Filed 4/20/22 We Advocate Through Environmental Review v. County of Siskiyou 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED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 This opinion has not been certified for
publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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
(Siskiyou)
----
WE ADVOCATE THROUGH ENVIRONMENTAL C090840
REVIEW et al.,
(Super. Ct. No.
Plaintiffs and Appellants, SCCVPT2018041)
v.
COUNTY OF SISKIYOU et al.,
Defendants and Respondents.
CRYSTAL GEYSER WATER COMPANY,
Real Party in Interest and Respondent.
From 2001 to 2010, a water bottling company operated a plant in Siskiyou County
(the County) that extracted groundwater and then used it to produce bottled water. A few
years after the plant closed, Crystal Geyser Water Company (Crystal Geyser) bought the
facility and sought to revive it. To that end, Crystal Geyser requested, among other
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things, a permit from the County to build a caretaker’s residence for the bottling plant and
a permit from the City of Mount Shasta (the City) to allow the plant to discharge
wastewater into the City’s sewer system. Both the County and the City ultimately
granted Crystal Geyser the permits it sought.
This appeal concerns one of two lawsuits challenging these approvals, both of
which are now on appeal and both of which concern the California Environmental
Quality Act (CEQA; Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq.). In one suit, Appellants We
Advocate Thorough Environmental Review and Winnehem Wintu Tribe alleged that the
County’s environmental review for the bottling facility was inadequate under CEQA. In
another, they alleged that the City’s decision to issue the wastewater permit for the
bottling plant, which relied on the County’s environmental review for the facility, was
also improper under CEQA.
We focus here on Appellants’ challenge to the County’s environmental review for
the bottling facility. CEQA generally requires public agencies, like the County and the
City, to consider the environmental consequences of discretionary projects they propose
to approve. When multiple agencies propose to approve aspects of the same project, as
here, one serves as the “lead agency” that conducts environmental review for the whole
of the project. In this case, the County served as the lead agency and considered the
potential environmental impacts of permitting the bottling facility before it or any other
public agency issued a permit for the facility. But in Appellants’ view, the County’s
analysis was inadequate. Appellants allege that the County (1) provided a misleading
description of the project, (2) defined the project’s objectives in an impermissibly narrow
manner, (3) improperly evaluated the project’s impacts to aesthetics, air quality, climate
change, noise, and hydrology, and (4) approved the project even though it would result in
violations of the County’s and the City’s general plans.
The trial court rejected all Appellants’ arguments. But we find two of Appellants’
contentions have merit. First, we agree that the County defined the project’s objectives in
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an overly narrow manner. Second, we also agree that the County’s process for evaluating
the project’s impacts to climate change was flawed. Relevant to this point, the County
initially informed the public that the bottling project would result in greenhouse gas
emissions of one amount, but, after the period for public comments had ended, the
County disclosed that the project would actually result in emissions nearly double what it
initially estimated. Under the circumstances of this case, we find that the County should
have allowed the public further opportunity to comment on the project after this late
disclosure. For these reasons, we reverse.
BACKGROUND
In the 1990s, Dannon Waters of North America, which later became Coca-Cola
Dannon (Dannon), acquired a property in the County with the intent of constructing a
bottling facility. It afterward, following County approval, constructed a bottling facility,
a groundwater production well (known as DEX-6), and a domestic groundwater well
(known as the domestic well). Dannon operated the plant from January 2001 until some
point in 2010.
Crystal Geyser acquired the property in 2013. A few years later, after Crystal
Geyser proposed returning the plant to production, the County initiated environmental
review of the proposed project under CEQA. In 2017, the County released a draft
document, called a draft Environmental Impact Report or draft EIR, describing the
proposed project and analyzing the project’s potential impacts. In the draft EIR, the
County explained that, in general, “[t]he Proposed Project entails renovations to a former
bottling plant in unincorporated Siskiyou County . . . adjacent to the City of Mt. Shasta
(City) for the production of sparkling water, flavored water, juice beverages, and teas.” It
added that, to facilitate the project, Crystal Geyser would need to obtain permits from
several public agencies, including, among other permits, a permit from the County for
construction of a caretaker’s residence for the plant, a permit from the City for
wastewater discharge from the plant, and several permits from the local air quality district
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for the plant’s generators and boilers. The County evaluated in its draft EIR the potential
environmental impacts associated with all these governmental approvals.
After the County circulated the draft EIR, various parties commented on the
project, including Appellants. The County afterward issued a final EIR for the project
with responses to these comments. A few months later, in December 2017, the County’s
board of supervisors certified the EIR. As part of the approval, the board acknowledged
that the project would have some unavoidable significant environmental impacts but
found these impacts would be outweighed by the project’s benefits. (See Cal. Code.
