IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
INTERNATIONAL LONGSHORE AND
WAREHOUSE UNION, LOCAL 19, No. 70006-5-I
Appellant, DIVISION ONE
PUBLISHED OPINION
CITY OF SEATTLE, a Washington CO
rn
municipal corporation; KING
COUNTY, a Washington county; and i
WSA PROPERTIES, III, LLC, a cnn-.
Delaware limited liability company,
dba ArenaCo,
CO
Respondents. FILED: September 9, 2013
Becker, J. — Chris Hansen, a private investor and basketball enthusiast,
has acquired land on which he proposes to develop and operate a new sports
arena south of downtown Seattle near the existing football and baseball
stadiums. Hansen approached the city of Seattle and King County proposing
that they participate in the development and ownership ofthe arena on his
property. Last December, King County and the city signed a "Memorandum of
Understanding" that contemplates the use of public funds for an arena on
Hansen's proposed site. The memorandum lays out the particulars of how the
venture will be financed and operated if King County and Seattle ultimately
decide to participate in it. Environmental review of the proposal as required by
the State Environmental Protection Act (SEPA), chapter 43.21 C RCW, is
currently underway.
No. 70006-5-1/2
In this lawsuit, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, Local
19 (ILWU), contends that by signing the memorandum before analyzing the
environmental consequences of the project, the city and county have illegally
stacked the deck in favor of the south Seattle location.
The trial court dismissed the suit on summary judgment. We affirm. The
memorandum does not predetermine where an arena will be built or even that an
arena will be built at all. Whether the city and county will agree to Hansen's
proposal is a decision expressly reserved until after environmental review is
complete. Because there has not yet been a government "action" as that term is
defined by SEPA, the courts are not a forum for the union's opposition to
Hansen's proposal.
FACTS
In 2011, about three years after Seattle lost the Seattle Supersonics to
Oklahoma City, hedge fund manager Chris Hansen approached city and county
officials with a plan for an arena that could host professional basketball and
hockey teams. The discussions were initially kept confidential. Hansen's
company, WSA Properties III LLC, doing business as ArenaCo, bought property
in the industrial area south of downtown Seattle. In February 2012, Hansen
publicly submitted his proposal to Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn and King County
Executive Dow Constantine. Hansen planned to raise over $500 million in
private funds to develop the facility, purchase a professional basketball team,
and seek a partner to recruit a hockey team. At the time, Hansen hoped to
purchase the Sacramento Kings and relocate the team to Seattle.
No. 70006-5-1/3
Hansen requested a public investment of $200 million. His proposal
included a number of provisions to ensure repayment of the public funds. To
facilitate private funding and commitments from the professional sports
franchises, Hansen urged the city and county to sign agreements outlining a
proposed deal and the process by which the governments would decide whether
to participate.
McGinn and Constantine formed a review panel to evaluate the merits of
Hansen's proposal. The panel issued a report in April 2012 after four public
meetings. In May 2012, McGinn and Constantine presented proposed
ordinances to their respective councils seeking authorization to enter into a
"Memorandum of Understanding" with ArenaCo.
The preliminary draft of the memorandum set out Hansen's proposed
terms for future transactional agreements between ArenaCo, the city, and the
county about location, financing, ownership, management, operation, and use of
an arena facility. On December 3, 2012, after months of negotiations, revisions,
and the passing of ordinances authorizing the agreements, Hansen, McGinn, and
Constantine signed the 39-page memorandum of understanding that is at issue
in this appeal.
The area in which Hansen's arena would be located is already home to
Century Link Field and Safeco Field. The site is just south of the existing
stadiums. It is bounded by South Massachusetts Street to the north, First
Avenue South to the west, South Holgate Street to the south, and the Burlington
Northern Railway to the east. Zoning is industrial commercial, with an 85-foot
No. 70006-5-1/4
height limit. A spectator sports facility is already a permitted use. Hansen
proposes an arena with about 700,000 square feet of usable space. The arena
would hold between 17,500 and 19,000 attendees for sports or concert events.
