Opinion
Appellant Aptos Council challenges respondent County of Santa Cruz’s (County) adoption of three ordinances that (1) extended minor exceptions to zoning site standards, (2) altered certain height, density, and parking requirements for hotels in commercial districts, and (3) established an administrative process for approving minor exceptions to the County’s sign ordinance. Aptos Council argues the County engaged in piecemeal environmental review in violation of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) (Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq.)
1
when it considered the
For the reasons discussed below, we reject Aptos Council’s claim that the County engaged in piecemeal environmental review. Although the County is in the process of modernizing some of its zoning regulations, this modernization process does not constitute a single project under CEQA. We also reject Aptos Council’s claim that the negative declaration for the hotel ordinance was inadequate. The County should consider the potential environmental impacts resulting from reasonably foreseeable future development resulting from the ordinance. Future hotel developments, however, were wholly speculative at the time the negative declaration was adopted. Thus, we affirm the trial court’s order denying Aptos Council’s petition for a writ of mandate.
Background
1. The County’s Overhaul of Zoning Regulations
The County’s planning department is in the midst of overhauling various County code sections, including code sections dealing with zoning. The planning department’s Web site invites visitors to “[ljearn about new and amended land use regulations resulting from our Regulatory Reform efforts.” On November 20, 2013, the County administrative officer wrote to a County supervisor providing a status update on “completed regulatory reform initiatives.” The memorandum explained that “[mjodernizing, clarifying and streamlining regulations and the regulatory process is a top priority of the Planning Department, accomplished in a way that continues to respect community and environmental values.” The memorandum stated the changes that had been made were “completed in order to modernize, simplify, clarify, streamline and/or provide standards where there were no clear standards previously (such as for vacation rentals).” It then provided a list of completed code amendments, a list of code amendments currently scheduled for public hearings, and a list of amendments presently being worked on by the planning department.
Title 13 of the County’s code is titled “Planning and Zoning Regulations.” Chapter 13.10 of title 13 is titled “Zoning Regulations.”
In 2010, the planning department proposed a series of changes to chapter 13.10 (Chapter 13.10) of the County Code. The proposed changes would allow certain variances to zoning code standards be approved administratively without a public hearing. The following year, the County Board of Supervisors (Board) adopted ordinance No. 5087. Ordinance No. 5087 authorized administrative approval of “minor exceptions” to zoning site standards limited to no more than a 5 percent height increase, 15 percent setback reduction, 7.5 percent increase in the 50 percent floor-to-area ratio (FAR) for lots 4,000 square feet or less, and 15 percent increase in total allowable lot coverage. Ordinance No. 5087 restricted this authority to properties within the urban services line and certain areas shown within a map attached to the ordinance.
In March 2013, the planning department recommended extending the minor exceptions ordinance to the entire county. The County prepared ordinance No. 5181, which extended the minor exceptions set forth under ordinance No. 5087. Ordinance No. 5181 also extended existing provisions allowing minor exceptions and reduced garage setbacks, extended the existing provisions allowing reduction of front yard setbacks by up to 25 percent with an administrative permit, allowed a 25 percent increase in lot coverage for parcels of less than 6,000 square feet with a minor exception, and extended existing provisions allowing for up to a 50 percent reduction of side and rear setbacks for garages with a minimum 40-foot setback.
Prior to adopting ordinance No. 5181, the Board accepted an addendum to the negative declaration prepared for ordinance No. 5087, which found the amendments would not have significant environmental impacts. Thereafter, in 2014, the Board adopted ordinance No. 5181.
3. Ordinance No. 5171 (The Hotel Ordinance)
In September 2013, the planning department submitted a letter to the Board recommending it schedule a public hearing to consider amendments to standards for hotel development. The letter stated the hotel standards had come to the planning department’s attention as part of its “ongoing regulatory reform and economic development initiatives.” In October 2013, the Board held a public hearing to consider amendments to portions of Chapter 13.10 dealing with visitor accommodations in commercial districts. The County Code had previously mandated that there be 1,100 square feet of developable area per habitable hotel room and presumed that any room over 400 square feet was composed of two or more rooms. The planning department proposed ordinance No. 5171, which removed the one room per 1,100 square foot
Prior to the adoption of ordinance No. 5171, the planning department circulated a negative declaration that found the amendments would not have a significant effect on the environment. In 2014, the Board adopted ordinance No. 5171.
