Reprinted with the permission of LexisNexis.
125 Cal. App. 4th 1098; 23 Cal. Rptr. 3d 321; 2005 Daily Journal DAR 677
SALMON PROTECTION AND WATERSHED NETWORK et al.,
Plaintiffs and Respondents,
v.
THE COUNTY OF MARIN et al.,
Defendants; JOSHUA HEDLUND,
Real Party in Interest and Appellant.
COURT OF APPEAL, FIRST DISTRICT, CALIFORNIA
A105592
OPINION
Sepulveda, J.
The County of Marin (County) approved appellant Joshua
Hedlund’s construction of a house within a riparian area designated by the
County as an environmental resource of critical concern. In approving the project, the County
concluded that the project was categorically exempt from review under the
California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) (Pub. Resources Code, § 21050
et seq.) because it entailed construction of a single-family residence. (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 14, § 15303, subd. (a).)
The County did not make express findings on the specific regulatory
exception prohibiting categorical exemption for projects that “may impact on an
environmental resource of . . . critical concern,” but found generally that any
adverse environmental impacts were eliminated by mitigation measures adopted as
conditions for project approval. (Cal.
Code Regs., tit. 14, § 15300.2, subd. (a).)
The trial court issued a writ of mandate commanding the
County to set aside its approval of the project. The trial court found that the County erred
in relying upon mitigation measures to grant a categorical exemption from CEQA. We affirm the lower court’s order. Only those projects having no significant
effect on the environment are categorically exempt from CEQA review. (Pub. Resources Code, §§ 21080, subd.
(b)(9), 21084, subd. (a).) If a project
may have a significant effect on the environment, CEQA review must occur and
only then are mitigation measures relevant.
(Azusa Land Reclamation Co. v.
Main San Gabriel Basin Watermaster (1997) 52 Cal.App.4th 1165, 1199-2000 (Azusa).)
Mitigation measures may support a negative declaration but not a
categorical exemption. (Ibid.)
facts
The County general plan governing land use recognizes
riparian systems as “irreplaceable” and valuable for water quality, fish and
wildlife, recreation, aesthetics, erosion control, and human health. To protect riparian systems, the general plan
designates natural watercourses and adjacent riparian habitat as stream
conservation areas. Protective polices
for stream conservation areas are implemented through the County’s permit
review process and adoption of specific ordinances.
One such ordinance requires discretionary review of any
development adjacent to anadromous fish streams, even construction of
single-family homes. Anadromous fish,
like salmon, migrate upriver from the sea to breed in fresh water. In adopting the ordinance, the County Board of Supervisors found that a
discretionary permit process was necessary to protect riparian habitats and
their threatened coho salmon and steelhead trout populations from unconstrained
development. The ordinance was in
response to studies finding that there were approximately 160 undeveloped
riparian lots that were conventionally zoned and thus capable of receiving
ministerial building permits without review to insure environmental
protection. Almost all of these
undeveloped riparian lots are in the San Geronimo Valley, where the majority of
the County’s coho salmon and stealhead trout spawn. Appellant Hedlund’s property is one of these
undeveloped lots along San Geronimo Creek, and it was his request for a building
permit that prompted a County agency to initiate the zoning amendment that now
mandates discretionary review of development in sensitive riparian areas.
In June 2002, Hedlund submitted a design review application
to the County for permission to build a four-bedroom house of 3,649 square feet,
with a garage of 768 square feet, on a 7.26-acre parcel abutting San Geronimo
Creek and within a designated stream conservation area. The house would be within 40 feet of the
creek’s bank, and the creek setback for the parking area would be just 20 feet. Respondents Salmon Protection and Watershed
Network (SPAWN) and Tomales Bay Association (collectively, SPAWN), among
others, objected to the proposed development.
The County Community Development Agency (CDA) approved the project in October
2002, subject to conditions meant to minimize “adverse physical effects on the
natural environment.” The conditions
included detailed construction limitations and incorporation of a riparian
protection plan prepared by an engineering firm. The riparian protection plan acknowledged
that runoff from new rooftops and driveways can erode stream banks, and
proposed drainage features for erosion and sediment control. The CDA concluded that the project was
categorically exempt from CEQA because it entailed construction of a
single-family residence with no potentially significant impacts on the
environment.