The memorandum is a binding agreement as to the process the parties
will follow to complete necessary reviews, including environmental reviews, fulfill
conditions precedent and, as appropriate, approve the transaction documents
defined in the agreement. But many of its terms become obligations of the
parties only after several contingencies occur. Future decisions by the city and
county whether to invest in Hansen's project site are expressly reserved until
after review under SEPA. The memorandum makes clear that the city and
county will not commit to this project until each has analyzed the environmental
impacts of the proposed arena, including "consideration of one or more
alternative sites":
5. SEPA. The Parties acknowledge that the Project is subject
to review and potential mitigation under various laws, including the
State Environmental Policy Act, Chapter 43.21 C of the Revised
Code of Washington ("RCW"), and the state and local implementing
rules promulgated thereunder (collectively, "SEPA"). Before the
City and County Councils consider approval of the Umbrella
Agreement and any Transaction Documents, the City and County
will complete a full SEPA review, including consideration of one or
more alternative sites, a comprehensive traffic impact analysis,
impacts to freight mobility, Port terminal operations, and
identification of possible mitigating actions, such as improvements
to freight mobility, and improved pedestrian connections between
the Arena and the International District light rail station, the Stadium
light rail station, the SODO light rail station, and Pioneer Square.
The City and County anticipate that alternatives considered as part
of the SEPA review will include a "no action" alternative and an
alternative site at Seattle Center. The City or County may not take
any action within the meaning of SEPA except as authorized by
law, and nothing in this MOU [memorandum of understanding] is
intended to limit the City's or County's exercise of substantive
No. 70006-5-1/5
SEPA authority. Consistent with Section 4 of this MOU, ArenaCo
will reimburse the City for the costs incurred by the City as part of
the SEPA review and will be responsible for funding any required
mitigation imposed through SEPA substantive authority.
Memorandum § 5.
Under the memorandum, after the SEPA review, the city and county will
decide whether to invest public funds in an arena on Hansen's proposed site. If
they decide to proceed, they will commit up to $200 million total, subject to
various contingencies. Memorandum § 10. The memorandum contains a variety
of financial terms that will govern the parties' relationship if the city and county
opt to proceed.
The obligations of the city and county to support Hansen's proposal are
expressly limited by several conditions precedent. These include completion of
SEPA review through issuance of a final environmental impact statement,
obtaining of a master use permit and all other permits necessary for construction
of the project, and decisions by the city and county whether, in consideration of
the environmental review, it is appropriate to proceed:
24. City/County Conditions Precedent. The obligations
of the City and County under this MOU to commit Public Financing
are expressly conditioned on the following conditions precedent:
b. SEPA and Permitting. Before the Umbrella
Agreement and Transaction Documents may be authorized as
described in Section 24.e below, (i) SEPA review associated with
any City or County actions as described in Section 5 of this MOU
has been completed through issuance of a Final Environmental
Impact Statement; (ii) the master use permit and all other permits
required for construction of the Project have been obtained; (iii) the
City and County and their respective councils have considered the
SEPA review in connection with their respective actions and have
determined whether it is appropriate to proceed with or without
additional or revised conditions based on the SEPA review; and (iv)
No. 70006-5-1/6
any challenges to the Project have been resolved in a manner
reasonably acceptable to the Parties.
Memorandum § 24.b. Other conditions precedent include an economic impact
analysis and ArenaCo's securing of a professional basketball franchise.
Memorandum § 24.d and g.
The city of Seattle is the lead agency responsible for SEPA review. The
city started the environmental review process in October 2012 and shortly
thereafter issued a determination of significance requiring the preparation of an
environmental impact statement.
On October 23, 2012, ILWU sued to invalidate the memorandum of
understanding, naming as defendants the city, the county, and WSA Properties
III LLC, doing business as ArenaCo. Local 19 of ILWU represents 3,000
longshoremen who work at the Port of Seattle loading and unloading container
cargo and service cruise ships. The union opposes construction of an arena in
industrial south Seattle because of concern that the construction and additional
traffic will disrupt the movement of freight and drive away maritime business and
jobs.
The union alleges that the memorandum is an "action" as SEPA defines
that term. The union's complaint asserts that the provisions identifying a specific
site and outlining financial terms "will create irreversible political momentum" in
favor of Hansen's proposal so that the evaluation of alternatives to his proposal
in the currently ongoing environmental review process will be "a sham."
No. 70006-5-1/7
The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. The court found
that the memorandum was not an "action" subject to environmental review under
SEPA and dismissed the ILWU lawsuit on February 22, 2013.
On May 15, 2013, while the parties were still in the process of filing
appellate briefs, the Board of Governors of the National Basketball Association
voted against allowing the Sacramento Kings to be sold to Hansen's group and
relocated to Seattle. This event undoubtedly makes resolution of the lawsuit less
urgent, but no one has suggested that ILWU's claim is moot. The memorandum
states that it is good for five years from the date it was signed.
