Filed 8/24/21 Sierra Watch v. Placer County 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
(Placer)
----
SIERRA WATCH, C087892
Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. SCV0038917)
v.
PLACER COUNTY et al.,
Defendants and Respondents;
SQUAW VALLEY REAL ESTATE et al.,
Real Parties in Interest and Respondents.
In 2016, Placer County (the County) approved a project to develop a resort on
about 94 acres near Lake Tahoe. Sierra Watch afterward challenged the County’s
approval in two lawsuits, both of which are now on appeal. In one of its suits, it alleged
the County’s environmental review for the project was inadequate. In another, it alleged
the County approved the project in violation of the Ralph M. Brown Act (Brown Act,
1
Gov. Code,1 § 54950 et seq.) — an act intended to facilitate public participation in local
government decisions.
This appeal concerns Sierra Watch’s Brown Act allegations and involves two of
the act’s requirements. Its first claim concerns section 54957.5 of the Brown Act. Under
that statute, in the event a county distributes to its board of supervisors any writing
pertinent to an upcoming board meeting less than 72 hours before that meeting, the
county must make that writing “available for public inspection” at a county office “at the
time the writing is distributed” to the board. We consider here two competing
interpretations of this statute. To satisfy section 54957.5’s requirements, must the writing
simply be placed in a county office that allows for public inspection of documents “at the
time the writing is distributed” to the board, or must the writing be placed in this office
and actually available for public inspection “at the time” of distribution? Considering the
statute’s plain language and purpose, we find the latter is true. In most instances, the
distinction between the two interpretations is irrelevant, as a writing is generally available
for public inspection at the moment it is placed in a location allowing for public
inspection. But that is not true when, as in this case, the county places the writing in a
county office at a time the office is closed to the public — for example, on a weekend. In
that event, the writing is not actually available for public inspection until the office
reopens to the public, and so is not available at the time required under section 54957.5.
Sierra Watch’s second claim concerns section 54954.2 of the Brown Act. Under
that statute, counties must post an agenda before each board meeting “containing a brief
general description of each item of business to be transacted or discussed at the meeting.”
The County here, in its agenda, informed the public that its board would consider
approving a development agreement that its planning commission had recommended.
1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code.
2
But in the end, the County’s board never considered that particular agreement. It instead
considered and then approved a materially revised development agreement that County
staff, in consultation with the project applicant and another party, had prepared the night
before the meeting. The question we consider is whether the board’s consideration of
this revised agreement, rather than the one referenced on the County’s agenda, rendered
its agenda misleading. We find it did.
Because the trial court found differently on both of these issues, we reverse in part.
But although we find the County’s conduct violated the Brown Act, we reject Sierra
Watch’s request that we vacate the County’s approvals.
BACKGROUND
I
Factual Background
In 2011, Squaw Valley Real Estate LLC (Squaw) proposed a project titled the
Village at Squaw Valley Specific Plan, which involves a proposed development on about
94 acres in Olympic Valley (formerly known as Squaw Valley). Shortly after, the
County began environmental review for the project under the California Environmental
Quality Act (CEQA), and in 2015, the County released a draft document, called an
Environmental Impact Report or EIR, analyzing the project’s potential impacts.
Several parties afterward expressed concern over the County’s analysis of the
project’s environmental impacts, including Sierra Watch and the California Attorney
General. According to the Attorney General, the County’s EIR insufficiently analyzed
project impacts from increased vehicle use in the Lake Tahoe Basin. The Attorney
General’s office initially expressed these concerns in August 2016 in a formal comment
letter, and later, in early November 2016, it reiterated these concerns in an e-mail to
County counsel. In the e-mail, the deputy attorney general assigned to the matter offered
to speak with County staff about her office’s concerns but warned that, absent additional
environmental review, her office would file litigation challenging the County’s EIR.
3
Shortly after receiving this e-mail, on November 9, 2016, the County posted the
agenda for the upcoming meeting of its board of supervisors (the Board), during which
the Board would consider whether to approve the EIR for the project. Among other
things, the agenda informed the public that the Board would consider at its November 15,
2016 meeting “a recommendation from the Placer County Planning Commission for
APPROVAL of the following”: (1) “a resolution to certify the Village at Squaw Valley
Specific Plan Final Environmental Impact Report” and (2) “an ordinance to approve the
Development Agreement relative to the Village at Squaw Valley Specific Plan.” At the
same time it posted the agenda, the County also made available for public inspection
various documents discussed on the agenda, including the proposed development
agreement for the project.
The same day the County posted the agenda, two deputy attorneys general met
with County counsel and Squaw’s counsel about the project. At the meeting, the two
deputy attorneys general asked the County to require Squaw to pay an air quality
mitigation fee to the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA). But the County declined
to do so. Squaw, however, thought it better to pay the fee if the Attorney General would
agree not to sue over the project. It approached the Attorney General about such an
agreement and offered to ask the County to amend the development agreement for the
project to include a requirement that it pay the TRPA fee. Squaw and the Attorney
General afterward reached an agreement along these lines on November 14, 2016.2
Shortly after, at Squaw’s request and in consultation with the Attorney General, County
counsel updated the development agreement to accommodate the agreement between
Squaw and the Attorney General. To that end, she added a provision requiring Squaw to
2 Squaw and the Attorney General’s agreement was initially reflected in a series of
e-mails. On January 4, 2017, the parties also entered into a formal contract.
4
pay $440,862 in fees to be used for TRPA “Environmental Improvement Projects,” which
are projects intended to reduce traffic and improve air and water quality at Lake Tahoe.
County counsel afterward, at 5:36 p.m. on November 14, 2016, e-mailed the
County clerk the updated development agreement and a memorandum (the Schwab
Memorandum) explaining the change and providing other information about the project.
On receiving the e-mail, the County clerk placed copies of the development agreement
and the memorandum in an office where the public can inspect County records —
namely, the County clerk’s office, which is open to the public from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
on weekdays. At 5:42 p.m., the County clerk e-mailed the two documents to all Board
members.
