Delta Stewardship Council Cases

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 12, 2020
DocketC082944
StatusPublished

This text of Delta Stewardship Council Cases (Delta Stewardship Council Cases) 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
Delta Stewardship Council Cases, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 4/10/20; Modified and certified for partial publication 5/12/20 (order attached)

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

C082944 & C086199

(JCCP No. 4758; Sacramento Super. Ct. case Nos. 34-2013-80001500, DELTA STEWARDSHIP COUNCIL CASES. 34-2013-80001530, 34-2013- 80001534; San Francisco Super. Ct. case Nos. CPF-13-513047; CPF-13- 513048, CPF-13-513049.)

This case concerns the management of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (Delta), a critically important natural resource for California and the nation (Wat. Code, § 85002).1 It is the most valuable estuary and wetland ecosystem on the west coast of North and South America, and is the hub of California’s water delivery system. (Ibid.) It is endowed with many invaluable and unique resources of major statewide significance,

1 Unless otherwise specified, undesignated statutory references are to the Water Code.

1 including highly productive agriculture, recreational assets, fisheries, and wildlife environment. (§ 12981, subds. (a), (b).) In addition, the economies of major regions of the state depend on the ability to use water within the Delta watershed or to import water from the Delta watershed. More than two-thirds of California residents and more than two million acres of highly productive farmland receive water exported from the Delta watershed. (§ 85004, subd. (a).) Water diverted from the Delta watershed has made the Central Valley the fruit basket and salad bowl of the nation. Unfortunately, the Delta is not doing so well. After years of slow decline, the Delta’s watery ecosystem has gone critical. In California, the conflicts over water are legendary. At the heart of California’s water troubles are scarcity of supply and competing demands—in particular, conflict with the water needs of the ecosystem. This dynamic of conflict characterizes the essential debate over management of the Delta. Due to ecosystem decline and increasing demand for limited water resources, management of the Delta has been the subject of considerable, and oftentimes intense, review, planning, and litigation. In 2009, after decades of conflict and unsuccessful efforts to comprehensively address the many problems and challenges facing the Delta, the Legislature found and declared that the “Delta watershed and California’s water infrastructure are in crisis and existing Delta policies are not sustainable,” and that “[r]esolving the crisis requires fundamental reorganization of the state’s management of Delta watershed resources.” (§ 85001, subd. (a).) In response to this crisis, the Legislature enacted the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Reform Act of 2009 (§ 85000 et seq.) (Delta Reform Act or Act). As part of the Act, the Legislature created the Delta Stewardship Council (Council) as an independent agency of the state (§ 85200, subd. (a)) and charged it with adopting and implementing a legally enforceable “Delta Plan,” a comprehensive, long-term management plan for the Delta that furthers two “coequal goals”—“providing a more reliable water supply for California

2 and protecting, restoring, and enhancing the Delta ecosystem” (§§ 85001, subd. (c), 85054, 85059, 85300, subd. (a)). Following the preparation of a program-level environmental impact report (PEIR) pursuant to the California Environmental Quality Act (Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq.) (CEQA), the Council adopted the Delta Plan in May 2013, which includes a set of recommendations and regulatory policies to achieve the coequal goals. The regulatory policies were subsequently approved as regulations by the Office of Administrative Law, and are currently codified at sections 5001-5016 of title 23 of the California Code of Regulations. Thereafter, seven lawsuits were filed by various groups (e.g., water exporters, in-Delta water users, environmental organizations) challenging the validity of the Delta Plan, the Delta Plan regulations, and the PEIR for the Delta Plan. The lawsuits were based primarily on alleged violations of the Delta Reform Act, the Administrative Procedures Act (Gov. Code, § 11340 et seq.) (APA), and CEQA. Each lawsuit sought a writ of mandate commanding the Council to vacate and set aside the Delta Plan and the Delta Plan regulations, and to rescind its certification of the PEIR. After the lawsuits were coordinated into one proceeding in Sacramento County Superior Court,2 the trial court issued written rulings in May and July 2016 collectively rejecting the legal challenges predicated on violations of the Delta Reform Act and the

2 The coordinated proceeding consisted of the following cases: San Luis Delta Mendota Water Authority, et al. v. Delta Stewardship Council (Sacramento Super. Ct. case No. 34- 2013-80001500); State Water Contractors, et al. v. Delta Stewardship Council (Sacramento Super. Ct. case No. 34-2013-80001530); North Coast Rivers Alliance, et al. v. Delta Stewardship Council (Sacramento Super. Ct. case No. 34-2013-80001534); California Water Impact Network, et al. v. Delta Stewardship Council (San Francisco Super. Ct. case No. CPF-13-513047); Central Delta Water Agency, et al. v. Delta Stewardship Council (San Francisco Super. Ct. case No. CPF-13-513048); Save the California Delta Alliance v. Delta Stewardship Council (San Francisco Super. Ct. case No. CPF-13-513049); and City of Stockton v. Delta Stewardship Council (San Joaquin Super. Ct. case No. 39-2013-00298188-CU-WM-STK).

3 APA, with a few exceptions involving under-regulation by the Council. As a consequence of the statutory violations, the trial court vacated and set aside the Delta Plan and any applicable regulations and ordered the Council to correct the identified deficiencies. The trial court did not reach the CEQA challenges, finding that there was no longer a proposed project with a PEIR subject to review under CEQA. Following the entry of judgment, timely appeals were filed in each of the coordinated cases. In October 2017, the trial court granted a motion for attorney fees and costs filed by the petitioners in California Water Impact Network, et al. v. Delta Stewardship Council (San Francisco Super. Ct. case No. CPF-13-513047).3 The petitioners in that case were awarded $94,698.33, representing a substantial reduction from the amount requested—$1,440,713. The petitioners timely appealed from the trial court’s fee order. The Council filed a timely cross-appeal. In April 2018, while the appeals were pending, the Council adopted amendments to the Delta Plan (Delta Plan Amendments) and certified the PEIR for the Delta Plan Amendments.4 Due to a stipulated settlement, we dismissed the appeals taken from the judgment entered in one of the coordinated cases in April 2019.5 In July 2019, we

3 The Council has filed a motion asking us to take judicial notice of the trial court’s fee order. We grant the Council’s request. (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (d).) 4 Delta Alliance has filed a motion asking us to take judicial notice of various documents, including portions of the Delta Plan Amendments, portions of the PEIR for the Delta Plan Amendments, comment letters submitted to the Council during the environmental review process for the Delta Plan Amendments, and the Council’s resolution adopting the Delta Plan Amendments and certifying the PEIR for the Delta Plan Amendments. We grant Delta Alliance’s unopposed request for judicial notice. (Evid. Code, § 452, subds. (c), (h).) 5 We dismissed the appeals taken from the judgment entered in City of Stockton v. Delta Stewardship Council (San Joaquin Super. Ct. case No. 39-2013-00298188-CU-WM- STK).

4 granted the request to consolidate the appeals filed in the attorney fee case (case No. C086199) with the appeals filed in the merits case (case No. C082944) for purposes of argument and disposition.

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