Regs., tit. 14, § 15092, subd. (b)(2)(B).1)
A month after the County approved the project, Appellants filed a petition for writ
of mandate and complaint, alleging that the County and its board violated CEQA and also
violated the County’s and the City’s general plans. Appellants reasoned, as relevant here,
that the County provided an inaccurate description of the project, defined the project’s
objectives in an impermissibly narrow manner, improperly evaluated several of the
project’s impacts, and approved the project even though it would be inconsistent with the
County’s and the City’s general plans.
Following a hearing, the trial court rejected all Appellants’ claims. The court
afterward entered a judgment denying Appellants’ petition for writ of mandate and
complaint.
Appellants timely appealed.2
1 California Code of Regulations, title 14, sections 15000-15387 are ordinarily referred
to as the CEQA Guidelines. We will use that shorthand to refer to these regulations
going forward.
2 A few months after filing this action, Appellants also filed a related action challenging
the City’s issuance of a wastewater permit for the bottling facility. In that case too, the
trial court rejected all Appellants’ claims. Appellants afterward timely appealed the
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DISCUSSION
I. CEQA Background
CEQA serves “to ensure that public agencies will consider the environmental
consequences of discretionary projects they propose to carry out or approve.” (Stockton
Citizens for Sensible Planning v. City of Stockton (2010) 48 Cal.4th 481, 488.) To that
end, absent an exemption, an agency proposing to carry out or approve a project
generally must conduct an initial study to determine “if the project may have a significant
effect on the environment.” (CEQA Guidelines, § 15063, subd. (a).) In the event
multiple agencies propose to approve aspects of the same project, one serves as the “lead
agency” that conducts the initial study. (See Pub. Resources Code, § 21067 [defining
“lead agency”]; see also CEQA Guidelines, §§ 15050, subd. (a), 15063, subd. (a) [noting
that “the lead agency” conducts the initial study].)
Depending on the initial study’s findings, the lead agency must then prepare either
an EIR, a mitigated negative declaration, or a negative declaration. If “there is no
substantial evidence that the project or any of its aspects may cause a significant effect on
the environment,” the agency need only prepare a negative declaration that “briefly
describ[es] the reasons that [the] proposed project . . . will not have a significant effect on
the environment.” (CEQA Guidelines, §§ 15063, subd. (b)(2), 15371.) If substantial
evidence shows the project may in fact have a significant environmental effect, but the
project applicant agrees to changes that would avoid or mitigate them, then the agency
may instead prepare a mitigated negative declaration. (CEQA Guidelines, § 15070, subd.
(b).) And if substantial evidence shows the project may have a significant environmental
effect and a mitigated negative declaration is inappropriate, as is true in this case, then the
agency must prepare an EIR providing detailed information about the project’s potential
court’s decision, which we considered in the separate case of We Advocate Thorough
Environmental Review, et al. v. City of Mount Shasta, et al. (Case No. C091012).
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environmental impacts. (Pub. Resources Code, §§ 21100 [state agency requirements],
21151 [local agency requirements], 21061 [defining an EIR].)
An EIR, as courts have often said, is “ ‘ “the heart of CEQA.” ’ ” (Cleveland
National Forest Foundation v. San Diego Assn. of Governments (2017) 3 Cal.5th 497,
511 (Cleveland Nat. Forest Foundation).) It serves to “(1) inform the government and
public about a proposed activity’s potential environmental impacts; (2) identify ways to
reduce, or avoid, those impacts; (3) require project changes through alternatives or
mitigation measures when feasible; and (4) disclose the government’s rationale for
approving a project.” (Protecting Our Water & Environmental Resources v. County of
Stanislaus (2020) 10 Cal.5th 479, 488.) To fulfill these purposes, an “EIR ‘must include
detail sufficient to enable those who did not participate in its preparation to understand
and to consider meaningfully the issues raised by the proposed project.’ ” (Cleveland
Nat. Foundation, supra, 3 Cal.5th at p. 511.) But that does not mean an EIR must be
exhaustive on all topics. Courts look “ ‘not for perfection but for adequacy,
completeness, and a good faith effort at full disclosure.’ [Citation.]” (In re Bay-Delta
etc.(2008) 43 Cal.4th 1143, 1175 (In re Bay-Delta).)