A few minutes before the County clerk shared the new materials with the Board, a
deputy attorney general e-mailed Sierra Watch’s counsel about the development.
Without going into detail, she informed Sierra Watch’s counsel that Squaw had agreed
“to mitigate . . . the Project[’s] in-basin trips as if the project were located in the basin.”
She also offered to talk about the new mitigation requirements, but Sierra Watch’s
counsel did not see the e-mail until after the Board’s meeting began the following day.
The Board held its meeting the next day, which Sierra Watch attended. Before the
meeting began, County staff placed at a public table at the meeting copies of the Schwab
Memorandum and other project documents. Following some discussion of the
development agreement, including the new TRPA provision, the Board voted in favor of
the ordinance approving the agreement.
II
Procedural Background
A couple of weeks after the Board approved the development agreement and the
EIR for the project, Sierra Watch sent a letter to the County alleging it had violated the
Brown Act. The Brown Act imposes various requirements on local agencies, including
counties, intended to ensure that their actions and deliberations are conducted openly.
5
(§ 54950.) According to Sierra Watch’s letter, the County violated two of these
requirements. First, it alleged the County violated section 54954.2 of the Brown Act,
which requires counties (and other local agencies) to post an agenda at least 72 hours
before each board meeting “containing a brief general description of each item of
business to be transacted or discussed at the meeting.” (§ 54954.2, subd. (a)(1).) Sierra
Watch reasoned the County’s agenda was insufficient because it did not “announc[e] . . .
that [the Board] was to consider a substantive amendment to the proposed Development
Agreement” — namely, the addition of the TRPA-fee provision. Second, it alleged the
County violated section 54957.5 of the Brown Act, which requires counties (and other
local agencies), when distributing any meeting material to their boards less than 72 hours
before an open meeting, to make that writing “available for public inspection . . . at the
time the writing is distributed to all, or a majority of all, of the [board] members.”
(§ 54957.5, subd. (b).) The County violated this requirement, Sierra Watch asserted,
because it failed to make the Schwab Memorandum available to the public at the same
time it was distributed to the Board members. The County, however, disagreed with both
Sierra Watch’s allegations and declined to reconsider its approvals.
Shortly after receiving the County’s response, Sierra Watch filed a petition for
writ of mandate and complaint for injunctive and declaratory relief against the County
and its Board. Sierra Watch alleged in its suit the two issues it raised in its letter: The
County violated section 54954.2 because its agenda failed to notify the public that the
Board would consider a substantive revision to the development agreement, and it
violated section 54957.5 because it failed to make the Schwab Memorandum available
for public inspection at the same time it was distributed to the Board. After the County
successfully demurred to Sierra Watch’s cause of action under 54954.2, Sierra Watch
modified its allegations somewhat in an amended petition and complaint. In its amended
petition and complaint, it alleged the County violated section 54954.2 because its “posted
agenda listed no item of business describing that the Board would consider approving the
6
substance of an agreement . . . between the County, Attorney General’s Office, and
[Squaw] to purportedly address serious concerns about the Project’s impacts on the Lake
Tahoe Basin, which was memorialized in a substantive revision to the . . . Development
Agreement.” Sierra Watch asked the trial court to, among other things, nullify the
Board’s approval of the development agreement, grant injunctive relief, and declare that
the County violated the Brown Act.
Following a bench trial, the court rejected Sierra Watch’s claims, starting with
Sierra Watch’s claim under section 54954.2. In the court’s view, to determine whether
the County violated this provision, it needed to consider whether the TRPA provision
“constituted a distinct item of business which needed to be separately identified on the
agenda, or whether the amended Development Agreement differed radically from the
previous version of the Development Agreement to such an extent as to make the agenda
misleading.” But because it found neither true, it rejected Sierra Watch’s claim. The
court turned next to Sierra Watch’s claim under section 54957.5. Rejecting Sierra
Watch’s contentions, it found the County made the Schwab Memorandum available for
public inspection at the same time the memorandum was distributed to the Board
members. It reasoned that the County clerk made the memorandum available for public
inspection the moment she placed it in the County clerk’s office — which she did around
the same time she e-mailed the memorandum to the Board — even though the clerk’s
office was closed at that time.
Sierra Watch timely appealed.3
3 Around the same time it challenged the County’s action under the Brown Act, Sierra
Watch also challenged the County’s action under CEQA. In that case too, the trial court
ultimately rejected all Sierra Watch’s claims. Sierra Watch afterward appealed the court’s
decision, which we consider in the separate case of Sierra Watch v. Placer County et al.
(Aug. 24, 2021, C088130) [nonpub. opn.].
7
DISCUSSION
I
The County’s Disclosure of the Schwab Memorandum
We consider first whether the County violated the Brown Act’s disclosure
requirements under section 54957.5.
Under section 54957.5 of the Brown Act, a county must disclose writings that are
distributed to all or most of the county’s board of supervisors “in connection with a
matter subject to discussion or consideration” at the board’s open meetings. (§ 54957.5,
subd. (a).) In most circumstances, section 54957.5 requires these writings to “be made
available upon request without delay.” (§ 54957.5, subd. (a).) But when these writings
are distributed to all or most board members less than 72 hours before an open meeting, it
imposes a slightly different requirement in terms of when and where these writings must
be made available. Under these circumstances, subdivision (b)(1) of section 54957.5
describes when these public records must be made available: If a “public record . . . that
relates to an agenda item for an open session of a regular meeting of [a county’s board of
supervisors], is distributed less than 72 hours prior to that meeting, the writing shall be
made available for public inspection pursuant to paragraph (2) at the time the writing is
distributed to all, or a majority of all, of the members of the [board].” Subdivision (b)(2)
of section 54957.5 then describes where these public record must be made available: “A
[county] shall make [the] writing . . . available for public inspection at a public office or
location that the [county] shall designate for this purpose.” Subdivision (b)(2) adds that
“[t]he [county] also may post the writing on the [county’s] Internet Web site in a position
and manner that makes it clear that the writing relates to an agenda item for an upcoming
meeting.” Should a county fail to abide by these requirements, an interested person
cannot nullify the county’s resulting actions but can seek declaratory and injunctive
relief. (§ 54960, subd. (a).)
