Marina Coast Water Dist. v. County of Monterey

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 4, 2023
DocketH049146
StatusPublished

This text of Marina Coast Water Dist. v. County of Monterey (Marina Coast Water Dist. v. County of Monterey) 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
Marina Coast Water Dist. v. County of Monterey, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 9/8/23; Modified and Certified for Partial Pub. 10/4/23 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

MARINA COAST WATER DISTRICT, H049146 & H049170 (Monterey County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 19CV003305)

v.

COUNTY OF MONTEREY et al.,

Defendants and Appellants;

CALIFORNIA-AMERICAN WATER COMPANY,

Real Party in Interest and Appellant.

California-American Water Company (Cal-Am), an investor-owned utility that supplies water to much of the Monterey Peninsula, seeks to implement its Monterey Peninsula Water Supply Project (Water Supply Project) to comply with a state order to cease its decades-long overuse of other water sources. Crucial to the Water Supply Project are (1) construction of the desalination plant here at issue in unincorporated Monterey County and (2) the drilling of wells in coastal land administered by the City of Marina (the City) to supply the plant. We are called to review the approval of construction of the desalination plant by the County of Monterey through its Board of Supervisors (collectively, the County). The Water Supply Project is intended to increase the region’s supply of potable water by using the wells to draw unusable seawater and brackish water1 from coastal aquifers in the Salinas Valley Groundwater Basin (Salinas Basin),2 and routing it by pipeline to the plant, where it will be desalinated. As a hydrological matter, whether the Water Supply Project will serve its purpose depends on the nature of the water the planned intake wells draw from the “capture zone”—the volume of aquifer that contributes the water extracted by the wells—and, by extension, on the replenishment, or recharge, of the capture zone predominantly by ocean water and not fresh water from inland portions of the Salinas Basin. As a legal matter, realization of the multijurisdictional Water Supply Project depends on the approval of its many component parts by dozens of governmental agencies. Acting as a lead agency under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA; see Pub. Resources Code, § 21050),3 the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) undertook environmental review of Cal-Am’s proposal for the Water Supply Project. The CPUC ultimately certified a final EIR and granted Cal-Am a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity authorizing commencement of a scaled-down version of Cal-

1 For consistency, our terminology tracks that of the final environmental impact report (EIR): “[S]eawater is defined as water that originated in the ocean, identified as containing 33,500 mg/L TDS [total dissolved solids], which represents current salinity levels in Monterey Bay; brackish water is a combination of seawater and fresh water with TDS concentrations between 500 mg/L and 33,500 mg/L; and fresh water is that which originated in a groundwater basin through precipitation or rivers and streams and contains TDS concentrations of less than 500 mg/L.” 2 As explained in the final EIR, “[a] groundwater basin is an aquifer or a stacked series of aquifers with reasonably well-defined boundaries in a lateral direction and a definable bottom.” 3 Undesignated statutory references are to the Public Resources Code.

2 Am’s proposal, subject to Cal-Am’s obtaining necessary approvals from various responsible agencies. Among the various responsible agencies having jurisdiction over local components of the Water Supply Project, the City denied Cal-Am coastal development permitting to install the intake wells. While Cal-Am’s appeal from the City’s denial was pending before the California Coastal Commission, the County approved Cal-Am’s application for a permit (the Permit) to construct the desalination plant and associated facilities in an unincorporated part of Monterey county. Marina Coast Water District (MCWD) challenged the County’s approval of the Permit by filing a petition for writ of mandate and a complaint for declaratory relief. MCWD argued, among other things, that the County: (1) violated CEQA by (a) failing to prepare a subsequent or supplemental EIR; and (b) adopting a statement of overriding considerations that was unsupported by substantial evidence in the record; and (2) violated its own general plan by approving a project that lacked a long-term sustainable water supply and adequate water supply system. The trial court granted MCWD’s writ petition in part and denied it in part. The court ruled that the County was not required to prepare a subsequent or supplemental EIR and did not violate its own general plan, but unlawfully relied on the water-related benefits of the desalination plant in its statement of overriding considerations without addressing the uncertainty as to the water supply introduced by the City’s denial of the coastal development permit. The court issued a peremptory writ of mandate setting aside the County’s approval of the Permit and entered judgment on April 29, 2021. The County and Cal-Am timely appealed and MCWD cross-appealed. On the County and Cal-Am’s appeal, we conclude that the County’s statement of overriding considerations was supported by substantial evidence and any remaining deficiency in the statement as an informational document was not prejudicial. On