In March 2003, the County Planning Commission likewise
approved the project, over SPAWN’s objections, after imposing additional
mitigation measures. The Planning Commission
found that the project “as conditioned incorporates numerous provisions
reducing to insignificance the possibility that the project would harm coho
salmon or steelhead trout.” SPAWN
appealed project approval to the County Board of Supervisors, which rejected the
appeal in April 2003. The Board of
Supervisors affirmed the project’s exemption from CEQA as a single-family
residence without adverse environmental impacts. The Board observed that one constraint upon
development of the site was potential “adverse impacts on the habitat of
threatened or endangered species,” but found that “[p]ossible disharmonies with
the creek have been adequately addressed” by the riparian protection plan and
other conditions of approval. The Board
found that the project, as conditioned
and mitigated, would not have significant adverse environmental effects.
On May 7, 2003, SPAWN filed a petition for a writ
of mandate to compel the County to set aside its approval of the Hedlund
project. SPAWN alleged, among other
things, that environmental review of the project was required under CEQA. The trial court denied SPAWN’s request for a
preliminary injunction to stop construction, and SPAWN petitioned this Court to
reverse the trial court’s order.
On October 9, 2003, we denied SPAWN’s writ petition
but directed the trial court’s attention to two issues for its consideration at
the hearing on the merits. We observed
that the Hedlund project appears to be in a County designated area of “critical
concern,” thus implicating an exception to categorical exemption from
CEQA. (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 14, § 15300.2, subd. (a).)
We also questioned whether the categorical exemption finding, which
considered potential environmental impacts, was made without reference to
proposed mitigation measures. (Azusa, supra, 52 Cal.App.4th at pp.
1199-1201.)
Following a hearing on the merits, the trial court granted
SPAWN’s petition for a writ of mandate and issued an order commanding the
County to set aside its approval of the Hedlund project. The court found that the County “erred
procedurally and substantively” in finding the project categorically exempt
from CEQA review. The project was within
a stream conservation area and had the potential to impact a County designated
environmental resource of critical concern, thus disentitling the project to
CEQA exemption. (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 14, § 15300.2, subd. (a).)
The County erred, the trial court concluded, in finding that Hedlund was
nevertheless entitled to a categorical exemption because the project’s adverse
impacts could be mitigated. The trial
court noted that eligibility for a categorical exemption must be determined
without reference to mitigation measures.
(Azusa, supra, 52 Cal.App.4th
at pp. 1199-1200.) Hedlund appealed
the trial court’s order.
discussion
A. CEQA requirements.
“CEQA
is a comprehensive scheme designed to provide long-term protection to the
environment,” and must be “interpreted ‘to afford the fullest possible
protection to the environment within the reasonable scope of the statutory
language.’ ” (Mountain Lion Foundation v. Fish & Game Com. (1997) 16 Cal.4th
105, 112.) To achieve its objective of
environmental protection, CEQA and the regulatory guidelines implementing it
“establish a three-tiered structure. If
a project falls within a category exempt by administrative regulation
[citation] or ‘it can be seen with certainty that the activity in question will
not have a significant effect on the environment [citation] [then] no further
agency evaluation is required. If there
is a possibility that the project may have a significant effect, the agency
undertakes an initial threshold study [citation] [and] if that study
demonstrates that the project ‘will not have a significant effect,’ the agency
may so declare in a brief Negative Declaration.
[Citation.] If the project is one
‘which may have a significant effect on the environment,’ an [Environmental
Impact Report (EIR)] is required.” (No Oil, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles (1974)
13 Cal.3d 68, 74.)
Certain “classes of projects are ‘categorically exempt’ from
CEQA pursuant to administrative regulation because they do not have a
significant effect on the environment.”
(Mountain Lion Foundation v. Fish
& Game Com., supra, 16 Cal.4th at pp. 112-113; Pub. Resources
Code, §§ 21080, subd. (b)(9), 21084, subd. (a).) Single-family homes are categorically exempt
from CEQA. (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 14, § 15303, subd. (a).)
Categorical exemptions, however, are subject to important
exceptions based on factors such as location, cumulative impact, or unusual
circumstances. (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 14, § 15300.2.) A
categorically exempt project, like a single-family residence, loses its exempt
status “where the project may impact on an environmental resource
of . . . critical concern where designated, precisely
mapped, and officially adopted pursuant to law by federal, state, or local
agencies.” (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 14, § 15300.2, subd. (a).)