8
With those requirements in mind, we turn to the issue before us. The Schwab
Memorandum, as all parties agree, was a public record related to an agenda item for one
of the Board’s open meetings and was distributed to all the Board members less than 72
hours before that meeting. Under those circumstances, as all parties further agree, the
County needed to make the memorandum “available for public inspection” at the same
time it was distributed to the Board members. (See § 54957.5, subd. (b).) The question
here is whether it did. The County, its Board, Squaw, and Squaw Valley Resort LLC
(collectively, respondents) argue it did, reasoning the County complied with section
54957.5 because it placed the Schwab Memorandum in an office where records are
“available for public inspection” at the same time it distributed the memorandum to the
Board — that is, around 5:40 p.m. on November 14, 2016. Sierra Watch, in contrast,
argues otherwise. Because the memorandum was placed in the County clerk’s office
after hours, it contends the County made the memorandum “available for public
inspection” only when the office reopened on November 15, 2016.
We find Sierra Watch has the better argument. Section 54957.5 is not, as
respondents believe, merely concerned with the time a record is placed in a location
allowing for public inspection; it is instead principally concerned with the time a record is
actually available for public inspection. That is plain from the statutory text. Per section
54957.5, subdivision (b)(1), “the writing shall be made available for public inspection . . .
at the time the writing is distributed to all, or a majority of all, of the members of the
[board].” (Italics added.) In this case, the County distributed the Schwab Memorandum
to the Board around 5:40 p.m. on November 14, 2016. The question for us, then, is
whether the memorandum was “available for public inspection . . . at th[at] time.” It was
not. No document at the County clerk’s office, after all, was “available for public
inspection” at 5:40 p.m. on November 14, 2016 — a time when the clerk’s office was
closed.
9
Respondents, reading section 54957.5 somewhat differently, contend the statute’s
plain language instead requires a ruling in their favor. They argue as follows:
(1) Subdivision (b)(1) of section 54957.5 required the County to make the memorandum
“available for public inspection pursuant to [subdivision (b)(2)] at the time the writing
[wa]s distributed to all, or a majority of all, of the members of the [Board].”
(2) Subdivision (b)(2), in turn, required the County to make the memorandum “available
for public inspection at a public office or location that the [County had] designate[d] for
this purpose.” (3) Putting these two requirements together, the County fully complied
with section 54957.5 because it placed the memorandum in the County clerk’s office at
the time it was distributed to the Board.
But subdivisions (b)(1) and (b)(2), read together, did not simply require the
County to place the memorandum in the County clerk’s office at the time it was
distributed to the Board. Both these subdivisions, again, are principally concerned with
the time that records are actually available for public inspection, not merely the time that
these records are placed in areas allowing for public inspection. Subdivision (b)(1)
describes when these records must be “available for public inspection” — namely, “at the
time the writing is distributed to all, or a majority of all, of the members of the [board of
supervisors].” Subdivision (b)(2) then describes where these records must be “available
for public inspection” — namely, “at a public office or location that the agency shall
designate for this purpose.” Together these subdivisions required the memorandum here
to be available for public inspection “at a public office or [other designated] location”
(§ 54957.5, subd. (b)(2)) “at the time the writing [wa]s distributed to all, or a majority of
all, of the members of the [Board]” (§ 54957.5, subd. (b)(1)). But again, that did not
happen. More specifically, the Schwab Memorandum was not available for public
inspection at the County clerk’s office around 5:40 p.m. on November 14, 2016 — the
time the memorandum was distributed to the Board. It instead was first available for
10
public inspection at the clerk’s office a day later, when the clerk’s office reopened. The
County violated section 54957.5 as a result.
Apart from their textual argument, respondents also assert that accepting Sierra
Watch’s position would lead to several absurd results. First, they contend Sierra Watch’s
position will at times force counties to delay when they distribute materials to their board
members. That is so, they explain, because if a county would like to deliver certain
materials to its board at, say, 6:00 p.m. on a Friday in advance of a Monday meeting, it
would need to wait until its offices reopened on Monday to send the materials.
Sierra Watch, in response, contends this is not necessarily so because agencies
could always post their materials online to comply with section 54957.5, subdivision (b).
But we are not so sure. Section 54957.5 does not say agencies may make records
available at a physical location or alternatively post the records online — though some
committee analyses on the bill enacting section 54957.5, subdivision (b) did interpret it
this way. (See Sen. Rules Com., Analysis of Sen. Bill No. 343 (2007-2008 Reg. Sess.) p.
2 [to make “writings available for public inspection,” this bill requires a local agency to
“do either of the following”: (1) “[m]ake the writing available at an office or location that
has been designated by the agency and listed on the meeting agenda; or” (2) “[p]ost the
writing on the local agency’s Internet Web site” (italics added)]; Sen. Local Gov. Com.,
Analysis of Sen. Bill No. 343 (2007-2008 Reg. Sess.) pp. 1-2 [same].) The statute
instead says agencies “shall” make records available at a physical location and “also
may” post the records online. (§ 54957.5, subd. (b)(2), italics added; see Common Cause
v. Board of Supervisors (1989) 49 Cal.3d 432, 443 [“the word ‘may’ is ordinarily
construed as permissive, whereas ‘shall’ is ordinarily construed as mandatory,
particularly when both terms are used in the same statute”]; Holland v. Assessment
Appeals Bd. No. 1 (2014) 58 Cal.4th 482, 490 [“ ‘If the plain, commonsense meaning of a
statute’s words is unambiguous, the plain meaning controls.’ ”].) We thus agree with
respondents that, under a literal reading of the statute, counties cannot satisfy section
11
54957.5, subdivision (b) merely by posting materials online. And we agree too that, if
that is so, then accepting Sierra Watch’s position may at times require counties to delay
when they distribute materials to their board members.