3 MCWD’s cross-appeal, we are not persuaded that the trial court erred in rejecting MCWD’s other contentions. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment. I. BACKGROUND A. Historical Sources of Water Supply Water supply has been a concern on the semi-arid Monterey Peninsula for decades, given the frequency of drought conditions. One source of water on the peninsula is the Carmel River system. Construction of the San Clemente Dam on the Carmel River in 1921 formed the San Clemente Reservoir, until the dam’s removal in 2015. River water diverted at the dam was the sole water supply for the peninsula until the 1940’s. In 1949, Los Padres Dam, which forms Los Padres Reservoir, was built upstream of the San Clemente Dam to provide a second reservoir and control water flowing into the San Clemente Reservoir. Starting in the 1940’s and continuing into the 1990’s, production wells installed along the river in the Carmel Valley Alluvial Aquifer became another means of collecting Carmel River water. The Seaside Groundwater Basin (Seaside Basin) is another source of water for the peninsula. Groundwater pumping from aquifers in the Seaside Basin has exceeded recharge.4 The Salinas Basin is north of the Seaside Basin. The Salinas Basin is hydrologically connected to the Monterey Bay by ocean outcrops in the Salinas Basin’s 180-Foot Equivalent (FTE)5 and 400-Foot Aquifers. (See Appendix 1, post.) Due to this connection, the ocean is a constant source of pressure for aquifers in the Salinas Basin.

4 An aquifer may be recharged by surface water or from adjacent aquifers. Along the coast, recharge may also be from the ocean. When the ocean recharges an aquifer, seawater enters the ocean to mix with the fresh groundwater, causing seawater intrusion. 5 The 180-Foot Aquifer and 180-FTE Aquifer are distinguished by the “different depositional process” that produced the terrace deposits of which the aquifers are composed, but both aquifers are “at the same depth interval and . . . considered to be 4 Before wells extracted water from the Salinas Valley, the seaward gradient of inland groundwater6 effectively limited seawater intrusion into the coastal aquifers of the Salinas Basin. Surface water from the Salinas Valley watershed would recharge the aquifers and counter pressure from seawater, maintaining dynamic equilibrium at the interface. Development of the Salinas Valley brought water supply wells that pumped water from the Salinas Basin. In the Salinas Valley, groundwater is primarily pumped from the 180-Foot and 400-Foot Aquifers.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Masonite Corp. v. County of Mendocino
218 Cal. App. 4th 230 (California Court of Appeal, 2013)
Lesher Communications, Inc. v. City of Walnut Creek
802 P.2d 317 (California Supreme Court, 1990)
Citizens of Goleta Valley v. Board of Supervisors
801 P.2d 1161 (California Supreme Court, 1990)
Citizens of Goleta Valley v. Board of Supervisors
197 Cal. App. 3d 1167 (California Court of Appeal, 1988)
Village Laguna of Laguna Beach, Inc. v. Board of Supervisors
134 Cal. App. 3d 1022 (California Court of Appeal, 1982)
WOODWARD PARK HOMEOWNERS v. City of Fresno
58 Cal. Rptr. 3d 102 (California Court of Appeal, 2007)
Federation of Hillside & Canyon Associations v. City of Los Angeles
24 Cal. Rptr. 3d 543 (California Court of Appeal, 2004)
California Native Plant Society v. City of Santa Cruz
177 Cal. App. 4th 957 (California Court of Appeal, 2009)
Sequoyah Hills Homeowners Ass'n v. City of Oakland
23 Cal. App. 4th 704 (California Court of Appeal, 1993)
Tuolumne County Citizens for Responsible Growth, Inc. v. City of Sonora
66 Cal. Rptr. 3d 645 (California Court of Appeal, 2007)
Riverwatch v. Olivenhain Municipal Water District
170 Cal. App. 4th 1186 (California Court of Appeal, 2009)
In Re Gossage
5 P.3d 186 (California Supreme Court, 2000)
City of Marina v. Board of Trustees of California State University
138 P.3d 692 (California Supreme Court, 2006)
Ketchum v. Moses
17 P.3d 735 (California Supreme Court, 2001)
California-American Water Co. v. Marina Coast Water District
2 Cal. App. 5th 748 (California Court of Appeal, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Marina Coast Water Dist. v. County of Monterey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marina-coast-water-dist-v-county-of-monterey-calctapp-2023.