In reviewing an agency’s compliance with CEQA, courts review for abuse of
discretion. (Sierra Club v. County of Fresno (2018) 6 Cal.5th 502, 512.) Courts will find
an agency abused its discretion if it either failed to proceed in a manner required by law
or reached a decision not supported by substantial evidence. (Ibid.) “ ‘Judicial review of
these two types of error differs significantly: While we determine de novo whether the
agency has employed the correct procedures, “scrupulously enforc[ing] all legislatively
mandated CEQA requirements” [citation], we accord greater deference to the agency’s
substantive factual conclusions. In reviewing for substantial evidence, the reviewing
court “may not set aside an agency’s approval of an EIR on the ground that an opposite
conclusion would have been equally or more reasonable,” for, on factual questions, our
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task “is not to weigh conflicting evidence and determine who has the better argument.”
[Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
With those principles in mind, we turn to Appellants’ arguments on appeal.
II. Project Description
We start with Appellants’ contention that the EIR had a misleading project
description.
Courts have long stated that “[a]n accurate, stable and finite project description is
the sine qua non of an informative and legally sufficient EIR.” (County of Inyo v. City of
Los Angeles (1977) 71 Cal.App.3d 185, 193.) Per the CEQA Guidelines, an EIR’s
project description must contain (1) the precise location and boundaries of the proposed
project, (2) a statement of the objectives sought by the proposed project, (3) a general
description of the project’s technical, economic, and environmental characteristics, and
(4) a statement briefly describing the intended uses of the EIR. (CEQA Guidelines,
§ 15124; see also In re Bay-Delta, supra, 43 Cal.4th at p. 1163, fn. 7 [“ ‘In interpreting
CEQA, we accord the Guidelines great weight except where they are clearly
unauthorized or erroneous.’ ”].) In supplying this information, a project description must
account for “the entirety of the project” rather than “some smaller portion of it.” (South
of Market Community Action Network v. City and County of San Francisco (2019)
33 Cal.App.5th 321, 332.) But it should not overwhelm the public with detail “ ‘beyond
that needed for evaluation and review of the environmental impact.’ ” (Ibid.)
In this case, the EIR’s project description explained that the proposed project
“consists of the operation of a bottling facility and ancillary uses within an approximately
118-acre site formerly developed and operated as a bottling plant.” It explained that the
proposed bottling plant would use “groundwater from the Big Springs Aquifer obtained
through an existing production well (DEX-6) in the northern area of the project site to
bottle three different types of beverage products: sparkling water (flavored and
unflavored), teas, and juice beverages.” It explained that the proposed plant would
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initially operate one bottling line and use about “80 [gallons per minute (gpm)] on a
monthly average basis (with an annualized average of 115,000 [gallons per day (gpd)])”
and, over time and dependent on market conditions, could eventually operate two bottling
lines and use about “150 gpm on a monthly average basis . . . (with an annualized average
of 217,000 gpd).” And lastly, as relevant here, it explained that Crystal Geyser “proposes
to construct a 1,188-sf caretaker/security residence within the project site” to “allow for
continuous, on-site security at the Plant.”
In attacking this project description, Appellants first argue that it improperly
focused on the planned bottling facility rather than the caretaker’s residence, even though
“the only discretionary approval being sought from the County” concerned “the
caretaker’s residence.” They then suggest that all the detail about the bottling facility is
irrelevant, because it “is largely unrelated to the discretionary Permit that was issued by
the County in conjunction with certification of the EIR.” Appellants, in other words,
appear to argue that the County’s EIR should have focused exclusively on the caretaker’s
residence, and some other EIR (or EIRs) should have covered the rest of the project.
We find differently. Several agencies, it is true, had approval authority over
distinct parts of the project. The County had approval authority over the building permit
for the caretaker’s residence, encroachments permits for “sewer system pipeline
upsizing,” and a building permit for a “pH [n]eutralization [s]ystem building”; the City
had approval authority over a wastewater discharge permit; the regional water board had
approval authority concerning the transfer and modification of waste discharge
requirements; and the local air quality district had approval authority over the proposed
operation of several propane generators and boilers. But nothing in CEQA required these
agencies to separately evaluate their piece of the project in a separate EIR. CEQA,
rather, required the opposite. It required the County, as the lead agency, to consider the
“whole of the action” together, even if the project were “subject to several discretionary
approvals by [distinct] governmental agencies.” (CEQA Guidelines, § 15378, subds. (a)
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[“ ‘[p]roject’ means the whole of an action”], (c) [“[t]he term ‘project’ refers to the
activity which is being approved and which may be subject to several discretionary
approvals by governmental agencies”; it “does not mean each separate governmental
approval”].)
Second, Appellants claim that the project description was inadequate because it
“did not disclose to the public the fact that the County has no control over groundwater
extraction or beverage bottling activities.” In our reading, however, the project
description made clear the limited approval authority the County had over the project. It
explained that the County had permitting authority over three matters only: The
construction of a caretaker’s residence, the installation of additional sewer lines to
accommodate greater wastewater flows, and the construction of a pH neutralization
system building that could be used to treat the pH of project wastewater to acceptable
limits.