But even so, we do not find that result so absurd that we must override the plain
meaning of the statutory language requiring records to be “available for public inspection
. . . at the time” they are distributed to the board. “To justify departing from a literal
reading of a clearly worded statute, the results produced must be so unreasonable the
Legislature could not have intended them.” (In re D.B. (2014) 58 Cal.4th 941, 948.) We
cannot find so here. True, our literal reading of the statute may at times delay the
distribution of materials to board members, occasionally leaving them with less time to
consider late submissions. But the Legislature enacted section 54957.5, subdivision (b)
in part because of the disparity of information available to the public and board members,
with board members having access to agenda materials before the public. (See Assem.
Com. on Local Gov., Analysis of Sen. Bill No. 343 (2007-2008 Reg. Sess.) p. 2 [noting
the bill author’s concern that “the last-minute release of agenda packet materials leaves
citizens feeling blindsided by their governments”].) And its solution to this perceived
problem was not to require counties to make these materials available to the public
“without delay” after distribution to board members, as section 54957.5 requires in other
circumstances. (See § 54957.5, subd. (a).) Its solution instead was to require counties to
make these materials available to the public “at the time” they are distributed to board
members. Considering this backdrop, it is at least plausible the Legislature thought it
best that board members and the public have equal opportunity to review late
submissions, even if achieving that requirement would on occasion result in less time for
board members to review these submissions.
Respondents further assert that accepting Sierra Watch’s position “would also lead
to absurd results because it would allow opponents to perpetually delay project approval
by submitting last minute comments outside of normal business hours.” We appreciate
12
the concern. Suppose that in the middle of the night before every meeting, a member of
the public e-mails all board members comments concerning an item on the board’s
agenda. Strictly construing section 54957.5, those e-mails arguably would need to “be
made available for public inspection” at the county’s office “at the time” they were sent
to the board members. But it of course would be absurd to expect the county to remain
open and staff its office to allow public inspection of documents in the middle of the
night.4
For that reason, respondents argue, their favored reading of the statute is the better
one. But their approach fares no better in addressing this issue. Respondents, again,
contend a county satisfies section 54957.5, subdivision (b) if, at the time a record is
distributed to most or all board members, the county places a copy of that record in a
location allowing for public inspection — even if the county does so at a time when that
location is currently closed. But unless the county staffs its office around the clock, it
cannot even accomplish that much when a member of the public e-mails the board in the
middle of the night. And so, even under respondents’ approach, this potential issue
remains. So how should we deal with this situation? We need not decide this issue
today, which unlike our case, concerns the conduct of those outside a county’s control.
For our purposes here, it is enough that we find the County violated section 54957.5
when, as a result of its own conduct, it failed to make the Schwab Memorandum
available for public inspection at the time it distributed the memorandum to the Board.
4 As originally drafted, section 54957.5 required only the disclosure of records
distributed to a local agency’s legislative body “by a member, officer, employee, or agent
of such body for discussion or consideration at a public meeting.” (Stats. 1980, ch. 1284,
§ 24, pp. 4343-4344.) But in 1993, the Legislature expanded this language to require the
disclosure of records distributed “by any person in connection with a matter subject to
discussion or consideration at a public meeting” — language that remains the same today,
with the exception of “a public meeting” now being “an open meeting.” (Stats. 1993, ch.
1136, § 14, p. 6366, italics added; see § 54957.5, subd. (a).)
13
II
The County’s Amendment to the Development Agreement
We consider next whether the County violated the Brown Act’s requirements for
posting agendas under section 54954.2.
The Brown Act requires counties, at least 72 hours before each meeting, to “post
an agenda containing a brief general description of each item of business to be transacted
or discussed at the meeting.” (§ 54954.2, subd. (a)(1).) A county that fails to provide in
its agenda the required “brief general description” of an item of business cannot discuss
that item at the meeting, except in a few limited situations irrelevant here. (§ 54954.2,
subds. (a)(3), (b).) And should it nonetheless do so, an interested person can seek
declaratory and injunctive relief (§ 54960, subd. (a)) and also seek to nullify the county’s
action (§ 54960.1, subd. (a)). But interested persons cannot successfully nullify a
county’s action if the county at least substantially complied with section 54954.2’s
requirements. (§ 54960.1, subd. (d)(1).) Nor may they do so unless they suffered some
prejudice from the county’s action. (Fowler v. City of Lafayette (2020) 46 Cal.App.5th
360, 372.)
A. The County’s Agenda Was Inaccurate and Misleading
The County’s agenda here, in relevant part, informed the public that the Board
would consider approving a certain development agreement, which is a type of
“ ‘enforceable contract between a municipality and a developer’ ” that, “[i]n essence, . . .
‘freeze[s] zoning and other land use regulation applicable to specified property to
guarantee that a developer will not be affected by changes in the standards for
government approval during the period of development.’ [Citation.]” (Center for
Community Action & Environmental Justice v. City of Moreno Valley (2018) 26
Cal.App.5th 689, 696-697; see § 65864 et seq.) In particular, the County’s agenda noted
that its Board would “consider a recommendation from the Placer County Planning
14
Commission” (the Planning Commission) to adopt “an ordinance to approve the
Development Agreement relative to the Village at Squaw Valley Specific Plan.”
According to Sierra Watch, however, the County’s agenda ultimately proved to be
“fatally misleading.” Sierra Watch accepts that the agenda’s reference to the
“Development Agreement” would have allowed the approval of the development
agreement that the County initially shared with the public at the time it posted its agenda.