4. Ordinance No. 5172 (The Sign Ordinance)
In October 2013, the Board held a public hearing to consider amendments to the County Code that would allow administrative approvals of sign exceptions with a public notice. The proposed amendments also provided for a public hearing before the zoning administrator for exceptions that exceeded certain limits. Prior to the amendments, applications for signs exceeding County regulations required a variance and a public hearing. When proposing the amendments, the planning department characterized them as “part of the ongoing Planning Department program to streamline permit review, modernize the County Code, and facilitate economic development.” The planning department further stated it was “recommending that an effort be undertaken to prepare a more comprehensive amendment of the sign ordinance.”
The planning department prepared a notice of exemption for ordinance No. 5172, relying on several exemptions from CEQA review: (1) the statutory exemption for amendment of a local coastal program (CEQA Guidelines, § 15265), (2) class 5 and 11 categorical exemptions for minor alterations in land use limitations (CEQA Guidelines, §§ 15305, 15311) and accessory structures, and (3) the commonsense exemption which applies when “it can be seen with certainty that there is no possibility that the activity in question may have a significant effect on the environment” (CEQA Guidelines, § 15061, subd. (b)(3)). In 2014, the Board found the proposed amendment to be exempt from CEQA review and approved ordinance No. 5172.
5. Other Planned Changes to the County Code
At or around the same time it was considering the aforementioned ordinances, the planning department was also contemplating revisions to the County’s “Wireless Communications Facility and Broadband Ordinance” (County Code, § 13.10.660-668). Other code amendments under development by planning department staff included modernization of the “use charts” of each zoning district within the agricultural, commercial, industrial, residential, and other districts.
6. Petition for Writ of Mandate
On March 19, 2014, Aptos Council filed a petition for a writ of mandate. The petition challenged the County’s actions in 2014 approving the three ordinances related to minor exceptions, hotels, and signs. Aptos Council argued the sign ordinance was not exempted from CEQA review, the County’s negative declaration prepared for the hotel ordinance should have taken into consideration future developments, and the County had improperly engaged in unlawful piecemeal review of the environmental impacts of the various ordinances. 2
On September 4, 2015, the trial court issued an order and judgment denying Aptos Council’s petition for a writ of mandate. The trial court concluded the County’s “regulatory reform efforts” were not a single project for purposes of CEQA, there was no substantial evidence in the record to support a fair argument the hotel ordinance had a reasonably foreseeable effect on the environment, and the sign ordinance was exempt from CEQA review. Aptos Council appealed.
Discussion
1. Piecemeal Review
Aptos Council argues the County’s adoption of ordinances Nos. 5171, 5172, and 5181 constitutes a single project under CEQA—the County’s effort toward reforming and modernizing zoning regulations. Therefore, it claims the County improperly piecemealed review of environmental impacts when it independently and individually considered each ordinance. As we explain below, we disagree with Aptos Council’s interpretation and do not find the adoption of the three ordinances in question to be a single project under CEQA.
“The foremost principle under CEQA is that the Legislature intended the act ‘to be interpreted in such manner as to afford the fullest possible protection to the environment within the reasonable scope of the statutory language.’ ”
(Laurel Heights Improvement Assn. v. Regents of University of California
(1988)
CEQA requires the preparation of an environmental impact report (EIR) whenever a public agency proposes to approve or to carry out a project that may have significant impacts on the environment. (§§21100, 21151.) “An EIR is an ‘environmental “alarm bell” whose purpose it is to alert the public and its responsible officials to environmental changes before they have reached ecological points of no return.’ ”
(Laurel Heights,
supra,
“ ‘Project’ is a term of art. ‘CEQA broadly defines a “project” as “an activity which may cause either a direct physical change in the environment, or a reasonably foreseeable indirect physical change in the environment, and . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . that involves the issuance to a person of a lease, permit, license, certificate, or other entitlement for use by one or more public agencies.” [Citation] [¶] The statutory definition is augmented by the [CEQA] Guidelines [citation], which define a “project” as
‘'the whole of an action,
which has a potential for resulting in either a direct physical change in the environment, or a reasonably foreseeable indirect physical change in the
environment(Banning Ranch Conservancy v. City of Newport Beach
(2012)
Of vital import is the timing of the preparation of the EIR. “A basic tenet of CEQA is that an environmental analysis ‘should be prepared as early as feasible in the planning process to enable environmental considerations to influence project program and design and yet late enough to provide meaningful information for environmental assessment.’ ”
(Laurel Heights, supra,
“There is no dispute that CEQA forbids ‘piecemeal’ review of the significant environmental impacts of a project.”