Third, Appellants assert that the project description improperly offered estimates
on the amount of groundwater that Crystal Geyser would extract. They acknowledge the
EIR’s offered estimates were based on the testimony of a Crystal Geyser employee,
Richard Weklych, who has decades of experience in the bottling industry and who
“provided estimates of the production levels that could be anticipated given certain
equipment.” But they assert that because the EIR did not impose a limit on the amount of
water that Crystal Geyser could extract, any estimate on Crystal Geyser’s potential water
use would be speculative.
We disagree. Weklych stated that he had about 30 years of experience in the
bottling industry, including as an operations manager for a bottling facility that “has
similar hours of operation” as the proposed plant here. He explained that his estimates
for the facility reflected the “maximum operational capacity of the plant” and that this
capacity “is dictated primarily by two factors: equipment limitations and hours of
operation.” In terms of equipment limitations, he noted that the existing facility only
9
contains two production lines and that a permit would be needed to enlarge the building.
And in terms of hours of operations, he noted, among other things, that his estimates
already assumed that Crystal Geyser would operate the facility 24 hours a day Monday to
Friday, with additional shifts on Saturday and Sunday. Based on these considerations
and his experience, Weklych ultimately estimated that Crystal Geyser’s average daily
water demand would be 113,621 gpm for one bottling line (which the EIR appears to
have rounded up to 115,000) and 216,975 gpm for two bottling lines (which the EIR
appears to have rounded up to 217,000).
Considering this testimony, which appears to have gone unchallenged, we find
that the EIR’s offered extraction estimates were supported by substantial evidence, and
not merely speculative, even if they theoretically could be exceeded. (CEQA Guidelines,
§ 15384, subd. (a) [“ ‘Substantial evidence’ as used in these guidelines means enough
relevant information and reasonable inferences from this information that a fair argument
can be made to support a conclusion, even though other conclusions might also be
reached. . . .”].)
Fourth, Appellants challenge Weklych’s estimates on groundwater use for two
additional reasons. They first suggest that the County could not accept Weklych’s
estimates because he was biased in favor of his employer, Crystal Geyser. In Appellants’
apparent view, an interested party’s testimony cannot serve as substantial evidence on
any issue. But as other courts have long explained, these types of objections are
meritless. (San Franciscans Upholding the Downtown Plan v. City & County of San
Francisco (2002) 102 Cal.App.4th 656, 684 [rejecting claim that an expert’s “report
cannot constitute substantial evidence because, rather than providing objective analysis,
[the expert] instead was a paid consultant hired by Real Parties to produce a biased, self-
serving study aimed at a predetermined result”]; Foundation for San Francisco’s
Architectural Heritage v. City and County of San Francisco (1980) 106 Cal.App.3d 893,
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908 [“EIR [wa]s not fatally undermined by the direct participation of the developer and
his experts in the underlying environmental and other studies”].)
Appellants also allege that the County could not rely on Weklych’s estimates
because his estimates were based on faulty assumptions about Dannon’s operation of the
plant. They reason that there are no “reliable records of groundwater extraction rates for
the previous plant” and that the previous plant “was trucking water in from another
source at the rate of 148,800 gallons per week (and not pumping all of the water for its
production from DEX-6).” But Appellants, in making these assertions, ignore the
material evidence that favors a contrary conclusion. Although Appellants’ cited authority
indicates that there are no direct records of groundwater extraction rates from Dannon,
the EIR found that these rates could nonetheless be estimated using Dannon’s “electrical
use data, the engineering specifications of the pump in DEX-6, the depth to water, and an
approximation of the working pressure in the pipelines.” And although Appellants’ cited
authority said that Dannon trucked in water from another source, that same authority
went on to note that Dannon did so only temporarily and later “did stop trucking in water
. . . and began drawing all water from DEX-6.”
In neglecting to disclose this important evidence that significantly undermines
their position, we find that Appellants forfeited their claim that insufficient evidence
supports the EIR’s estimates of groundwater use. As courts have long explained, “ ‘ “an
appellant challenging an EIR for insufficient evidence must lay out the evidence
favorable to the other side and show why it is lacking. Failure to do so is fatal.” ’ ”
(Pfeiffer v. City of Sunnyvale City Council (2011) 200 Cal.App.4th 1552, 1572 (Pfeiffer);
see also Rayii v. Gatica (2013) 218 Cal.App.4th 1402, 1408 [an appellant “who cites and
discusses only evidence in his favor fails to demonstrate any error and waives the
contention that the evidence is insufficient to support the judgment.”].)