But, in Sierra Watch’s view, the County acted improperly when it amended the
agreement the night before the Board’s meeting to add a requirement that Squaw pay
$440,862 in air quality mitigation fees to TRPA. That is so, it reasons, because this fee
requirement was effectively a “new type of approval” serving “to avoid a lawsuit by the
Attorney General — a purpose entirely distinct from, and outside the scope of, the
Development Agreement.” And, it adds, even if this fee requirement were not a new type
of approval distinct from the development agreement, the County’s agenda was still
“inadequate because the Development Agreement listed on it was substantially altered
without notice, thereby misleading the public.”
We address these arguments in turn, starting with Sierra Watch’s contention that
the TRPA fee requirement reflected a “new objective” and so was effectively a “new type
of approval.” The County required Squaw to pay various mitigation fees in the
development agreement and perhaps, as Sierra Watch believes, it had somewhat different
motives in imposing these different fees. Perhaps it required Squaw to pay some of these
fees to address the County’s concerns, and perhaps it required Squaw to pay the TRPA
fee in part to address the Attorney General’s concerns. But we reject Sierra Watch’s
contention that each provision in an agreement that addresses a distinct concern must
necessarily be listed as a separate agenda item. Nothing in the Brown Act, in our view,
imposes such a requirement. The Brown Act, again, requires a county’s agenda to
provide “a brief general description of each item of business to be transacted or discussed
at the meeting.” (§ 54954.2, subd. (a)(1).) And an agreement that includes, say, 10
15
distinct provisions to address the parties’ various objectives on a topic is not, for that
reason, 10 distinct “item[s] of business.” It is instead one agreement and one “item of
business.” And so it is here: The development agreement for the project was, even as
amended, one agreement and “one item of business.”
Sierra Watch’s two cited cases — Hernandez v. Town of Apple Valley (2017) 7
Cal.App.5th 194 (Hernandez) and San Joaquin Raptor Rescue Center v. County of
Merced (2013) 216 Cal.App.4th 1167 (San Joaquin Raptor) — do not support a contrary
finding. In Hernandez, a city council posted an agenda that discussed the potential
approval of a “Wal-Mart Initiative Measure” but then, at its meeting, it approved more
than just the initiative. It also approved a memorandum of understanding “that
authorized accepting a gift from Walmart to pay for the” initiative process — something
that “was first proposed at the meeting.” (Hernandez, at pp. 197, 208.) The city council
doing so, the court found, violated the Brown Act. It reasoned that section 54954.2
requires “each item of business” to be on the agenda, but the agenda in this case — which
only referenced the “Wal-Mart Initiative Measure” — gave “no notice” of the separate
and “important” item of business concerning the memorandum of understanding.
(Hernandez, at pp. 208-209.)
The court’s decision in San Joaquin Raptor is similar. The county there disclosed
in its agenda that it would consider approving an application to subdivide three large
parcels into nine parcels. (San Joaquin Raptor, supra, 216 Cal.App.4th at p. 1171.) But
it then approved at its meeting the subdivision application and the CEQA document
prepared for the project. The court found it violated section 54954.2 as a result. Similar
to the court in Hernandez, the court reasoned that section 54954.2 requires “each item of
business” to be on the agenda, but the agenda in this case — which only referenced the
subdivision application — gave no notice of the “distinct item of business” concerning
the CEQA document. (San Joaquin Raptor, at pp. 1176-1177; see also Olson v.
16
Hornbrook Community Services Dist. (2019) 33 Cal.App.5th 502, 521 [agenda discussing
the intent to approve nine specific bills did not authorize the approval of a tenth bill].)
Although Sierra Watch finds these cases “squarely on point here,” we find
differently. Unlike in Hernandez and San Joaquin Raptor, the County here noticed one
development agreement in its agenda and the Board then approved one development
agreement, not two distinct agreements, at its meeting. Sierra Watch, again, believes the
approved development agreement is really two documents — a development agreement
and a TRPA fee agreement — because its motive for adding the TRPA provision was “to
avoid a lawsuit by the Attorney General.” But again, we find that argument
unpersuasive. To start, the premise that the County added the TRPA-fee provision “to
avoid a lawsuit by the Attorney General” is questionable. As the trial court found, the
County did not add that provision at the Attorney General’s request. It instead added the
provision, and apparently begrudgingly at that, because Squaw requested it. In any event,
a contract that includes a provision to placate a third party, even if added late, is still only
one contract and one “item of business.”
That said, we acknowledge Sierra Watch’s concern that local agencies may, in
some instances, attempt to shoehorn new matters into existing agenda items to
circumvent the Brown Act’s requirements. But we reject its invitation to treat the TRPA
fee in this case as an entirely new matter that was outside the scope of the development
agreement. In arguing we should find otherwise, Sierra Watch claims that “the Board
itself” characterized the TRPA provision as a “ ‘complete and separate issue’ ” from the
development agreement, and so we should find the same. But we read the record
differently. At the meeting, one Board member said it was not the County’s policy to
“concede” that TRPA had authority to impose fees on projects outside the Lake Tahoe
Basin, and he then sought to confirm that the TRPA provision added here reflected, not
the County’s concession about TRPA’s jurisdiction, but “a complete and separate issue
related to the relationship between Squaw and [the Attorney General].” County counsel,
17
in response, confirmed that the provision was not a concession about TRPA’s authority
over the project but instead “a voluntary contribution on the part of [Squaw].” All this
discussion, then, concerned only a desire to clarify the County’s position concerning the
scope of TRPA’s authority — not the appropriate scope of a development agreement.
Considering the context of this one Board member’s “complete and separate issue”
comment, we decline to find that “the Board itself” believed the TRPA concerned a
matter “complete and separate” from the development agreement.
We turn next to Sierra Watch’s second argument. Again, per Sierra Watch, even
if the fee requirement were not a distinct agreement, the County’s agenda would still be
“inadequate because the Development Agreement listed on it was substantially altered
without notice, thereby misleading the public.” Unlike Sierra Watch’s first argument, we
find this one has merit.
