City of Hesperia v. Lake Arrowhead Community Services Dist.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 12, 2023
DocketD079956
StatusPublished

This text of City of Hesperia v. Lake Arrowhead Community Services Dist. (City of Hesperia v. Lake Arrowhead Community Services Dist.) 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
City of Hesperia v. Lake Arrowhead Community Services Dist., (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 7/12/23

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

CITY OF HESPERIA, D079956

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. CIVDS2019176)

LAKE ARROWHEAD COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT et al.,

Defendants and Respondents;

SUNPOWER CORPORATION SYSTEM,

Real Party in Interest and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Bernardino County, David S. Cohn, Judge. Affirmed. Aleshire & Wynder, Eric L. Dunn, June S. Ailin, and Nicholas P. Dwyer for Plaintiff and Appellant. Best Best & Krieger, Amy E. Hoyt and Amanda Daams; Stoel Rives and Lindsay D. Puckett for Defendants and Respondents Lake Arrowhead Community Services District and Board of Directors of Lake Arrowhead Community Services District. Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis and Emily L. Murray for Real Party in Interest and Respondent, SunPower Corporation System. I. INTRODUCTION This appeal arises from a second lawsuit brought by the City of Hesperia (the City) against respondents Lake Arrowhead Community Services District and the Board of Directors of Lake Arrowhead Community Services District (jointly, the District) regarding a proposed 0.96-megawatt solar photovoltaic project (the Solar Project) that the District has been planning to develop on six acres of a 350-acre property it owns that is known

as the Hesperia Farms Property.1 The Hesperia Farms Property is located within the City’s municipal boundary and is generally subject to the City’s zoning regulations. The District began considering the development of the Solar Project with an eye toward the use of a state renewable energy self-generation bill credit transfer program (the RES-BCT program), as codified in Public

Utilities Code2 section 2830. The RES-BCT program permits local governmental entities to offset the cost of their energy consumption at one

1 The first lawsuit filed by the City against the District regarding the Solar Project was City of Hesperia v. Lake Arrowhead Community Services District et al., San Bernardino County Superior Court case No. CIVDS1602017, filed in February 2016 (the 2016 lawsuit).

2 Further statutory references are to the Public Utilities Code unless otherwise indicated. 2 location by receiving bill credits for the generation of renewable energy at a different location. (See § 2830, subs. (a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(4) & (c).) In August 2015, in anticipation of its use of the bill crediting system provided for under the RES-BCT program, the District entered into a Public Utilities Commission Rule 21 Generator Interconnection Agreement for Exporting Facilities (the Interconnection Agreement) with Southern California Edison (SCE), the investor-owned utility company that provides energy service to all of the District’s facilities. The Interconnection Agreement authorizes the Solar Project’s connection to SCE’s electrical grid distribution system and provides that the District will receive a credit for its generation of electrical energy at the RES-BCT tariff rate that it may use to offset the cost of energy it consumes at other sites. The District first approved its Solar Project in December 2015, after determining that the project was either absolutely exempt from the City’s zoning regulations under Government Code section 53091, or qualifiedly

exempt under Government Code section 53096.3 Displeased with the District’s determination that it was not required to comply with the City’s zoning regulations, the City filed an action against the District seeking a writ of mandate prohibiting the District from further pursuing the Solar Project. The City challenged the District’s approval of the Solar Project on two

3 Government Code section 53091, subdivision (e) provides an absolute exemption from local zoning regulations for “the location or construction of facilities . . . for the production or generation of electrical energy”—unless those facilities are “for the storage or transmission of electrical energy,” in which event the local zoning ordinances apply. Government Code section 53096, subdivision (a) provides a qualified exemption for an agency’s proposed use upon a showing that (a) the development is for facilities “related to storage or transmission of water or electrical energy” and (b) four-fifths of the agency’s members “determine[ ] by resolution” that “there is no feasible alternative to [the agency’s] proposal.” 3 grounds: (1) that the District was without statutory authority to construct and operate the Solar Project, and (2) that the Solar Project was not exempt from the zoning regulations under either of the Government Code provisions on which the District had relied. At the conclusion of the trial court proceedings, the court determined that the District possessed the authority to develop and operate the Solar Project but agreed with the City that the District was not exempt from the City’s zoning regulations under either Government Code section 53091 or Government Code section 53096. While the District appealed the trial court’s judgment, the City did not cross-appeal to challenge that portion of the trial court’s ruling that the District possessed the authority to construct and operate the Solar Project. This court affirmed the trial court’s judgment in City of Hesperia v. Lake Arrowhead Community Services Dist. (2019) 37 Cal.App.5th 734 (Hesperia I). In Hesperia I, we determined that the District’s Solar Project was not exempt from the City’s zoning regulations under Government Code section 53091’s absolute exemption, or under Government Code section 53096’s qualified exemption. (Hesperia I, supra, at pp. 758–759, 760–765.) We concluded, however, that Government Code section 52096’s qualified exemption did not apply to the District’s approval of the Solar Project only because the District had failed to provide substantial evidence to support its conclusion that there was no other feasible alternative to its proposed location for the Solar Project. This result left open the possibility that the District could undertake further analyses and show that there is no feasible alternative to the Solar Project’s proposed location—this time with substantial supporting evidence in the record—in order to avoid application of the City’s zoning ordinances.

4 In response to Hesperia I, the District began a process to address the evidentiary failures in the administrative record in connection with its no- feasible-alternative determination. The District retained experts to conduct technical analyses and develop reports evaluating the feasibility of other potential sites for developing a solar energy facility, and District staff prepared a feasibility study. In June 2020, after these reports and studies had been completed, the District’s board members unanimously adopted a resolution concluding that there is no feasible alternative to the Hesperia

Farms Property location for developing a solar energy facility.4 A few months after the District made its second no-feasible-alternative determination with respect to the Solar Project, the City filed a second petition for writ of mandate and complaint challenging the Solar Project. In this second action, the City asserts four causes of action against the District. In the first cause of action, the City challenges the District’s eligibility to use the RES-BCT program with respect to the Solar Project as proposed on the Hesperia Farms Property; specifically, the City alleges that the Hesperia Farms Property is not within the District’s “geographical boundaries” as required by section 2830. In the second cause of action, the City alleges violations of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).

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City of Hesperia v. Lake Arrowhead Community Services Dist., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-hesperia-v-lake-arrowhead-community-services-dist-calctapp-2023.