(Berkeley Keep Jets Over the Bay Com. v. Board of Port Comrs.
(2001)
In
Laurel Heights,
our Supreme Court held that “an EIR must include an analysis of the environmental effects of future expansion or other action if: (1) it is a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the initial project; and (2) the future expansion or action will be significant in that it will likely change the scope or nature of the initial project or its environmental effects. Absent these two circumstances, the future expansion need not be considered in the EIR for the proposed project.”
(Laurel Heights, supra,
Whether the challenged ordinances constitute a single project under CEQA and whether the County improperly engaged in piecemeal environmental review are questions of law that we review independently.
(Banning Ranch, supra,
b. Analysis
At issue is whether the County’s passage of the three ordinances in question constitutes a single project under CEQA. “The California Supreme Court has considered how to interpret the word ‘project’ and concluded that CEQA is ‘to be interpreted in such manner as to afford the fullest possible protection to the environment within the reasonable scope of the statutory language.’ ”
(Tuolumne County Citizens for Responsible Growth, Inc. v. City of Sonora
(2007)
Aptos Council relies on CEQA Guidelines sections 15378, subdivision (a), 15165, and 15168, subdivision (a) in coming to the conclusion that the amendments to these ordinances constitute a single project, requiring a single EIR. First, Aptos Council opines that CEQA Guidelines section 15378, subdivision (a) defines a “project” as “the whole of an action, which has a potential for resulting in either a direct physical change in the environment, or a reasonably foreseeable indirect physical change in the environment, and that is any of the following,” including “enactment and amendment of zoning ordinances.”
Based on this definition, Aptos Council surmises the County’s overhaul of its zoning ordinances constitutes a single project. And CEQA Guidelines
Aptos Council is correct that, read together, CEQA Guidelines sections 15378, 15165, and 15168 interpret CEQA to require the preparation of a
single
program EIR for a series of actions that are properly characterized as a large project. We also agree with Aptos Council to the extent it argues that certain proposals that amend local ordinances or codes dealing with issues such as zoning may fall within the purview of a single ‘“project” under CEQA. We do not, however, find the County’s action in this particular instance—engaging in reform of the zoning code—is a single project under CEQA as discussed in
Laurel Heights, supra,
In
Laurel Heights,
our Supreme Court held that ‘“an EIR must include an analysis of the environmental effects of future expansion or other action if: (1) it is a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the initial project; and (2) the future expansion or action will be significant in that it will likely change the scope or nature of the initial project or its environmental effects. Absent these two circumstances, the future expansion need not be considered in the EIR for the proposed project.”
(Laurel Heights, supra,
Courts have found that agencies improperly piecemealed environmental review of projects in various situations. ‘“First, there may be improper piecemealing when the purpose of the reviewed project is to be the first step toward future development.”
(Banning Ranch, supra,
Additionally, “there may be improper piecemealing when the reviewed project legally compels or practically presumes completion of another action.” (Ba
nning Ranch, supra,
There is no piecemealing, however, when “projects have different proponents, serve different purposes, or can be implemented independently.”
3
(Banning Ranch, supra,
Aptos Council insists the County’s actions here are analogous to the actions contemplated in
City of Santee
v.
County of San Diego
(1989)
Santee,
however, is distinguishable. We find the agency’s failure to take into account the entirety of the jail expansion project in
Santee
readily satisfies the test set forth in
Laurel Heights. {Laurel Heights, supra,
47 Cal.3d
Unlike the project contemplated in
Santee,
we do not believe the County’s reform efforts meet the
Laurel Heights
requirements. Instead, we find the situation contemplated in
Banning Ranch
to be analogous to the one presented here. In
Banning Ranch,
the City of Newport Beach (Newport Beach) considered a development project and prepared an EIR for the Newport Banning Ranch (NBR) Project, a development that would construct residential dwelling units, commercial space, and resort accommodations.
(Banning Ranch, supra,
The plaintiff in
Banning Ranch
submitted comments during the public review period arguing Newport Beach was piecemealing review of the project.