Fifth, Appellants argue that “[t]he fact that [Crystal Geyser] representatives with
years of experience could provide a plausible estimate of how much water could be
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pumped . . . was beside the point. Even if the inherent limits of production line
capacities, waste stream disposal, etc. were never exceeded, the Project operator could
easily, and without environmental review, transport extracted ground water by truck in
unlimited quantities to an off-site facility for processing and bottling elsewhere.”
Appellants then fault the EIR for failing to evaluate “the maximum pumping that would
be allowed” under this scenario.
But nothing in the record, as far as Appellants have shown, suggests that Crystal
Geyser might act as Appellants speculate. We cannot, for example, say that Crystal
Geyser intends to transport groundwater to an offsite bottling facility. Nor can we say
that Crystal Geyser could, even if wanted, feasibly do so—a topic that neither Appellants
nor anyone else appears to have raised at the administrative level. Although, on this
point, Appellants claim that “[t]rucking water to bottling locations is a practice that
occurs in the water bottling industry in the area,” they cite, in support, only evidence
showing that Dannon temporarily trucked water from a nearby spring to its facility. But
that tells us little about whether Crystal Geyser could feasibly transfer groundwater from
this facility to another bottling facility. Nor does it tell us whether another bottling
facility even exists anywhere near the facility here. We thus decline to find, as
Appellants allege, that Crystal Geyser “could easily, and without environmental review,
transport extracted ground water by truck in unlimited quantities to an off-site facility for
processing and bottling elsewhere.” (See Center for Biological Diversity v. County of
San Bernardino (2016) 247 Cal.App.4th 326, 349 [“find[ing] the possibility of an
extension of the term of the Project to be far too speculative to require environmental
analysis at this point”]; Save Round Valley Alliance v. County of Inyo (2007)
157 Cal.App.4th 1437, 1448-1450 [rejecting the claim that a project description for a
housing development should have characterized the project as involving 54 units, rather
than 27, because a local ordinance allowed a second unit on each lot; “the possibility that
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future lot owners will or will not build a second unit is extremely uncertain, and any
impact of such second units is highly speculative”].)
Although Appellants counter that one case, San Joaquin Raptor Rescue Center v.
County of Merced (2007) 149 Cal.App.4th 645, supports a ruling in their favor on this
point, we are unpersuaded. The court there considered an EIR for the proposed
expansion of a mining operation. Relevant here, the EIR’s project description provided
conflicting signals on whether the project would or would not increase mine production.
On the one hand, it indicated “that no increases in mine production [was] being sought.”
But on the other hand, “it provide[d] for substantial increases in mine production.” (Id. at
p. 655.) The EIR, for example, indicated that the “mine would have a peak capacity of
550,000 tons per year (as mined),” but it then assumed in its evaluation of impacts that,
as in previous years, “there w[ould] be production levels of only 260,000 tons per year.”
(Id. at pp. 655-656.) The court found the EIR flawed as a result of these inconsistent
statements. (Id. at p. 656.)
Our facts, however, are readily distinguishable. Unlike in San Joaquin Raptor,
nothing in the record here suggests that Crystal Geyser feasibly could extract
substantially more groundwater than the EIR estimated. Again, the EIR’s offered
estimates were premised on Weklych’s unchallenged testimony. And Weklych’s
estimates, in turn, were based on his decades of experience and his understanding of
“[t]he maximum operating capacity of the plant,” which, he stated, were “dictated
primarily by two factors: equipment limitations and hours of operation.” Considering
this record, and finding nothing to support Appellants’ claim that Crystal Geyser “could
easily, and without environmental review, transport” water elsewhere, we cannot say that
our facts are comparable to those in San Joaquin Raptor.
Lastly, in their discussion of the project description, Appellants raise two
objections that appear to have little connection to the project description. First, they
allege that the EIR “actively misled the public by including mitigation measures that the
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County has no ability to enforce.” Second, and relatedly, they allege that the County
failed to “comply[] with CEQA’s requirement that all feasible mitigation measures be
adopted, and that they be enforceable.” But to the extent Appellants sought to challenge
the EIR’s mitigation measures, they needed to raise that argument “under a separate
heading or subheading summarizing the point,” as required under California Rules of
Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(A). Because they failed to do so, we find they forfeited these
arguments. (Opdyk v. California Horse Racing Bd. (1995) 34 Cal.App.4th 1826,
1831, fn. 4.)
III. Project Objectives
We turn next to Appellants’ contention that the EIR’s project objectives were
impermissibly narrow.