A CEQA exemption is also inapplicable “when the cumulative impact of
successive projects of the same type in the same place, over time is
significant.” (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 14, § 15300.2, subd. (b).)
Nor may a categorical exemption “be used for an activity where there is
a reasonable possibility that the activity will have a significant effect on
the environment due to unusual circumstances.”
(Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, § 15300.2, subd. (c).)
“An agency should decide whether a project is eligible for a
categorical exemption as part of its preliminary review of the project” without
reference or reliance upon any proposed mitigation measures. (Azusa,
supra, 52 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1199-2000.) “ ‘In categorical exemption cases, where the
agency establishes that the project is within an exempt class, the burden
shifts to the party challenging the exemption to show that the project is not
exempt because it falls within one of the exceptions’ ” listed in the
regulatory guidelines. (Fairbank v. City of Mill Valley (1999)
75 Cal.App.4th 1243, 1259.)
B. The County erred in finding the Hedlund
project categorically exempt from CEQA.
Single-family homes are categorically exempt from CEQA,
except (1) when they “may impact on an environmental resource
of . . . critical concern”; (2) “when the cumulative impact
of successive projects of the same type in the same place, over time is
significant”; or “where there is a reasonable possibility that the activity
will have a significant effect on the environment due to unusual
circumstances.” (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 14, § 15300.2, subds. (a)-(c).) SPAWN maintains that all of these exceptions
apply here.
The County did not expressly address these regulatory
exceptions but did make a general finding that the project was exempt from CEQA
“because the construction of one single-family residence on a legal lot would
not create adverse environmental impacts,” and also found “no reasonable
possibility of any significant impacts.”
The County’s exemption finding is contrary to the evidence. The first exception to CEQA exemptions, where
a project “may impact on an environmental resource
of . . . critical concern” is the dispositive regulation
here. (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 14, § 15300.2, subd. (a).)
It is undisputed that the project site is adjacent to a protected
anadromous fish stream and within a stream conservation area. The County itself conceded in the lower court
that the project is within an area of “critical concern” of its own
designation. (Cal. Code Regs.,
tit. 14, § 15300.2, subd. (a).)
The relevant issue is thus reduced to whether the project “may impact”
on that environmental resource of critical concern.
Appellant Hedlund claims there is no potential for an
adverse environmental impact, but the County’s own findings prove
otherwise. The County Board of Supervisors remarked that one
constraint on development of the project site was the possible “adverse impacts
on the habitat of threatened or endangered species,” and also found “[p]ossible
disharmonies with the creek.” Even
Hedlund’s own engineering consultant acknowledged, in a riparian protection
plan submitted to the County, that runoff from new rooftops and driveways can
erode stream banks, and proposed extensive drainage features for erosion and
sediment control. The Board’s ultimate
conclusion that the project would not result in adverse effects was expressly
founded on “dozens of conditions that have been applied to enhance mitigations
and reduce to a minimum the possibility of any adverse environmental impacts.”
As the trial court properly found, the County erred in
relying upon mitigation measures to grant a categorical exemption from
CEQA. Only those projects having no
significant effect on the environment are categorically exempt from CEQA
review. (Pub. Resources Code,
§§ 21080, subd. (b)(9), 21084, subd. (a).)
“[A]n activity that may have a significant effect on the environment
cannot be categorically exempt.” (Mountain Lion Foundation v. Fish & Game
Com., supra, 16 Cal.4th at p. 124.)
If a project may have a significant effect on the environment, CEQA
review must occur, and only then are mitigation measures relevant. (Azusa,
supra, 52 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1199-2000.)
In Azusa, an agency authorized the continued
disposal of municipal waste at a landfill and declared the project exempt from
CEQA as the operation or minor alteration of an existing facility. (Azusa,
supra, 52 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1176, 1193.) The trial court reversed the agency’s
determination and concluded that CEQA applied because the project would have a
significant effect on the environment. (Id. at p. 1176.) The appellate court agreed that the
significant effect exception precluded categorical exemption from CEQA. (Id.
at pp. 1197-1201.)
In granting the categorical exemption, the agency in Azusa had acknowledged that pollutants
were leaking from the landfill but had relied upon evidence that mitigation
measures could prevent further pollution.