(Banning Ranch, supra,
Akin to
Banning Ranch,
the County’s consideration of the three ordinances dealing with minor exceptions, hotels, and signs does not satisfy
both
of the criteria set forth in
Laurel Heights.
We agree that the County’s approval of various zoning regulations
could
conceivably impact the scope or nature of other regulations. We also agree with Aptos Council that the reforms are
The key term here is “consequence.” Thus, the issue is whether changing or reforming certain zoning regulations—for example, altering the density requirements for hotels and reducing the required number of parking spaces per hotel room—are reasonably foreseeable consequences of the other regulatory reforms challenged by Aptos Council, such as eliminating the need to obtain a variance for certain signs, or expanding administrative approval of minor exceptions to the entire county. We do not believe they are. Like the two projects contemplated in Banning Ranch, the regulatory reforms operate independently of each other and can be implemented separately. 4
Aptos Council maintains the ordinances all serve the County’s same stated goal to modernize the County Code, loosen standards, and reduce barriers to development within the County. Although the ordinances can be considered a part of what the County characterizes as its efforts toward regulatory reform of various zoning ordinances, each of the contemplated ordinances are separate and apart from each other. In other words, they serve different purposes.
(Banning Ranch, supra,
The cases and principles cited by Aptos Council are inapplicable. First,
Orinda Assn.
v.
Board of Supervisors
(1986)
Aptos Council also relies on
Tuolumne County,
which rejected the argument that projects are not integral unless they cannot be implemented independently.
(Tuolumne County, supra,
Aptos Council claims
Tuolumne County
is applicable, because the County’s various efforts at amending zoning regulations can be seen as steps taken toward a greater overarching effort to overhaul the County’s zoning regulations as a whole. The
facts
of
Tuolumne County,
however, are readily distinguishable. The issue in
Tuolumne County
was whether the proposed development of a home improvement center should have also considered a road realignment project.
(Tuolumne County, supra,
Here, it stretches the imagination to conceive that amending an ordinance regarding hotel densities, extending minor exceptions, and amending a sign ordinance are, taken together, various steps toward achieving an “objective” as articulated in
Tuolumne County.
“The foremost principle under CEQA is that the Legislature intended the act ‘to be interpreted in such manner as to afford the fullest possible protection to the environment within the reasonable scope of the statutory language.’ ”
(Laurel Heights, supra,
Aptos Council maintains that allowing the County to proceed and separately review each proposed reform to Chapter 13.10 would disguise the true extent of the County’s reform efforts and would fail to sound the environmental “alarm bell” for County residents. Early environmental review is preferred, but “premature environmental analysis may be meaningless and financially wasteful.”
(Laurel Heights, supra,
Aptos Council’s citation to
San Franciscans for Reasonable Growth v. City and County of San Francisco
(1984)
Aptos Council argues the problem contemplated in
San Franciscans
is analogous to the trouble that will be created if the regulatory reforms are
Thus, CEQA mandates that when an agency is considering whether a project has a significant effect on the environment requiring the preparation of the EIR, the agency shall find a significant effect if “[t]he project has possible environmental effects that are individually limited but cumulatively considerable. ‘Cumulatively considerable’ means that the incremental effects of an individual project are significant when viewed in connection with the effects of past projects, the effects of other current projects, and the effects of probable future projects.” (CEQA Guidelines, § 15065, subd. (a)(3).) Accordingly, an agency cannot prepare a negative declaration if, taking into consideration the effects of past, current, and probable future projects, the environmental effect is significant. Similarly, categorical exemptions from CEQA also cannot be found if “the cumulative impact of successive projects of the same type in the same place, over time is significant.” (CEQA Guidelines, § 15300.2, subd. (b).)
In its reply brief, Aptos Council argues that although CEQA mandates consideration of these cumulative impacts, the negative declarations and exemptions below do not reflect that this type of analysis occurred. As argued by the County below, the County’s failure to address the purported cumulative impacts is readily explained. At the time the ordinances were considered, other regulatory reforms that may have cumulative impacts had not yet come to fruition. When future reforms are considered for environmental review, the cumulative impacts of all related reforms, as articulated in the CEQA Guidelines, will be examined.
In sum, we do not find the County erroneously engaged in piecemeal environmental review when it evaluated the ordinances and their respective environmental impacts separately.