An EIR’s project description, as noted above, must contain a statement of the
project objectives. A lead agency must then use this statement to help it, among other
things, develop a reasonable range of alternatives to the proposed project to evaluate in
the EIR. (CEQA Guidelines, § 15124.) As our Supreme Court has explained, “[t]he
process of selecting the alternatives to be included in the EIR begins with the
establishment of project objectives by the lead agency. ‘A clearly written statement of
objectives will help the lead agency develop a reasonable range of alternatives to evaluate
in the EIR and will aid the decision makers in preparing findings. . . .’ [Citation.]” (In re
Bay-Delta, supra, 43 Cal.4th at p. 1163; see also CEQA Guidelines, § 15126.6 [“An EIR
shall describe a range of reasonable alternatives to the project, or to the location of the
project, which would feasibly attain most of the basic objectives of the project but would
avoid or substantially lessen any of the significant effects of the project, and evaluate the
comparative merits of the alternatives.”].)
Here, the EIR stated that Crystal Geyser had eight objectives for the proposed
project: (1) to “operate a beverage bottling facility and ancillary uses to meet increasing
market demand,” (2) to “site the proposed facility at the Plant previously operated by
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[Dannon], to take advantage of the existing building, production well, and availability
and high quality of existing spring water on the property,” (3) to “utilize the full
production capacity of the existing Plant building based on its current size,” (4) to
“initiate operation of the Plant as soon as possible to meet increasing market demand,”
(5) to “minimize environmental impacts . . . by utilizing existing facilities and
infrastructure to the extent possible,” (6) to “modify the existing facilities at the Plant in a
manner that incorporates sustainable building and design practices, recycling efforts, and
other conservation methods, in order to reduce water use,” (7) to “withdraw groundwater
in a sustainable manner that does not result in negative effects on nearby springs or wells,
the underlying shallow or deep aquifers, or the surrounding environment,” and (8) to
“create new employment opportunities for the local and nearby communities, promote
sustainable economic development, provide for adequate services and infrastructure to
support the project, and contribute to the County’s tax base.” The EIR elsewhere defined
the term “Plant” to mean the “former bottling plant in unincorporated Siskiyou County.”
Appellants assert, and we agree, that these objectives were “so narrow[] as to
preclude any alternative other than the Project.” The County largely defined the project
objectives as operating the project as proposed. The project as proposed, again, “consists
of the operation of a bottling facility and ancillary uses within an approximately 118-acre
site formerly developed and operated as a bottling plant” in the County. And the stated
project objectives, mirroring the proposed project itself, consists largely of the use of “the
full production capacity of the existing Plant” and the “operation of the Plant as soon as
possible.” But if the principal project objective is simply pursuing the proposed project,
then no alternative other than the proposed project would do. All competing reasonable
alternatives would simply be defined out of consideration.
In taking this artificially narrow approach for describing the project objectives, the
County ensured that the results of its alternatives analysis would be a foregone
conclusion. It also, as a result, transformed the EIR’s alternatives section—often
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described as part of the “core of the EIR” (In re Bay-Delta, supra, 43 Cal.4th at
p. 1162)—into an empty formality. No alternative apart from the rehabilitation of the
existing plant, after all, could “site the proposed facility at the Plant,” involve the use of
“the full production capacity of the existing Plant,” allow the “operation of the Plant as
soon as possible,” or involve the “modif[ication] [of] the existing facilities at the Plant.”
We find that the County produced a flawed EIR as a result. (See id. at p. 1166 [“a lead
agency may not give a project’s purpose an artificially narrow definition”]; see also
Citizens of Goleta Valley v. Board of Supervisors (1990) 52 Cal.3d 553, 565 [“ ‘One of
[an EIR’s] major functions . . . is to ensure that all reasonable alternatives to proposed
projects are thoroughly assessed by the responsible official.’ ”].)
We also find that the County’s error was prejudicial. Because the County
effectively described the principal project objective as operating the project as proposed,
and “as soon as possible,” it dismissively rejected anything other than the proposed
project. In doing so, it prejudicially prevented informed decision making and public
participation. (North Coast Rivers Alliance v. Kawamura (2015) 243 Cal.App.4th 647,
668, 671 [EIR that had a stated objective of eradicating a certain type of moth, when the
underlying objective was really to protect California’s native plants and agricultural crops
from damage, was unreasonably narrow; it was also prejudicial because it resulted in “the
EIR dismissively rejected anything that would not achieve eradication”]; see also Pub.
Resources Code, § 21005, subd. (a) [“The Legislature finds and declares that it is the
policy of the state that noncompliance with the information disclosure provisions of this
division which precludes relevant information from being presented to the public agency,
or noncompliance with substantive requirements of this division, may constitute a
prejudicial abuse of discretion.”].)
