State Water Board Cases CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 2023
DocketC096511
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Water Board Cases CA3 (State Water Board Cases CA3) 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
State Water Board Cases CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 11/17/23 State Water Board Cases CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

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

STATE WATER BOARD CASES C096511

(JCCP No. 5013)

In December 2018, respondent State Water Resources Control Board (the Board) adopted amendments to the water quality control plan for the San Francisco Bay/Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Estuary (the Bay-Delta Plan) and certified a substitute environmental document (SED) supporting the amendments. No fewer than 13 separate lawsuits were filed against the Board challenging its adoption of the amendments and the SED on various grounds. Appellant — the San Joaquin Tributaries Authority, or SJTA — filed one of those 13 lawsuits. The lawsuits were filed in six different counties. At the request of the Board, the lawsuits were coordinated in Sacramento County as State Water Board Cases, Judicial Council Coordination

1 Proceeding No. 5013 (hereafter the coordination proceeding), and this court was designated as the court having appellate jurisdiction. SJTA thereafter filed a motion to intervene in all of the cases that were part of the coordination proceeding. The trial court denied the motion, SJTA appeals, and we affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In December 2018, the Board adopted amendments to the Bay-Delta Plan (which are hereafter referred to as the Plan Amendments) and certified the SED. Among other things, the Plan Amendments include new “flow objectives” for the lower San Joaquin River to protect fish and wildlife beneficial uses.1 The new flow objectives are to “[m]aintain inflow conditions from the San Joaquin River watershed to the Delta at Vernalis sufficient to support and maintain the natural production of viable native San Joaquin River watershed fish populations migrating through the Delta.” Numerically, the objectives are to “[m]aintain 40% of unimpaired flow, with an allowed adaptive range between 30% - 50%, inclusive, from each of the Stanislaus, Tuolumne, and Merced Rivers from February through June.” “Unimpaired flow represents the natural water production of a river basin, unaltered by upstream diversions, storage, or by export or import of water to or from other watersheds.” As the Board recognized in the SED, “The use of a percent of unimpaired flow assigns an explicit percent of unimpaired flow to fish and wildlife, with the remaining percent of unimpaired flow available for other uses. . . . For example, if the flow

1 The Plan Amendments also include relaxed “salinity objectives” for the southern Delta. SJTA’s lawsuit originally contained one cause of action (the 26th) challenging the adoption of the salinity objectives, but that cause of action was dismissed by the trial court. Thus, although SJTA briefly mentions the salinity objectives in its opening brief, its primary challenge is to the flow objectives.

2 requirement is 40 percent of unimpaired flow from February through June, the remaining 60 percent is available for all other uses.” Thus, under the new flow objectives, 40 percent of the unimpaired flow of the Stanislaus, Tuolumne and Merced Rivers will remain in the rivers to support and maintain native fish populations, leaving the remaining 60 percent available for other uses. The Board also recognized, “The primary effect of the flow proposal is that it would decrease the quantity of surface water available for diversion for other uses compared to the current condition.” (Italics added.) The Board estimated that implementation of the flow objectives will reduce surface water available for other uses by anywhere from 7 to 23 percent. It also noted that “[t]his reduction in availability of surface water could affect water users who obtain their water from . . . anywhere within the Stanislaus, Tuolumne, and Merced River Watersheds,” including, in particular, the South San Joaquin Irrigation District, the Turlock Irrigation District, and the City and County of San Francisco. SJTA is a joint powers authority comprised of, among others, the South San Joaquin Irrigation District, the Turlock Irrigation District, and the City and County of San Francisco, all of whom hold water rights on the Tuolumne or Stanislaus Rivers. They fear that implementing the flow objectives will decrease the quantity of water available for their use. The Plan Amendments do not actually implement the flow objectives. They explain, “Most of the objectives in this ongoing plan are being, and will continue to be, implemented by assigning responsibilities to water right holders because the parameters to be controlled are primarily impacted by flows and diversions. This plan, however, is not to be construed as establishing the responsibilities of water right holders. Nor is this plan to be construed as establishing the quantities of water that any particular water right holder or group of water right holders may be required to release or forego to meet the objectives in this plan. The State Water Board will consider, in a future water rights

3 proceeding or proceedings, the nature and extent of water right holders’ responsibilities to meet these objectives.” Two of the 13 cases challenging the Plan Amendments and SED have since been dismissed, leaving 11 coordinated cases. All petitioners seek a writ of mandate ordering the Board to vacate, rescind and set aside its approval and adoption of the Plan Amendments and the SED.2 However, not all petitioners agree on why the Plan Amendments must be vacated. To give one example, some petitioners contend the flow objectives are too low, and more water should be allocated to fish; and some, including SJTA, contend the flow objectives are too high and less water should be allocated to fish. In June 2021, SJTA filed a motion to intervene in all of the coordinated cases (except for its own), along with a proposed complaint in intervention that was substantively identical to its original petition and complaint.3 SJTA argued it had a right to intervene because it had an interest relating to the transaction that is the subject of the consolidated cases, disposition of those cases could impair its ability to protect its interests, and its interests were not adequately represented by existing parties. Alternatively, SJTA argued it should be permitted to intervene because it had a direct and immediate interest in the other cases, intervention would not enlarge the issues, and its

2 In addition to SJTA, petitioners in the coordinated cases include: California Farm Bureau Federation; Merced Irrigation District; City of Modesto; Westlands Water District; Modesto Irrigation District; North Coast Rivers Alliance et al.; Stockton East Water District; San Francisco Baykeepers et al.; the United States of America; and South Delta Water Agency et al. 3 Four other motions to intervene were filed: three by existing parties to the coordinated cases (Bay Area Water Supply and Conservation Agency, Stockton East Water District, and Westlands Water District) seeking to intervene in some or all of the others; and one by a nonparty (State Water Contractors) seeking to intervene in four of the coordinated cases. The court granted State Water Contractors’ motion to intervene, but denied the other motions. Those orders are not at issue here.

4 reasons for intervention outweighed any opposition thereto. The Board opposed the motion.4 The trial court denied the motion, finding SJTA had no right to intervene because it failed to show it had an interest in the Board’s adoption of the Plan Amendments.

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