The County’s agenda, again, informed the public that the Board would “consider a
recommendation from the Placer County Planning Commission” to adopt an ordinance
approving “the Development Agreement relative to the Village at Squaw Valley Specific
Plan.” At the same time it shared the agenda, the County also shared a copy of the
development agreement that the Planning Commission had recommended, which was
titled “Development Agreement . . . relative to the Village at Squaw Valley Specific
Plan.” With these actions, the County plainly indicated that the development agreement
that the Board would consider at its meeting would be the development agreement that
the Planning Commission had recommended and that the County had publicly shared.
But in the end, the Board never considered that particular agreement. It instead only
considered (and then approved) a materially revised version of the development
agreement that County staff, in consultation with Squaw and the Attorney General, had
prepared the night before the Board’s meeting. It, in other words, only considered a
version of the agreement that the Planning Commission had never considered, even
though the agenda indicated that the Board would consider the agreement that the
18
commission had actually considered. We find the Board’s agenda was, as a result of this
change, rendered inaccurate and misleading.
Under similar circumstances, courts have found a government body’s agenda
improperly misleading. Consider the California Supreme Court’s decision in Santa
Barbara Sch. Dist. v. Superior Court (1975) 13 Cal.3d 315 (Santa Barbara School
District). That case concerned a statutory predecessor to the Brown Act that required
governing boards of school districts to post, 48 hours before any public meeting, “[a] list
of items that will constitute the agenda for” the meeting. (Santa Barbara School District,
at p. 333, fn. 8.) The board there posted an agenda informing the public that “plans” for
desegregating schools would be “[p]resent[ed] . . . to the Board” on one date and “a plan”
would be “adopt[ed] . . . by the Board” at a later date. In this language, the court found
that the board indicated — even if it did not state outright — that the plan to be adopted
by the board would be one of the plans presented to the board at its earlier meeting. (Id.
at p. 335.) But in the end, the board adopted a plan that “differed radically” from any of
the plans it had previously presented, leading the court to find the board’s agenda “fatally
misleading.” (Id. at pp. 335-336.) According to the court, once the board indicated in its
agenda that it would adopt one of the plans presented at its earlier meeting, “it thereby
limited its power to consider any other substantially different plan since otherwise the
posted agenda would be fatally misleading.” (Id. at p. 336.)
While the factual setting here is somewhat different, we find the error to be
similar. The Board, in its agenda, said it would consider a specific agreement at its
meeting (namely, the development agreement that the Planning Commission had
recommended), but in the end, the Board never once considered that agreement. It
instead only considered a materially different agreement (namely, the revised
development agreement that Squaw staff prepared the night before the meeting),
rendering the agenda inaccurate and misleading.
19
Respondents, in opposition, assert that the county code expressly allows the Board
to “ ‘accept, modify, or disapprove’ a draft Development Agreement recommended by
the Planning Commission,” and so, they suggest, the Board did not act improperly in
acting consistent with this authority. (See Placer County Code, § 17.58.240, subd. B
[“After the board of supervisors completes the public hearing, it may accept, modify, or
disapprove the recommendation of the planning commission”].) But the Board did not,
as respondents suppose, consider the Planning Commission’s recommended agreement
and then modify it to include the TRPA provision. The Board never modified anything.
Nor, again, did it ever consider the particular agreement that the Planning Commission
had recommended. It instead considered only the revised version of the agreement. And
because the agenda indicated that the Board would consider the development agreement
that the Planning Commission had recommended, and not instead consider only a
materially revised agreement that the Planning Commission had never considered, we
find the agenda was misleading as a result.
Respondents next, believing the analogy to Santa Barbara School District inapt,
contend the alteration to the development agreement here was only a limited one — a
“half-page ‘insert’ [that] did not change any other provisions in the” agreement. But the
substance of the change, not the length of the new language, is what matters. And the
addition of the TRPA fee here in the amount of $440,862, which was enough to address
the Attorney General’s significant concerns over the project, was a substantial alteration
in our view. To emphasize the point, suppose circumstances were flipped and the County
had removed a provision requiring the payment of nearly a half million dollars in fees as
mitigation. Under those circumstances, we expect all would agree the change was a
substantial one, even if excising that provision removed only half a page.
Respondents also challenge the idea that the Board’s agenda indicated that any
particular development agreement would be adopted. In their telling, the agenda never
elaborated on the “ ‘specific provisions of a Development Agreement [that] would be
20
considered.’ ” We disagree. The County’s agenda did not simply inform the public that
its Board would consider approving some unspecified development agreement for the
project. It did not, for example, say the Board would consider approving “a development
agreement” for the project. It instead said the Board would consider approving “the
Development Agreement relative to the Village at Squaw Valley Specific Plan” — which
was the title of the development agreement that the Planning Commission had
recommended. Any reasonable reader of this messaging would understand that the
development agreement the Board would consider at its meeting would be the
development agreement the Planning Commission had recommended.
Respondents next contend Santa Barbara School District is distinguishable by its
own terms. To that end, they cite a portion of the opinion stating that “if the agenda had
simply indicated the adoption of a ‘Desegregation/Integration Plan for the Elementary
District,’ we would entertain no doubt that it would have given adequate notice.” (Santa
Barbara School District, supra, 13 Cal.3d at p. 335.) But had the school board there said
only that, it would not have been suggesting that the board would consider approving any
particular type of plan — and that is not something we can say here. Again, the County
did not merely inform the public that its Board would consider an unspecified
development agreement for the project. It instead indicated that the Board would
consider the development agreement that the Planning Commission had recommended.
But again, the Board never considered that particular version of the agreement.
