quash service, by contrast, is an attack on in personam jurisdiction. Hence,
the fact that the service of summons on 14 water contractors was quashed means
they cannot be joined in the proceedings, but it is of no consequence in
determining whether plaintiffs established in rem jurisdiction. The motion for summary
adjudication, not the motion to quash, raises the dispositive issue whether the
trial court had jurisdiction to adjudicate the validity of DWR's contract to
divest itself of the Kern Fan Element and of the amended contracts DWR signed
implementing the terms of the Monterey Agreement. The specificity of the
validation statutes provides the answer. B. Analysis The statutory
requirements to establish jurisdiction over the res in validation proceedings
is set forth at section 860 et seq. of the Code of Civil Procedure. [FN8] Section
860 provides that a "public agency may upon the existence of any matter
which under any law is authorized to be determined pursuant to this chapter ...
bring an action ... to determine the validity of such matter. The action shall
be in the nature of a proceeding in rem." FN8 An in rem proceeding under section 860 et seq. may be
brought under Government Code sections 53511 and 17700 "to determine the
validity of [a state agency's] '... contracts ....' " (Planning &
Conservation League I, supra, 17 Cal.4th at p. 269; see also Wat. Code, 35855.) The term "public
agency" refers to the agency seeking a determination of the validity of
its action. It does not refer to other parties that may be interested in the
outcome of the action. Code of Civil Procedure section 861 encompasses these
interested parties. It provides that "[j]urisdiction of all interested
parties may be had by publication of summons ... in the county where the action
is pending," to wit, all interested parties whether public or private,
other than, of course, the public agency that brings the action. The *922
use of the term "jurisdiction" in this context is deceptive. Since
jurisdiction is necessary over the res, not over persons, in a validation
proceeding, section 861 of the Code of Civil Procedure is in essence a notice
provision. Interested persons must be noticed by publication of summons before
the court can obtain in rem jurisdiction of the validation action. Code of Civil
Procedure sections 860 and 861 apply to validation proceedings initiated by the
public agency whose action is at issue. The legislative scheme of which the two
statutes are component parts also authorizes proceedings by nonagency parties.
Such an action is covered by section 863 of the Code of Civil Procedure and is
sometimes called a "reverse validation action." (County of Riverside
v. Superior Court (1997) 54 Cal.App.4th 443, 445 [62 Cal.Rptr.2d 747].) Section
863 states: "If no proceedings have been brought by the public agency
pursuant to this chapter, any interested person may bring an action ... to
determine the validity of such matter." Read in context, the "public
agency" referred to in section 863 is necessarily the same public agency
referred to in section 860 or, in other words, the agency whose action is to be
tested or validated. And it is only
that public agency that, pursuant to section 863, "shall be a defendant
and shall be served with the summons and complaint in the action ...." [FN9]
It is uncontested that DWR is the public agency whose actions are challenged
and that it was properly served pursuant to section 863. All the other
(potential) parties to the action are deemed "interested parties"
over whom jurisdiction may be had by publication of summons. (Code Civ. Proc.,
861, 861.1.) That, too, was done in this case. [FN10] Accordingly, by
virtue of section 861, the court had jurisdiction over the res of DWR's actions
and could adjudicate its contract to convey the Kern Fan Element and its
amended contracts implementing the Monterey Agreement. [FN11] FN9 Defendants erroneously refer to "public agencies"
in the plural, whereas the validation statutes explicitly refer only to the
singular form, "the public agency." FN10 Other interested parties, including KCWA, were not only subject to the publication of summons in the county in which the action was filed, but were personally served with a copy of the summons. FN11 Plaintiffs do not, as defendants allege, claim the unnamed
water contractors were not indispensable because they received actual notice of
the validation proceeding. Rather, it is plaintiffs' position that the
contractors were properly served as "interested persons" and they
were not indispensable because the court had in rem jurisdiction. Defendants insist
that the trial court's ruling on the motion to quash resolved the
jurisdictional question, including jurisdiction in rem, adversely to the
plaintiffs, who are now, they claim, precluded from raising the issue in this
appeal. They mistakenly blur the distinction between the motion for *923
summary adjudication and the motions to quash service of process. [FN12]
The two motions involved different parties and achieved very different results.
[FN13] |