2. Negative Declaration for the Hotel Ordinance
Next, Aptos Council argues the negative declaration prepared for the amendments to the hotel ordinance was inadequate, because it failed to take
a. The Negative Declaration, Initial Study, and Aptos Council’s Arguments
The negative declaration for the hotel ordinance found it would have no significant environmental impact. First, with regards to the ordinance’s proposal to reduce the existing hotel density requirement of 1,300 square feet per habitable room to 1,100 square feet per habitable room, the County’s initial study noted ‘“[t]he number of hotel rooms . . . could increase through the removal of the density limitation, yet would remain constrained by setback requirements, design standards and availability of parking.”
Next, the initial study addressed the hotel ordinance’s elimination of the three-story limit for hotels. The County found this could allow development of four-story hotels so long as design standards and the overall existing height limit (County Code, § 13.10.333) were met. Under the County Code, there is a height limit of 35 feet, which may be extended by an additional five feet under certain circumstances as outlined in County Code section 13.10.510. The initial study also addressed the ordinance’s amendment to the parking requirements for hotels, noting the current parking requirements were not aligned with modern hotel projects, which often have more suites.
The negative declaration generally characterized the amendments as having no physical impacts on the environment, because future developments would be subject to further discretionary approval. Thus, Aptos Council argues the negative declaration improperly defers an analysis of future impacts to the future when they are presently reasonably foreseeable. Aptos Council cites to a letter drafted by the City of Santa Cruz Water Department, which asserted the negative declaration should provide information on the number of affected parcels and changes in build-out potential that could occur because of the ordinance, potential changes in the projected water demand due to the amendments, and an analysis of the City of Santa Cruz’s ability to meet these new water demands.
In response to this comment letter, the planning department stated the ‘“project consists of regulatory changes, which by themselves will have no
The County also contacted the owners of two of the most prominent vacant lots in the unincorporated area currently zoned for visitor accommodations. None of the owners had foreseeable plans to sell or develop their properties. Therefore, the County concluded there was nothing on which it could base its analysis of the impacts resulting from future developments, and it would be speculative to define what types of projects may be proposed.
b. Overview and Standard of Review
CEQA requires agencies to prepare an EIR for any project that will have a significant effect on the environment. (§ 21151.) ‘“If a project is not exempt from CEQA and there is a reasonable possibility the project may have a significant environmental impact, the public agency must conduct an initial threshold study. If that study shows there will be no significant environmental impact, the agency may issue a negative declaration for the project.”
(Sierra Club v. California Dept. of Forestry & Fire Protection
(2007)
“Environment” is defined as “the physical conditions which exist within the area which will be affected by a proposed project including land, air, water, minerals, flora, fauna, ambient noise, and objects of historic or
An agency must generally ‘“conduct an initial study to determine if the project may have a significant effect on the environment” unless it ‘“can determine that an EIR will clearly be required for the project . . . .” (CEQA Guidelines, § 15063, subd. (a).) ‘“The initial study as a standardized document ‘is largely a creature of the Guidelines . . .’ and ‘CEQA refers to [an initial study] only glancingly (e.g., § 21080, subd. (c)(2)).’ [Citation.] It is now well established, however, that an initial study is the preliminary environmental analysis (see [CEQA] Guidelines, § 15365) and its purposes include ‘[p]ro-vid[ing] the lead agency with information to use as the basis for deciding whether to prepare an EIR or negative declaration,’ ‘[e]nabl[ing] an applicant or lead agency to modify a project, mitigating adverse impacts before an EIR is prepared, thereby enabling the project to qualify for a negative declaration,’ and ‘[p]rovid[ing] documentation of the factual basis for the finding in a negative declaration that a project will not have a significant effect on the environment.’ ([CEQA] Guidelines, § 15063, subd. (c)(1), (2), (5).)”
(Lighthouse Field Beach Rescue v. City of Santa Cruz
(2005)
In a mandamus action alleging an agency failed to comply with CEQA, ‘“the inquiry shall extend only to whether there was a prejudicial abuse of discretion.” (§ 21168.5.) ‘“Abuse of discretion is established if the agency has not proceeded in a manner required by law or if the determination or decision is not supported by substantial evidence.” (Ibid.)