DISCUSSION
In reviewing summary judgment, this court's review is de novo. We
engage in the same inquiry as the trial court. Clallam County Citizens for Safe
Drinking Water v. City of Port Angeles, 137 Wn. App. 214, 219, 151 P.3d 1079
(2007). Summary judgment is proper only ifthere are no material issues of fact
and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. CR 56(c).
An environmental impact statement must be prepared for any "major
action significantly affecting the quality of the environment." RCW
43.21 C.030(c). "Generally, SEPA and its implementing regulations require that
the government conduct environmental review, through at least a threshold
determination, for any proposal that meets the definition of an action." Pub. Util.
Dist. No. 1 of Clark County v. Pollution Control Hearings Bd., 137 Wn. App. 150,
158, 151 P.3d 1067(2007).
No. 70006-5-1/8
Judicial review under SEPA "shall without exception be of the
governmental action together with its accompanying environmental
determinations." RCW 43.21 C.075(6)(c); see ajso RCW 43.21 C.075(1),(2)(a).
This means that until an agency has taken final action on a proposal, judicial
review of an agency's compliance with SEPA may not occur. State v. Grays
Harbor County, 122 Wn.2d 244, 250-51, 857 P.2d 1039 (1993). Requiring
parties to wait until a government has taken an "action" before a court may
review an appeal brought under SEPA serves the underlying policy of SEPA to
avoid piecemeal decision-making. Grays Harbor County, 122 Wn.2d at 250-51.
Whether a court can invalidate the memorandum thus hinges on whether the
memorandum meets the definition of a government "action."
There are "project actions" and "nonproject actions." WAC 197-11-704(2).
"Nonproject actions involve decisions on policies, plans, or programs." WAC
197-11-704(2)(b). For example, the adoption of a comprehensive land use plan
and a city's annexation of a certain area are nonproject actions. WAC 197-11-
704(2)(b)(ii),(iv). A "project action," on the other hand, must involve "a decision
on a specific project":
(a) Project actions. A project action involves a decision on
a specific project, such as a construction or management activity
located in a defined geographic area. Projects include and are
limited to agency decisions to:
(i) License, fund, or undertake any activity that will directly
modify the environment, whether the activity will be conducted by
the agency, an applicant, or under contract.
(ii) Purchase, sell, lease, transfer, or exchange natural
resources, including publicly owned land, whether or not the
environment is directly modified.
WAC 197-11-704(2)(a).
8
No. 70006-5-1/9
ILWU claims the memorandum of understanding is a "project action." The
memorandum is indeed a decision, but not every decision concerning a project is
a "project action." The memorandum does not license, fund, or undertake an
activity that will directly modify the environment, nor does it purchase, sell, lease,
transfer, or exchange natural resources. Therefore, it does not fit the above
definition of a project action. If and when the city and county ultimately decide to
give Hansen's proposal the green light, that decision will be a project action.
That is why an environmental impact statement is currently being prepared: so
that the city and county will have the benefit of a formal environmental analysis
and information about reasonable alternatives before deciding whether to give
Hansen the green light.
The union contends that signing the memorandum was an "incremental"
decision related to the arena and that such incremental decisions also have to
undergo an environmental review before the government entities sign on the
dotted line. There is simply no support in the SEPA statute or regulations for
defining "action" so broadly. To the contrary, regulations under SEPA recognize
that "preliminary steps or decisions are sometimes needed before an action is
sufficiently definite to allow meaningful environmental analysis." WAC 197-11-
055(2)(a)(ii). The memorandum is best understood as a preliminary step taken
by the city and county to set forth an arena proposal that is sufficiently definite to
allow further study, including preparation of a meaningful environmental impact
statement.
No. 70006-5-1/10
ILWU's argument that the memorandum itself is an "action" under state
law is rooted in King County v. Washington State Boundary Review Board for
King County, 122 Wn.2d 648, 860 P.2d 1024 (1993). In that case, the Supreme
Court reversed an annexation decision enlarging the city of Black Diamond
because it was not preceded by the preparation of an environmental impact
statement. Boundary Review Bd., 122 Wn.2d 648 (1993). In Boundary Review
Board, approval of the annexations constituted a nonproject "action." WAC 197-
11-704(2)(b)(iv). "Even a boundary change, like the one in this case, may begin
a process of government action which can 'snowball' and acquire virtually
unstoppable administrative inertia." Boundary Review Bd., 122 Wn.2d at 664.