(Azusa, supra, at
p. 1198.) The appellate court
concluded that the agency’s reliance on mitigation measures to grant a
categorical exemption “ignored the governing issue—whether there was
substantial evidence of a reasonable possibility that continued dumping would
have a significant effect on the environment.”
(Ibid.) The court emphasized that “ ‘[i]t is the possibility of a significant effect . .
. which is at issue, not a determination of the actual effect, which would be
the subject of a negative declaration or an EIR.’ ”
(Id. at p. 1200, italics
in original.) The court held that
“proposed mitigation measures cannot be used to support a categorical exemption;
they must be considered under the standards that apply to a mitigated negative
declaration.” (Id. at p. 1199.)
As the Azusa court
observed, there are sound reasons for precluding reliance upon mitigation
measures at the preliminary stage of determining eligibility for a categorical
exemption. Regulatory guidelines dealing
with the environmental review process under CEQA “contain elaborate
standards—as well as significant procedural requirements—for determining whether
proposed mitigation will adequately protect the environment and hence make an EIR unnecessary; in sharp contrast, the
Guidelines governing preliminary review do not contain any requirements that
expressly deal with the evaluation of mitigation measures.” (Azusa,
supra, at p. 1200.) An agency
should not be permitted to evade standards governing the preparation of a
mitigated negative declaration “by evaluating proposed mitigation measures in
connection with the significant effect exception to a categorical exemption.” (Id. at
p. 1201.)
The County here likewise made a premature and unauthorized
environmental evaluation at the preliminary stage of considering eligibility
for a categorical exemption. The County Board of Supervisors’s findings that the
Hedlund project had possible “adverse impacts on the habitat of threatened or
endangered species,” and created “[p]ossible disharmonies with the creek”
disqualified the project for a categorical exemption. The possibility of impacts on a County designated
resource of critical concern necessitates review under CEQA, at which time
mitigation measures may be considered in evaluating the actual environmental
impact of the project.
disposition
The order
is affirmed.
CONCURRING
Kay, P.J.
Rivera, J.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE
OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION FOUR
|
SALMON PROTECTION AND WATERSHED NETWORK et al.,
Plaintiffs
and Respondents,
v.
THE COUNTY OF MARIN et al.,
Defendants;
JOSHUA HEDLUND,
Real
Party in Interest and Appellant.
|
A105592
(Marin County
Super. Ct. No. CV032133)
ORDER MODIFYING
OPINION,
DENYING
REHEARING, AND
CERTIFYING
OPINION FOR
PUBLICATION
[NO CHANGE IN
JUDGMENT]
|
THE COURT:
It is
ordered that the opinion filed herein on December
16, 2004,
be modified as follows:
1. Add the following at page 8, after the
second full paragraph:
Appellant
Hedlund argues that Azusa does not
preclude an agency from relying upon proposed mitigation measures in deciding
whether a project is eligible for a categorical exemption provided that the
mitigation measures, like his riparian protection plan, are included in the
initial project application. The
argument is untenable. The determination
of whether a project may impact a designated environmental resource must be
made without reference or reliance upon any proposed mitigation measures. (Azusa,
supra, 52 Cal.App.4th at
pp. 1199-1200.) Reliance upon
mitigation measures (whether included in the application or later adopted)
involves an evaluative process of assessing those mitigation measures and
weighing them against potential environmental impacts, and that process must be
conducted under established CEQA standards and procedures for EIRs or negative
declarations.
2. Delete the first sentence of the last
paragraph on page 8 and replace it with:
The
County made a premature and unauthorized environmental evaluation at the
preliminary stage of considering eligibility for a categorical exemption.
The above
modification does not effect any change in the appellate judgment. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 24(c)(2).)
The County of Marin’s request that the court order
rehearing is denied.
The opinion
in the above-entitled matter filed on December
16, 2004,
was not certified for publication in the Official Reports. For good cause it now appears that the
opinion should be published in the Official Reports and it is so ordered.
Trial Court:
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Marin County Superior Court.
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Trial Judge:
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Honorable Lynn Duryee.
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Counsel for Real Party in Interest and Appellant:
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Neil Sorensen; Stoel Rives, Anne Evelyn Mudge.
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Counsel for Plaintiff and Respondents:
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Michael Ward Graf.
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