“ ‘The standard of judicial review of an agency decision to adopt a negative declaration is whether there is substantial evidence in support of a ‘“fair argument” of potential environmental impact.’ [Citation.] Substantial evidence ‘ “means enough relevant information and reasonable inferences from this information that a fair argument can be made to support a conclusion ....”’ [Citations.] Substantial evidence does not include argument, speculation, or unsubstantiated opinions or concerns about a project’s environmental impact.”
(Sierra Club, supra,
“Thus, the fair argument standard of review is not the typical substantial evidence standard, i.e., whether there is substantial evidence to support the decision not to prepare an EIR. Rather, the fair argument standard of review is whether, after examining the entire record, there is substantial evidence to support a fair argument that a project may have a significant effect on the environment.”
(Sierra Club, supra,
“The fair argument standard is a ‘low threshold’ test for requiring the preparation of an EIR. [Citations.] It is a question of law, not fact, whether a fair argument exists, and the courts owe no deference to the lead agency’s determination. Review is de novo,
with a preference for resolving doubts in favor of environmental review.” (Pocket Protectors v. City of Sacramento
(2004)
c. Analysis
Below to the trial court and in its opening brief on appeal, Aptos Council reiterates its argument that the negative declaration prepared by the County was inadequate, because it failed to take into consideration the impacts from future developments that would be permitted by the ordinance. A “negative declaration is inappropriate where the agency has failed either to provide an accurate project description or to gather information and undertake an adequate environmental analysis.”
(City of Redlands v. County of San Bernardino
(2002)
Aptos Council maintains that
City of Redlands
is analogous. There, the County of San Bernardino approved amendments to its general plan relating to land use regulation of unincorporated territory and adopted a negative declaration.
(City of Redlands, supra,
The court also held that CEQA extends beyond changes in the agency’s policy to the “ultimate consequences of such changes to the physical environment.”
(City of Redlands, supra,
In a related context, courts have also considered whether probable future development should be considered in an EIR. For example, Aptos Council also relies on
City of Cannel-by-the-Sea v. Board of Supervisors
(1986)
City of Antioch v. City Council
(1986)
First, the appellate court noted that conformity with a general plan does not insulate a project from an EIR requirement.
(City of Antioch, supra,
City of Antioch
concluded that although Pittsburg “cannot be expected to know the exact level of use of the roadway at such time as it is connected to existing highways, it must assume a level of use at that time that now seems probable. Similarly, while Pittsburg need not predict the precise form,
Similarly, in
Stanislaus Audubon Society, Inc. v. County of Stanislaus
(1995)
We note that
City of Carmel, City of Antioch,
and
Stanislaus Audubon Society
concern a different issue: whether there was substantial evidence of a fair argument that a proposed project may have a significant environmental effect. Here, our initial inquiry is not whether a fair argument that a significant environmental impact may result from the project exists; rather, it is whether the negative declaration and corresponding initial study should have taken into account the impacts of future development.
6
Nonetheless, we find the aforementioned cases relevant. They establish that when evaluating the potential environmental impact of a project that has growth-inducing effects, an agency is not excused from environmental review simply because
These cases, however, also reiterate the principle that CEQA mandates only the consideration of
''reasonably foreseeable
indirect physical changes in the environment which may be caused by the project.” (CEQA Guidelines, § 15064, subd. (d), italics added.) “A change which is speculative or unlikely to occur is not reasonably foreseeable.”
(Id.,
subd. (d)(3).)
City of Redlands, City of Carmel, City of Antioch,
and
Stanislaus Audubon Society
all concerned potential impacts that were nebulous and not yet defined, because actual development had not been proposed. Yet the cases share a commonality: the potential impacts were all
reasonably foreseeable.
Thus, they comported with the principle set forth in
Laurel Heights
that an EIR must include an analysis of a future project or expansion if “(1) it is a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the initial project; and (2) the future expansion or action will be significant in that it will likely change the scope or nature of the initial project or its environmental effects.”
(Laurel Heights, supra,
For example, in
City of Redlands,
the County of San Bernadino stated it did not anticipate that future development would result from the changes made to the general plan, but the record indicated the existence of potential future development and at least one project already undergoing environmental review.
