Cal. Clean Energy Com. v. City of Woodland

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 2014
DocketC072033
StatusPublished

This text of Cal. Clean Energy Com. v. City of Woodland (Cal. Clean Energy Com. v. City of Woodland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cal. Clean Energy Com. v. City of Woodland, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 2/28/14; part. pub. order 4/1/14 (see end of opn.)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Yolo) ----

CALIFORNIA CLEAN ENERGY COMMITTEE,

Plaintiff and Appellant, C072033

v. (Super. Ct. No. CVPT112146)

CITY OF WOODLAND,

Defendant and Appellant;

PETROVICH DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, LLC, et al.,

Real Parties in Interest and Respondents.

The City of Woodland (City) approved Gateway II –- a project by Petrovich Development Company, LLC (Petrovich) to develop a 234-acre regional shopping center on undeveloped agricultural land located at the City’s periphery. California Clean Energy Committee (CCEC), a California nonprofit organization, filed a petition for writ of mandate under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) (Pub. Resources

1 Code, §§ 21050 et seq.) to challenge the City’s certification of its final environmental impact report (final EIR) and approval of the project.1 The City opposed the petition, which was denied in its entirety by the trial court. CCEC appeals, contending (1) the trial court erred in concluding Gateway II did not conflict with the City’s general plan, (2) the City’s mitigation measures are insufficient to ameliorate the urban decay that will be caused by Gateway II, (3) the City did not give meaningful consideration to feasible project alternatives such as the mixed- use alternative, and (4) the final EIR did not properly identify and analyze potentially significant energy impacts generated by Gateway II. The City asserts claims regarding conflicts between Gateway II and the general plan are not cognizable because CCEC did not comply with the statute of limitations imposed by the planning and zoning law (Gov. Code, § 65000 et seq.). The City additionally asserts CCEC failed to present the CEQA issues in the trial court or during the administrative process. The City further argues it properly considered each of the other issues raised by CCEC but rejected them as it is allowed to do under CEQA. And, the City asserts it committed to implementing mitigation measures sufficient to ameliorate urban decay expected to result from Gateway II. The City also cross-appeals, contending the trial court erroneously granted CCEC’s motion to tax costs. Specifically, the City claims it should have received its costs for helping prepare the administrative record. CCEC responds that a public agency cannot recover costs when the CEQA petitioner has elected to prepare the record.

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Public Resources Code. References to guidelines are to those located in California Code of Regulations, title 14, section 15000 and following (Guidelines). These Guidelines are promulgated by the secretary of the California Resources Agency to implement CEQA requirements. (§ 21083, subd. (e); Center for Sierra Nevada Conservation v. County of El Dorado (2012) 202 Cal.App.4th 1156, 1161, fn. 1 (Center for Sierra Nevada Conservation).)

2 We conclude CCEC’s petition in the trial court did not assert a cause of action arising under the planning and zoning law. Consequently, CCEC has not preserved the issue of whether the rezoning of the land for Gateway II conflicts with the City’s general plan.2 On the merits, we conclude the City’s mitigation measures for alleviating the anticipated urban decay in its downtown and at a local shopping mall are inadequate under CEQA. Although one of the five mitigation measures is likely to lessen the effects of urban decay, even the City recognizes it alone does not constitute sufficient mitigation. The remaining urban decay mitigation measures are too speculative, vague, or noncommittal to comply with CEQA. As to the City’s consideration of project alternatives, we conclude the EIRs did not properly assess the merits of the mixed-use alternative. On the issue of energy impacts, we conclude CEQA required the City to assess transportation, construction, and operation energy impacts resulting from Gateway II. The City’s reliance on the California Building Standards Code (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 24, part 6) (Building Code) and California Green Building Standards Code (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 24, part 11) (CALGreen) did not suffice to address issues of transportation, construction, and operation energy impacts. Our conclusion that the judgment must be reversed obviates our need to consider the City’s issue on cross-appeal, which depends on the City being the prevailing party on the CEQA claims.

2 However, the City’s additional assertions of forfeiture of the CEQA issues are troubling because they are contradicted by the record. In a case in which the appellate record consists of 18,010 pages, claims regarding failure to assert a point during the EIR process should be more carefully presented.

3 BACKGROUND The City’s General Plan The City adopted its general plan in December 2002. In it, the City announced it intended “[t]o revitalize the Downtown district as the heart of the city. [¶] With a stock of historic buildings that tie the community to its past, Downtown is the center of community activity and a primary source of Woodland’s identity. The General Plan seeks to preserve Downtown’s central location and its function as a center for community activities by continuing the City’s revitalization efforts and considering the effects of other land use decisions on Downtown vitality.” The Gateway II Project The first phase of the development (Gateway I) was approved in 2006 and involved Petrovich’s development of 49 acres of agricultural land for retail and commercial uses on the edge of the City –- near the intersection of Interstate Highway 5 (I-5) and Yolo County Road 102. Gateway I was completed and began leasing when Petrovich submitted a plan to the City for development of the next phase of the project (Gateway II). In February 2007, Petrovich filed an application with the City to annex approximately 154 acres of farmland to the City and to rezone the acreage from “Agricultural” to “General Commercial.” The Draft EIR In October 2009, the City issued a notice of preparation that an EIR would be prepared for the proposed Gateway II project. A draft EIR was published in April 2010. The draft EIR described the scope of the project as a regional commercial center with approximately 808,000 square feet of retail space, 3 hotels with 100 rooms each, a 20,000 square foot sit-down restaurant, 3 fast food restaurants with a cumulative 30,500 square feet of space, an 80,000 square foot auto mall, and 100,000 square feet of office space. The draft EIR studied Gateway II’s anticipated impact on retail in surrounding areas. Based on “the super-regional retail center size of Woodland Gateway Phase I and

4 Phase II,” the draft EIR expected the project would “include customers from Woodland, Davis, Dixon, North Natomas, Greenbriar Specific Plan area, Colusa County, and unincorporated portions of Yolo County (including UC Davis and Winters).” Because “the specific tenant mix is unknown,” the draft EIR “evaluate[d] the retail trade area’s ability to support the overall amount of retail rather than specific classes of retail goods.” The analysis divided its assessment of impacts into “two time periods based on projected market demand.” According to the draft EIR, “The phasing approach allows for the Project to minimize the potential for urban decay. [¶] —- The first time period is based on estimated market demand in 2015. This phase includes the first 295,000 square feet of retail development and half of the auto mall (two dealerships). It is anticipated this first phase will be completed by 2015. [¶] —- The second time period includes the cumulative project absorption through 2025.

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Cal. Clean Energy Com. v. City of Woodland, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cal-clean-energy-com-v-city-of-woodland-calctapp-2014.