Nacimiento Regional Water Management Advisory Committee v. Monterey County Water Resources Agency

15 Cal. App. 4th 200, 19 Cal. Rptr. 2d 1, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3180, 93 Daily Journal DAR 5503, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 471
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1993
DocketB065023
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 Cal. App. 4th 200 (Nacimiento Regional Water Management Advisory Committee v. Monterey County Water Resources Agency) 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
Nacimiento Regional Water Management Advisory Committee v. Monterey County Water Resources Agency, 15 Cal. App. 4th 200, 19 Cal. Rptr. 2d 1, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3180, 93 Daily Journal DAR 5503, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 471 (Cal. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Opinion

GILBERT, J.

A government agency builds a dam many years prior to the enactment of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). The application to build the dam provides for the storing and annual release of water for various uses. Here we hold that the agency’s annual decision to release varying amounts of water to competing interests is part of an ongoing project, and is therefore exempt from CEQA.

The Nacimiento Regional Water Management Advisory Committee (Committee) appeals from the judgment of the trial court denying its petition for writ of mandate. Committee seeks to compel respondent, Monterey *202 County Water Resources Agency (Agency), to set aside its 1991 annual water release schedule for the reservoir at Lake Nacimiento pending compliance with CEQA. (Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq., eff. Nov. 23, 1970.)

The annual release schedule is part of the ongoing operation of the reservoir and, therefore, is exempt from CEQA. We affirm.

Facts

In 1955, the State of California approved Agency’s application to build Nacimiento Dam to store and release water annually for “irrigation and related Domestic, Municipal, Industrial, and Recreational uses with incidental flood control . . . .” The application described the purposes, resources and operation of the dam.

“The stored water so released and absorbed will mingle with the naturally available percolating ground water of the Salinas Valley and the mingled supply will be used by the landowners in Zone 2 of the District for the various uses for which they have beneficial needs.” 1

“The naturally available percolating waters ... are now used to meet the needs of the overlying owners for irrigation, for domestic use incidental to irrigation, for municipal use, and for industrial use. These mingled uses will continue and will draw on the naturally available and the artificially replenished . . . waters without recognition of separate rights of the different uses either in the amount of use or the priority of right in the waters to be appropriated under this application. This application is made for the joint and common benefit of all such uses. The portions of the total future use which may be secured from the water ... are not determinable and will vary from year to year.”

In its application, Agency projected the most probable future uses. Agency projected relatively small amounts would be made available for municipal and industrial uses and that “[t]he remainder of the water to be secured under this application will be used for irrigation.” “A minimum storage pool with a capacity of 10,000 acre feet for recreation purposes will be maintained in the Nacimiento Reservoir.”

Agency also stated that the “supply will vary from nothing in the occasional years in which no storable run-off will be available to the full *203 reservoir capacity in the other occasional years . . . .” (Italics added.) In particular, “[t]he water released from the Nacimiento Reservoir for replenishment of the naturally available ground water storage . . . will vary . . . from year to year." (Italics added.)

Pursuant to the permit issued by the state in accord with this application, the voters of zone 2 approved the project, bonds were issued and the proceeds were used to build the dam. The dam was completed in February 1957, and Agency started to use it immediately. The permit required annual progress reports which, inter alia, required “[ejstimate of augmentation to underground supply during water year caused by operation of Nacimiento Reservoir . . . .”

On November 4, 1965, the state issued a license for the diversion and use of water from the reservoir. This license established that Agency had perfected the uses discussed above, subject to an additional agreement of October 19, 1959, between Agency and the San Luis Obispo County Flood Control District. That agreement, inter alia, changed the minimum pool level from 10,000 to 22,000 acre-feet and required that Agency, “to the extent required by public health or other law, terminate, abolish, regulate or restrict recreational activities in, around or upon the waters of Nacimiento Reservoir ... to enable San Luis Obispo District to make use of said water . . . .”

Agency conducted no “environmental review” for the construction or operation of the reservoir, or for annual release schedules either before or after November 23, 1970, the effective date of CEQA.

Agency’s 1991 annual release schedule, at issue in this case, specified an initial water elevation of 745 feet and a final elevation of 689 feet—a drop of 56 feet. For 7 of its 33 years of operation, the reservoir’s water elevation fell to 689 feet or less 8 times: in 1960, 1961, 1969, 1972, 1977, 1988, 1989, excluding 1990 (level at 689 feet). The trial court noted that in 1985 the surface level fell to 695 feet In 9 of those 33 years, Agency permitted a drop of 55 feet or more. In four of those years, the minimum pool level was only six hundred seventy feet.

In devising the schedule, Agency considered: 1. providing maximum groundwater recharge for the entire Salinas Valley, 2. keeping the lakes at levels sufficient to provide good recreation benefits, 3. providing for the needs of fish and wildlife, 4. generating electricity at the Nacimiento Hydropower Plant, and 5. wasting as little water as possible to evaporation or to the ocean.

Although the trial court found that implementation of this release schedule “would negatively impact environmental concerns in the reservoir, including *204 lake fisheries and wildlife, as well as visual, aesthetic, and recreational concerns in the reservoir,” it held that the annual 1991 release schedule was exempt from environmental review under CEQA because it is part of an ongoing project, the operation of the reservoir.

Discussion

Committee contends that Agency’s 1991 annual schedule constitutes a project or that it represents a modification of Agency’s previous practice which triggers environmental review under CEQA.

“ ‘[I]n CEQA, the Legislature sought to protect the environment by the establishment of administrative procedures drafted to [ejnsure that the long-term protection of the environment shall be the guiding criterion in public decisions. (Pub. Resources Code, § 21001, subd. (d).) To achieve these objectives, CEQA and the guidelines issued by the State Resources Agency to implement CEQA establish a three-tiered structure [to determine whether any environmental review under CEQA is required]. If a project falls within a category exempt by administrative regulation ... no further agency evaluation is required. . . .’” (Burbank-Glendale-Pasadena Airport Authority v. Hensler (1991) 233 Cal.App.3d 577, 591 [284 Cal.Rptr. 498].)

Public Resources Code section 21065 defines the term “project” to mean “(a) Activities directly undertaken by any public agency. . .

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15 Cal. App. 4th 200, 19 Cal. Rptr. 2d 1, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3180, 93 Daily Journal DAR 5503, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nacimiento-regional-water-management-advisory-committee-v-monterey-county-calctapp-1993.