(City of Redlands, supra,
Thus, the issue is whether increased hotel developments, such as hotels proposed at higher densities than before, are a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the ordinance. The County argues they are not and characterizes the ordinances as merely modifying the standards for hotel development and preparing the County for appropriate review of a hotel development should
We disagree with Aptos Council’s analysis and find the potential for future developments to be too speculative to be reasonably foreseeable. We agree that there is evidence in the record supporting the argument that the County adopted the ordinance to possibly stimulate the development of hotels. For example, the letter recommending a public hearing on the hotel ordinance indicated the amendments were proposed because the current County Code restricted hotel development, “particularly for higher quality accommodations, which in turn restricts the County’s ability to compete for tourism business in this key market segment.” In the initial study, the County found that a limited number of new hotels had been approved in the unincorporated area, alluding that the prior County Code had “limited the County’s ability to attract the demographic of the tourist market that can contribute most to local economic development.” Unquestionably, these statements indicate a
hope
that hotel developments will occur as a result of the ordinances. Aptos Council, however, does not point to anything in the record to demonstrate increased development is reasonably foreseeable, rather than an “optimistic gleam in [the County’s] eye.”
(Topanga Beach Renters Assn. v. Department of General Services
(1976)
Additionally, it is apparent the County did take into consideration the potential impacts of future development in its negative declaration. The initial study noted the number of hotel rooms allowed on various parcels could increase due to the removal of density limitations. The initial study also explained the removal of the three-story limit for hotels may allow for the possible construction and design of four-story hotels. The impacts, however, would be speculative until it was known whether any developments would be proposed and, if developments are proposed, what type of hotels would be built. The negative declaration further concluded there would be no significant environmental impact, because any future developments would be subject to further environmental review under CEQA.
The County did not come to this conclusion without investigating or conducting studies. Rather, the County contacted the owners of the two most prominent vacant lots. The two owners expressed no foreseeable plan to either sell their land or pursue development. The County also tabulated the existing parcels and determined which parcels were vacant, which were developed, and how many already had visitor accommodation uses on site. Out of the 34 identified parcels, 20 were already developed with visitor accommodation uses. And the ordinance did not permit the development of hotels in areas where hotels could not have been developed before.
Additionally, the County responded to City of Santa Cruz Water Department’s concern over the potential of the ordinance to increase water usage. The County noted that future developments would need to obtain a “will serve” letter from applicable water purveyors and must be consistent with the general plan policies that address potential impacts on water supplies. Therefore, the County concluded there were no reasonably foreseeable effects on the environment, and the negative declaration was adequate.
Lastly, we also agree with the County that Aptos Council failed to satisfy its burden to show there is a fair argument that significant environmental effects may result from the ordinance. Aptos Council’s claims only amount to speculation about potential environmental impacts, and such speculation cannot amount to substantial evidence.
(Sierra Club, supra,
Thus, we conclude the trial court did not err in denying Aptos Council’s petition for a writ of mandate. 7
Disposition
The order denying Aptos Council’s petition for a writ of mandate is affirmed. The County is entitled to its costs on appeal.
A petition for a rehearing was denied April 25, 2017, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 14, 2017, S241816.
Notes
Unspecified statutory references are to the Public Resources Code. The administrative regulations implementing CEQA are set forth in California Code of Regulations, title 14, section
Aptos Council raised the issue of piecemealing before the County numerous times when the ordinances at issue were passed.
In its reply brief. Aptos Council argues the County erroneously applies the “independent utility” doctrine derived from
Del Mar Terrace Conservancy, Inc.
v.
City Council
(1992)
We note that there are differences between this case and Banning Ranch. Specifically, the projects have the same proponent, the County. Nonetheless, we do not believe that having the same proponent compels a contrary conclusion. CEQA does not mandate a single EIR for two unrelated projects simply because they are being contemplated by the same agency at the same time. Unless the two requirements set forth under Laurel Heights are met, a single environmental review is not necessary.
We reiterate that we do not mean to hold that the passing of several ordinances can never fit within the definition of a single project under CEQA as articulated in Laurel Heights. Our conclusion is limited to the specific facts of this case.
We address whether there is a fair' argument that the ordinance may have a significant environmental impact in more detail below.
In its respondent’s brief, the County asks this court to affirm the trial court’s findings that (1) the County properly adopted a negative declaration for the ordinance expanding minor exceptions, and (2) the County properly determined the sign ordinance was categorically and statutorily exempt from CEQA review. Aptos Council does not challenge these findings on appeal. Issues not raised in the appellant’s opening brief are deemed waived or abandoned.
(Pfeifer
v.
Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.
(2012)