Apart from arguing that the County defined the project’s objectives in an
impermissible narrow fashion, Appellants also assert that the EIR failed to demonstrate
that one of the project alternatives, the no-project alternative, was infeasible. The County
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rejected the no-project alternative because, in its view, “[t]his alternative would not
accomplish any of the basic project objectives.” The County then offered three specific
reasons for this conclusion, though two were largely redundant. Its three reasons were:
(1) “The existing facilities within the project site would remain vacant and non-
operational,” (2) the “existing facilities and infrastructure” would not be used “to the
extent possible,” and (3) no new employment opportunities would be created in the
County.
Challenging these findings, Appellants first assert that at least the first two of the
County’s stated reasons “lack support in the record.” Appellants, in this respect, appear
to challenge the County’s conclusion that the existing bottling facility would remain
vacant absent the proposed project. We reject their challenge. Following Dannon’s
closure of the plant, the facility remained vacant for several years until Crystal Geyser
purchased the plant for purposes of reviving it. These facts certainly tend to show that,
were Crystal Geyser to abandon the plant, it could reasonably be expected to remain
vacant again for a period of time. (See CEQA Guidelines, § 15384, subd. (b)
[“Substantial evidence shall include,” among other things, “reasonable assumptions
predicated upon facts.”].)
Appellants also suggest that the County’s stated reasons for rejecting the no-
project alternative were not clearly tied to the stated project objectives. We find
differently. That the no-project alternative would not create new employment
opportunities in the County plainly related to the project objective of “creat[ing] new
employment opportunities for the local and nearby communities.” And that the no-
project alternative would leave the existing bottling facility vacant plainly related to the
project objective of “utiliz[ing] the full production capacity of the existing Plant building
based on its current size.”
Lastly, Appellants contend that all the County’s stated reasons fail to
“demonstrate[] that the no project alternative is infeasible,” reasoning, it appears, that the
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County’s stated reasons are flawed because they are premised on the EIR’s unreasonably
narrow project objectives. We agree, as mentioned, that the offered project objectives
were unreasonably narrow. We also agree that this affected the County’s analysis of the
no-project alternative and that the County, for this reason, will need to redo its analysis.
IV. Impacts Analysis
We consider next Appellants’ challenge to the EIR’s discussion of environmental
impacts. Appellants allege that the EIR fell short in its analysis of the project’s impacts
on aesthetics, air quality, climate change, noise, and hydrology. We address each issue in
turn.
A. Aesthetics
Appellants first challenge the EIR’s analysis of aesthetic impacts. They argue that
the EIR improperly assumed that the plant is not a “dominant visual feature” in the area,
even though several commenters alleged otherwise. They also contend the County
wrongly declined to mitigate this aesthetic impact on the ground that it is an existing
condition, “despite the fact that the ‘existing’ situation is in violation of the 1998
Mitigation Agreement”—which is the agreement that Dannon and the County entered
into before Dannon constructed the bottling facility.
We reject both arguments. To start, the County did not need to label the existing
plant as a “dominant visual feature” simply because some individuals called it that. The
County acknowledged that the plant was part of one of the “most prominent non-natural
features” in the area, but it declined to find it was a “dominant” visual feature. It
explained that “[d]ominant visual features are considered based on position, extent, or
contrast of basic pattern elements.” It then concluded that the dominant visual features
here “primarily include the mountainous terrain and snowcapped mountains surrounding
the City of Mt. Shasta.” Although Appellants may disagree with this conclusion, finding
the word “dominant” more apt than the word “prominent” when describing the plant, we
find nothing unlawful in the County’s choice of words. (See Protect Niles v. City of
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Fremont (2018) 25 Cal.App.5th 1129, 1147 [“aesthetic judgments are
inherently subjective”]; see also North Coast Rivers Alliance v. Marin Municipal Water
Dist. Bd. of Directors (2013) 216 Cal.App.4th 614, 626 [“Where, as here, the agency
prepares an EIR, the issue is whether substantial evidence supports the agency’s
conclusions, not whether others might disagree with those conclusions.”].)
Appellants’ second argument fares no better. Although Appellants never fully
flesh out their argument, they appear to believe that the County should have treated the
plant building’s color, a reflective white that can occasionally produce glare, as a project
impact because it violates the terms of the 1998 Mitigation Agreement. As relevant here,
that agreement states: “Building and free-standing signage will be constructed of non-
reflective materials and will not be internally illuminated.” But the County, in the EIR,
declined to treat the plant’s reflective paint color as a project impact for a couple reasons.
First, it found that this type of argument was premised on a mistaken reading of the 1998
Mitigation Agreement. In the County’s view, the mitigation measure concerning “ ‘non-
reflective materials’ ” imposed “a limitation on material type (metal, glass, etc[.]), and
not on paint color.” Second, the County found that “[t]he plant building color is an
existing condition” and so “does not constitute a project impact.”