Respondents further assert that “nothing in the Brown Act prohibits changes to
agenda items . . . between the posting of the agenda and the ultimate agency action.” But
even if that is generally true, a county’s agenda still needs to be accurate; and an agenda
is not accurate if it says a county’s board of supervisors will consider one agreement at its
meeting but then, at the meeting, the board instead considers a materially different
agreement. Perhaps, had the Board here considered the development agreement the
Planning Commission had recommended and then acted itself to modify the agreement to
21
include the TRPA provision, we would have ruled differently. Perhaps, under those
circumstances, we would have agreed that “nothing in the Brown Act prohibits changes
to agenda items . . . between the posting of the agenda and the ultimate agency action.”
But those are not the facts before us. And focusing on the facts presented, we conclude
that the Board could not, in its agenda, say it would consider a particular development
agreement at its upcoming meeting, and then, at its meeting, consider only a materially
different agreement rather than the one it promised.
Finally, respondents express concern that accepting Sierra Watch’s argument
would make counties and other local agencies unable to respond to late comments. In
their view, “[i]f a local agency could not make changes to a proposed project in response
to public or other agency concerns (as the Board did here) without violating the Brown
Act, public comments received in the three or more days between the posting of the
agenda and the agency’s decision would be for naught.” But our holding does not, as
respondents imagine, bar a county’s board from making changes to a proposed project in
response to comments received after an agenda is posted. It has little to do with that
topic. The Board here, after all, never even made changes to any proposed project —
though respondents repeatedly try to characterize the record differently. Again, the
County’s agenda indicated that the Board would consider approving the development
agreement that the Planning Commission had recommended. But, because of a last
minute revision to the agreement, the Board never considered that particular agreement.
The Board never, that is, considered the specific agreement that the agenda said it would
consider. It instead only considered a substantially revised development agreement,
leaving the posted agenda inaccurate and misleading.
B. Sierra Watch Has Not Shown Prejudice
Our conclusion that the County violated section 54954.2 does not end the matter.
Because Sierra Watch seeks to nullify the Board’s approval of the development
agreement, it is not enough that the County violated section 54954.2. Sierra Watch,
22
again, cannot nullify the Board’s approval of the agreement if the County at least
“substantial[ly] compli[ed]” with section 54954.2’s requirements. (§ 54960.1, subd.
(d)(1).) Nor may Sierra Watch nullify the Board’s approval unless it suffered prejudice
as a result. (Fowler v. City of Lafayette, supra, 46 Cal.App.5th at p. 372.)
We start (and end) with the need to show prejudice. To make this showing, Sierra
Watch first asserts that, if it had more time to review the TRPA provision, it would have
sought expert advice and then provided comments to the Board. But the County’s
violation of section 54954.2 was not the cause of Sierra Watch’s limited ability to review
the TRPA provision. The Board’s agenda violated that statute, again, because it misled
the public about the particular development agreement to be considered at the Board’s
meeting — something that could have been avoided had the agenda simply clarified that
the development agreement the Board would consider at its meeting would not
necessarily be the development agreement the Planning Commission had recommended.
(See Santa Barbara School District, supra, 13 Cal.3d at p. 335 [“if the agenda had simply
indicated the adoption of a ‘Desegregation/Integration Plan for the Elementary District,’ ”
rather than indicating the adoption of one of the plans presented at an earlier meeting,
“we would entertain no doubt that it would have given adequate notice”].) But had the
agenda clarified that point, and thus avoided the violation of section 54954.2, Sierra
Watch still would not have been aware of the TRPA provision until the day of the
meeting. Nor, considering Sierra Watch’s allegations, can we say that Sierra Watch
would have acted differently or been better positioned had the agenda clarified this point.
Sierra Watch’s alleged harm, thus, cannot be attributed to the County’s violation of
section 54954.2.
Sierra Watch also, to show prejudice, contends the Attorney General’s agreement
not to sue in light of the TRPA provision “conceivabl[y] . . . influenced the Board’s
decision.” But in evaluating allegations of prejudice under the Brown Act, we do not
consider whether the agency’s ultimate decision could have “conceivabl[y]” been
23
different had the law been followed. We consider instead whether the agency’s failure to
comply with the law undermined the purposes of the Brown Act by depriving the public
of a fair opportunity to participate in the agency’s open meetings. (See Galbiso v. Orosi
Public Utility Dist. (2010) 182 Cal.App.4th 652, 671 [finding a plaintiff was not
prejudiced by an agency’s alleged violation of the Brown Act because the plaintiff
already had a fair opportunity to state her position]; cf. Rural Landowners Assn. v. City
Council (1983) 143 Cal.App.3d 1013, 1023 [declining, in a CEQA case, to conclude that
a party alleging prejudice must “show[] the result would have been different in the
absence of the error”; the party instead must show the “failure to comply with the law
result[ed] in a subversion of the purposes of CEQA by omitting information from the
environmental review process”].) And on that topic, Sierra Watch only alleges that, had
it known of the TRPA provision earlier, it would have sought expert advice and then
submitted comments to the Board. But again, the unlawful conduct it alleges (the posting
of a misleading agenda) did not cause the harm it alleges (the limited ability to review the
TRPA provision).5
Because, in sum, Sierra Watch has failed to show that the County’s violation of
section 54954.2 deprived it of a fair opportunity to participate in the County’s meeting,
5 Sierra Watch bases its conceivably-different-outcome argument on Hernandez. In
its view, Hernandez said a Brown Act violation is prejudicial so long as it was
conceivably “a factor” in the agency’s decision. But the Hernandez court said no such
thing. The court instead appeared to find prejudice because the Brown Act violation
before it — which concerned a city council’s approval of an agreement that was not on its
agenda — deprived the plaintiff of a fair opportunity to share his views on the agreement.
(See Hernandez, supra, 7 Cal.App.5th at pp. 204-205 [noting that, had the agenda
described the agreement, the plaintiff would have attended the meeting to express his
“ ‘serious concerns’ ”], 208 [noting that no one at the meeting expressed the plaintiff’s
concerns or even commented on the agreement].) The court then separately noted that
the city’s conduct was, apart from being prejudicial, also “troublesome as it is
conceivable this [violation] was a major factor” in the council’s approval of a related
project. (Id. at p. 208.)
