California Sportfishing Protection Alliance v. State Water Resources Control Board

73 Cal. Rptr. 3d 560, 160 Cal. App. 4th 1625, 38 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20071, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 382
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 21, 2008
DocketA117494
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 73 Cal. Rptr. 3d 560 (California Sportfishing Protection Alliance v. State Water Resources Control Board) 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
California Sportfishing Protection Alliance v. State Water Resources Control Board, 73 Cal. Rptr. 3d 560, 160 Cal. App. 4th 1625, 38 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20071, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 382 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

SWAGER, J.

We review in this appeal the trial court’s denial of appellants California Sportfishing Protection Alliance and DeltaKeeper Chapter of BayKeeper’s petition for writ of mandate, which challenged respondents State Water Resources Control Board (State Board) and state Regional Water Quality Control Board-Region 5’s (Regional Board) 2006 adoption and approval of the Deer Creek temperature amendment to the existing Water Quality Control Plan for the Sacramento and San Joaquin River Basins (the *1631 Basin Plan or plan). Appellants claim that the amendment violates the provisions of the Porter-Cologne Water Quality Control Act (Wat. Code, § 13000 et seq.) 1 (Porter-Cologne Act) and the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) (Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq.). In approving the temperature amendment to the Basin Plan, appellants argue respondents made findings on the beneficial uses of Deer Creek that are not supported by the evidence in the administrative record, and failed to comply with environmental review requirements that are the functional equivalent of CEQA. We conclude that the findings challenged by appellants are supported by the evidence, and respondents did not violate administrative regulations governing the environmental review of a basin plan by a certified regulatory program. We therefore affirm the order.

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Deer Creek, the subject of this litigation, is a small tributary stream in a watershed in the lower woodlands of the Sierra Nevada foothills in El Dorado and Sacramento Counties. It flows through residential neighborhoods and parks into a small reservoir at Cameron Park Lake, over a low flashboard dam, past a wastewater treatment plant, then across predominantly undeveloped agricultural land to its confluence with the Cosumnes River near the town of Elk Grove. It is a typical Sierra Nevada foothill stream. Runoff from seasonal rains rather than snowpack supplies Deer Creek in the rainy season, but beginning in May or June the flow subsides or ceases above Cameron Park Lake. Below the lake an intermittent or subterranean flow in summer and fall is derived from reservoir overflow, springs, effluent, and urban runoff. Like the Cosumnes River, during many years Deer Creek primarily “runs dry” for much of the summer season.

In 1974, the El Dorado Irrigation District (the District) constructed the Deer Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant in the watershed of Deer Creek, not far below Cameron Park Lake. Absent the discharge from the wastewater treatment plant, Deer Creek is an “ephemeral stream” during the dry season, so the effluent discharge helps to provide flow for aquatic habitat. Tertiary treated effluent from the wastewater treatment plant constitutes the vast majority of the flow of Deer Creek—90 percent or more—below the point of discharge during the summer and fall months, and for most of the year appreciably exceeds the natural water temperature in the creek. During the “precipitation period” of the year, effluent discharges constitute a much smaller but erratic fraction of the downstream flows, and natural conditions *1632 often provide adequate background flow to maintain hydraulic continuity with the Cosumnes River. The relative magnitude of temperature increase in Deer Creek due to the effluent discharges is highly variable from month to month and year to year, depending upon precipitation, variation in creek flow rates, ambient air temperatures, and other factors.

In accordance with the mandates of the Porter-Cologne Act, in 1975 respondents adopted a water quality control plan for the Sacramento and San Joaquin River basins, which, as amended in 1989, 1994, and 1998, established water quality objectives for Deer Creek. 2 In general, the Basin Plan stated that the primary goal of water quality planning is the protection and enhancement of existing and potential designated beneficial uses, achieved by setting quality and quantity objectives for surface and groundwaters. Under the “tributary rule,” the “beneficial uses” designated in the Basin Plan for the Cosumnes River, and hence for Deer Creek as a “cold freshwater aquatic habitat,” included municipal and domestic supply, irrigation and stock watering, recreation, preservation of warm and cold freshwater habitats as necessary to support aquatic vegetation or wildlife, and the migration, spawning and reproduction of aquatic organisms.

To maintain and protect cold freshwater beneficial uses, the Basin Plan, prior to the amendment challenged in the current proceeding, provided that “[a]t no time or place shall the temperature of COLD or WARM intrastate waters be increased more than 5 degrees F above natural receiving water temperature.” This prohibition against a discharge that raised the water temperature more than 5 degrees Fahrenheit—referred to as the “delta 5°F requirement” or the “5°F increase limitation”—was generic to “all water bodies” in the basin, and did not specifically protect Deer Creek. The Basin Plan also stated that the “natural receiving water temperature of intrastate waters shall not be altered unless it can be demonstrated to the satisfaction of the Regional Water Board that such [alteration] in temperature does not adversely affect beneficial uses.”

*1633 Effluent discharges from the Deer Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant, while of “high quality,” regularly exceeded the specified water objectives for pH, turbidity and temperature in late spring, summer and fall. The effluent is minimally diluted by the natural receiving water of the stream in the summer and fall, with the result that the “Basin Plan temperature objective [could not] be consistently achieved downstream of the point of effluent discharge” under the existing delta 5 degrees Fahrenheit requirement. Although the plant was significantly upgraded over the years in response to violations of the existing basin plan, during low-flow conditions Deer Creek still did not achieve compliance with the delta 5 degrees Fahrenheit requirement. In 2000, the District proposed a change in the designated beneficial uses of Deer Creek, particularly the cold freshwater habitat designation. The proposal was rejected by the Regional Board’s staff in July of 2000, out of concern for potential presence of steelhead trout and the “rare occurrence of individual rainbow trout” in Deer Creek.

The District then pursued a “Site-Specific Basin Plan Amendment” for Deer Creek in lieu of further physical improvements to the plant, to achieve compliance with the Basin Plan objectives for pH, turbidity and temperature. In January of 2003, the Regional Board issued a staff report that also proposed a site-specific amendment to the Basin Plan for “Deer Creek temperature.” The proposal noted that the delta 5 degrees Fahrenheit requirement is neither “supported by current science regarding the effects of temperature on aquatic life” nor “consistent with U.S. E.P.A.’s current approach to regulating temperature in ambient waters.”

In accordance with the District’s request, the Regional Board staff’s report considered three alternatives, but recommended “site-specific, numeric temperature objectives for Deer Creek” to replace the generic delta 5 degrees Fahrenheit requirement. 3

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73 Cal. Rptr. 3d 560, 160 Cal. App. 4th 1625, 38 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20071, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-sportfishing-protection-alliance-v-state-water-resources-calctapp-2008.