Postponing environmental review risks "'a dangerous incrementalism where the
obligation to decide is postponed successively while project momentum builds.'"
Boundary Review Bd., 122 Wn.2d at 664, quoting William H. Rodgers, The
Washington Environmental Policy Act, 60 Wash. L. Rev. 33, 54 (1984).
Even if adverse environmental effects are discovered later, the inertia
generated by the initial government decisions (made without
environmental impact statements) may carry the project forward
regardless. When government decisions may have such snowballing
effect, decisionmakers need to be apprised of the environmental
consequences before the project picks up momentum, not after.
Boundary Review Bd., 122 Wn.2d at 664.
The union argues the memorandum was specifically designed to create a
snowballing effect and build momentum for Hansen's proposal. The snowballing
metaphor is powerful because it embodies the fundamental idea of SEPA: to
prevent government agencies from approving projects and plans before the
environmental impacts of doing so are understood. But SEPA does not compel
10
No. 70006-5-1/11
environmental review of a decision that is not an "action." SEPA review must
precede approval of an annexation, even though specific development proposals
are not yet on the table, because an action has been taken that will have impacts
on the environment down the road. SEPA review must precede a decision to go
ahead with the arena because if and when that decision is made, the decision
will be a project action with immediate environmental impacts. The
memorandum of understanding is not an "action" because by itself it has no
environmental impact, either down the road or immediately. Under SEPA, there
is no snowball. All that has happened so far in terms of SEPA is a decision
about the process that will be used to make a decision.
The distinction is illustrated in Magnolia Neighborhood Planning Council v.
City of Seattle, 155 Wn. App. 305, 230 P.2d 190, review denied, 170 Wn.2d 1003
(2010). In Magnolia, the city of Seattle approved the Fort Lawton
Redevelopment Plan, a plan for construction of residential housing on property
the city was acquiring from the federal government. Magnolia, 155 Wn. App. at
310. The citywanted to wait to conduct SEPA review until it actually applied for
rezoning or land use permits. This court held that SEPA review was required
earlier, before adoption of the redevelopment plan, because the plan was a
"project action." Magnolia, 155 Wn. App. at 314. The plan was "binding" on the
city once approval by federal agencies was secured. Magnolia, 155 Wn. App. at
317. Even though adopting the plan would not result in immediate land use
changes, the City's approval of the plan without first conducting SEPA review
11
No. 70006-5-1/12
was "precisely the type of government decision that would have the 'snowballing
effect'" described in Boundary Review. Magnolia, 155 Wn. App. at 317.
Unlike in Magnolia, here the memorandum of understanding does not limit
or control future decisions the city and county may be called upon to make. It is
not "binding" as that word is used in Magnolia.
The union contends that the memorandum constitutes a preliminary
decision to which SEPA must apply because, in the union's view, the
memorandum unreasonably limits the alternatives considered in the
environmental impact statement to a no-action alternative and Seattle Center.
The case on which the union primarily relies for this argument is Public Utility
District No. 1, 137 Wn. App. 150 (2007). In that case, the Department of Ecology
gave a public utility district a permit for drilling test wells to gather data about
contamination, preliminary to the district's pending application to develop a new
wellfield near the Columbia River. No one questioned that approving the
preliminary permit for test wells was an "action" under SEPA. Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1,
137 Wn. App. at 157, 161 ("parties stipulated that the actions the preliminary
permit allows would not have an adverse environmental impact"). Rather, the
issue was whether the action of drilling test wells was categorically exempt from
SEPA review under WAC 197-11-800(17), which exempts basic information
collection and research. The court held the permit was categorically exempt
because the main objective was research to determine the effect of the wellfield
project on ground water contamination. Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1, 137 Wn. App. at
160.
12
No. 70006-5-1/13
Then, because the regulation exempting basic research specifically refers
to WAC 197-11-070, the court addressed the plaintiffs' claim that the preliminary
permit was an action that would "limit the choice of reasonable alternatives"
under WAC 197-11 -070(1 )(b). Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1. 137 Wn. App. at 160-61.
Under this regulation, which is entitled "Limitation on actions during SEPA
process," agencies must refrain from taking any action that would limit the choice
of reasonable alternatives until SEPA review has been completed:
Until the responsible official issues a final determination of
nonsignificance or final environmental impact statement, no action
concerning the proposal shall be taken by a governmental agency
that would:
(a) Have an adverse environmental impact; or
(b) Limit the choice of reasonable alternatives.