24
we decline to find that nullification of the County’s action is proper. The County’s
conduct, we acknowledge, led to the late disclosure of the TRPA provision, which in turn
led to Sierra Watch’s alleged harm in having too little time to review this provision. But
again, that alleged harm was unrelated to the County’s violation of section 54954.2.
Nothing in section 54954.2, after all, required the County to disclose the specific terms of
the development agreement at the time the agenda was posted. (See § 54954.2 [requiring
only a “brief general description of each item of business,” which “generally need not
exceed 20 words”].) And so even had the Board’s agenda complied with section
54954.2, Sierra Watch still would have been unaware of the TRPA provision. That said,
we do not deny that Sierra Watch suffered some prejudice through the late disclosure of
the TRPA provision. But that prejudice, if anything, resulted from the County’s violation
of section 54957.5; and as we discussed in part I of our opinion, the County’s violation of
that statute, even if prejudicial, does not provide ground for vacating the County’s action.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed to the extent that it denies Sierra Watch’s petition to set
aside the County’s action and is otherwise reversed. The trial court is instructed to enter
a new judgment granting Sierra Watch’s writ petition, including its request for
declaratory and injunctive relief, in a manner consistent with this opinion. The parties are
to bear their own costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278.)
/s/
BLEASE, J.
I concur:
/s/
DUARTE, J.
25
RAYE, P. J., concurring.
This case presents two issues of statutory construction concerning the obligation
of a county board of supervisors under the Ralph M. Brown Act (Gov. Code, § 54950 et.
seq.)6 to make certain information available to the public in advance of a meeting to
which the information relates.
Section 54954.2, subdivision (a)(1) requires a board to post an agenda at least 72
hours before each board meeting “containing a brief general description of each item of
business to be transacted or discussed at the meeting.”
Section 54957.5, subdivision (b)(1) requires county board of supervisors, when
distributing any meeting material to their boards less than 72 hours before an open
meeting, to make that writing “available for public inspection . . . at the time the writing
is distributed to all, or a majority of all, of the [board members].”
As to section 54957.5, subdivision (b), concerning the availability of meeting
materials distributed to board members less than 72 hours before an open meeting, I
agree with the majority opinion’s conclusion that (1) materials placed in a public office
after the close of business are not “available for public inspection” until the office
reopens, and (2) the statute does not authorize online posting as an alternative method of
providing public access. Consequently the materials at issue here, a provision requiring
Squaw Valley Real Estate LLC to pay $440,862 in fees to be used for Tahoe Regional
Planning Agency (TRPA) “Environmental Improvement Projects,” delivered to a public
office after closing hours, were not available for public inspection until the following
day, thus missing the 72-hour posting deadline.
6 Undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code.
1
However, I am not persuaded by the majority opinion’s construction of section
54954.2, subdivision (a)(1) and its conclusion that the agenda posted by board did not
comport with the statute.
In language about as clear as one can make it, the statute simply requires the
agenda to contain “a brief general description of each item of business to be transacted or
discussed.” (§ 54954.2, subd. (a)(1).) The agenda here informed the public that the
board would “consider a recommendation from the Placer County Planning Commission”
to adopt an ordinance approving “the Development Agreement relative to the Village at
Squaw Valley Specific Plan.” At the same time it shared the agenda, the county also
shared with the public a copy of the development agreement that the planning
commission had recommended, which was titled “Development Agreement . . . relative
to the Village at Squaw Valley Specific Plan.”
The majority opinion wisely rejects Sierra Watch’s contention that each provision
in an agreement that addresses a distinct concern must necessarily be listed as a separate
agenda item. The development agreement for the project was, even as amended, one
agreement and one “item of business.” (§ 54954.2, subd. (a)(1).)
The majority opinion also rejects the invitation to treat the TRPA fee in this case
as an entirely new matter that was outside the scope of the development agreement.
But the majority opinion accepts the argument that “the Development Agreement
listed on it was substantially altered without notice, thereby misleading the public.” The
majority opinion reasons that the development agreement referred to in the agenda was
the development agreement described in documents provided to board in advance of the
meeting—the documents that were not made “available for public inspection” as required
by section 54957.5, subdivision (b). The majority opinion likens this to facts considered
in Santa Barbara Sch. Dist. v. Superior Court (1975) 13 Cal.3d 315 (Santa Barbara
School District) where “the board indicated—even if it did not state outright—that the
plan to be adopted by the board would be one of the plans presented to the board at its
2
earlier meeting. (Id. at p. 335.) But in the end, the board adopted a plan that ‘differed
radically’ from any of the plans it had previously presented, leading the court to find the
board’s agenda ‘fatally misleading.’ ” (Maj. opn ante, at p. 19.)
But this case is not like the bait and switch of the Santa Barbara School District
case. The agenda did not indicate the board would “consider the recommendation from
the Placer County Planning Commission set forth in the materials furnished to the Board”
on a specified date. The development agreement the board considered and approved was
the agreement the planning commission recommended, as amended to address the
Attorney General’s opposition. The amendment led the Attorney General to drop his
opposition and smoothed the path to approval of the agreement recommended by the
planning commission.
Even with the amendment the development agreement fit the “general description”
set forth in the agenda. Perhaps if we treated agendas like pleadings we could assert
there was a material variance but agendas are not that. If the public was misled, it was
not because of the agenda but because the materials made available to them in advance of
the meeting were incomplete and did not accurately describe the plan. It was the board’s
violation of section 54957.5, subdivision (b) and not the violation of section 54954.2,
subdivision (a)(1) that created the problem complained of in the majority opinion.
Still, I agree there is no basis for setting aside the board’s action. So I concur in
the result.
/s/
RAYE, P. J.
3