WAC 197-11-070(1) (emphasis added).
The plaintiffs argued that the test wells, and the cost of conducting the
tests, would have a "coercive effect" on Ecology's future decision on the
groundwater rights application, thereby limiting the choice of reasonable
alternatives. Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1, 137 Wn. App. at 161. The court disagreed,
finding that the tests were solely for the purpose ofgathering data and the cost
was minimal. Butthe court acknowledged that if the test drilling had forced the
utility district to "put all of its financial resources in one project," conceivably the
district would become "less inclined to explore alternate sites that could have a
lower environmental impact." Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1. 137 Wn. App. at 162.
ILWU argues that unlike the permit for test wells, here the memorandum
does have a "coercive effect" upon the city and county officials who, now that
they have signed it, will be less inclined to explore alternate sitesfor the arena.
13
No. 70006-5-1/14
ILWU asserts that the memorandum "was structured to authorize a series of next
steps which, when coupled with WSA's anticipated reliance on these steps to the
tune of hundreds of millions of dollars, would put enormous political pressure on
the Councils' decision to site the Arena in SODO, thereby limiting alternatives."
This argument fails. Unlike the permit for the test wells, the memorandum
of understanding is not an "action." The memorandum does not preclude
consideration of alternate sites during SEPA review; indeed, it expressly
anticipates that the review process will consider at least the alternative of Seattle
Center as well as a "no action" alternative. As the trial court noted, there is no
other development proposal on the table:
[Tjhere wouldn't be any authority to approve elsewhere because
nobody's proposed an arena elsewhere, I mean, unless the City or
the County were going to build it themselves, which ... at this point
they're not proposing to go out and build an arena themselves,
regardless of whether there's any private investor or not.
If a proponent for an arena at an alternative location comes forward, the
memorandum will not prevent the city and county from evaluating or pursuing the
alternative proposal. It keeps the governments' options open while the
environmental impact of Hansen's proposal is being studied.
Case law under the National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA)
supports our conclusion that the memorandum of understanding is not an
"action." Because NEPA is substantially similar to SEPA, we may look to federal
case law for SEPA interpretation. Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1. 137 Wn. App. at 158.
Under NEPA, agencies must complete environmental review prior to the "go-no
go" stage of the project, which is to say before any "'irreversible and irretrievable
14
No. 70006-5-1/15
commitment of resources.'" Metcalf v. Daley, 214 F.3d 1135, 1142, 1143 (9th
Cir. 2000), quoting Conner v. Burford, 848 F.2d 1441, 1446 (9th Cir. 1988), cert,
denied, 489 U.S. 1012 (1989). Preliminary steps that retain an agency's
authority to "change course or to alter the plan it was considering implementing"
are not "actions" requiring NEPA environmental review. WildWest Inst, v. Bull,
547 F.3d 1162, 1169 (9th Cir. 2008) (premarking of trees for logging in Bitterroot
National Forest did not require NEPA review because it did not irretrievably
commit the Forest Service to a course of action).
The court reached a similar result in Center for Environmental Law and
Policy v. Bureau of Reclamation, 655 F.3d 1000, 1007 (9th Cir. 2011). In that
case, before conducting an environmental assessment, the Bureau of
Reclamation signed a memorandum of understanding and obtained two
secondary water use permits for a project involving release of water from Lake
Roosevelt. Environmental groups filed suit, claiming the Bureau should have
done the assessment before taking these preliminary steps. The lawsuit was
properly dismissed because the action had not reached the "go-no go stage."
The Bureau retained absolute authority to decide whether water from Lake
Roosevelt would be committed to the draw-down project until after it published
the final environmental assessment. Bureau of Reclamation, 655 F.3d at 1006;
see also Friends of S.E.'s Future v. Morrison, 153 F.3d 1059, 1063 (9th Cir.
1998) (preparation of a tentative operating schedule for planned timber supply
did not commit the agency to a particular action).
15
No. 70006-5-1/16
The same is true here. The city and county remain free to change course.
The memorandum of understanding does not commit them to action.
In summary, the trial court properly concluded that the memorandum of
understanding is not an "action" within the meaning of SEPA and judicial review
is not available.
Affirmed.
WE CONCUR:
ViLiWLQ ^r
16