We find nothing defective in the County’s reasoning. First, because Appellants
offer no argument concerning the County’s interpretation of the 1998 Mitigation
Agreement, we find they forfeited any argument they may have had on this point. And
second, because the County had the discretion to evaluate the project’s potential impacts
against the conditions existing at the time of the CEQA analysis, rather than the
conditions existing before the construction of the bottling facility in 1998, we find no
issue in its doing just that. (See Communities for a Better Environment v. South Coast
Air Quality Management Dist. (2010) 48 Cal.4th 310, 321 & fn. 7 [discussing a long line
of cases where “the appellate court concluded the baseline for CEQA analysis must be
the ‘existing physical conditions in the affected area’ [citation], that is, the ‘ “real
19
conditions on the ground” ’ [citations], rather than the level of development or activity
that could or should have been present according to a plan or regulation”]; see also Fat v.
County of Sacramento (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 1270, 1278-1280 [baseline for airport
expansion was existing airport operations, even though the airport had a “history of
illegal expansion”].)
B. Air Quality
Appellants next, in several little explained arguments, challenge the EIR’s
discussion of air quality impacts.
First, they assert that, “rather than use the methodology and inputs that are the
standard of the industry for air quality analysis, and rather than including all of the truck
traffic that the Project will generate, the County manipulated the inputs, misstating the
types of truck traffic as well as modifying the standard assumptions for General Heavy
Industrial analyses in such a way that the conclusions fall below thresholds of
significance.” But Appellants never follow through to explain these allegations. They
never provide the necessary background to understand their argument, neglecting, for
example, to describe “the methodology and inputs that are the standard of the industry for
air quality analysis.” Nor do they cite the relevant parts of the EIR showing the County’s
alleged wrongdoing. They simply cite to a comment letter that appears to have made the
same type of allegations that they raise here. Appellants, however, could not show that
the County wrongly “manipulated the inputs” in the EIR simply by noting that a
commenter alleged that the County wrongly “manipulated the inputs.” They needed to
supply reasoned argument and citations to the record and authority, not bare conclusions
without explanation. (Badie v. Bank of America (1998) 67 Cal.App.4th 779, 784-785
(Badie) [“When an appellant . . . asserts [a point] but fails to support it with reasoned
argument and citations to authority, we treat the point as waived”]; see also City of
Monterey v. Carrnshimba (2013) 215 Cal.App.4th 1068, 1099 [courts “ ‘are not bound to
develop appellants’ arguments for them’ ”].)
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Second, Appellants contend that “[t]he fleet mix for the DEIR analysis had also
been manipulated to leave out the heaviest vehicles”; in particular, “[t]he County’s air
quality modeling included an intentional reduction (or even zeroing out) of heavier
vehicles.” But again, Appellants never follow through to support or explain their
allegation. Although they show that two commenters alleged this type of conduct, they
never cite the applicable parts of the draft EIR showing the alleged manipulations. All
we can say based on Appellants’ record citations, then, is that two commenters alleged
wrongdoing. But an EIR is not flawed simply because someone said so. As this court
recently explained, “[r]egardless of what is alleged, an EIR approved by a governmental
agency is presumed legally adequate, and the party challenging the EIR has the burden of
showing otherwise.” (Chico Advocates for a Responsible Economy v. City of
Chico (2019) 40 Cal.App.5th 839, 846.)
Third, Appellants claim that the final EIR failed to address the flaws in the draft
EIR. They state: “[T]he FEIR emissions remained underestimated for CAP [an acronym
Appellants never define] and GHG pollutants, and the screening-level HRA [another
unexplained acronym] conducted for the DEIR was carried through unrevised to the
FEIR, reflecting substantially underestimated health risks.” They then add: “EMFAC’s
[another unexplained acronym] fleet mix for the Siskiyou area has been carefully
calculated” and the final EIR wrongly “deviat[ed] from the standard fleet mix” without
explanation when it calculated “the 103 daily truck trips . . . separately from the trips
calculated in CalEEMod [another unexplained acronym] for the land use type (General
Light Industrial).” But once again, Appellants fail to adequately explain or support their
claims. As with their previous two arguments, they cite a comment letter that appears to
allege similar types of wrongs, but they then decline to cite the relevant portions of the
EIR that could support their contentions. As a result, we once again reject their
undeveloped arguments. Appellants may be intimately familiar with the history of this
case, the standards for evaluating air emissions, and all 55,000 plus pages of the
21
administrative record. But we are not. We thus require the parties before us to supply
reasoned explanations for their arguments and to cite the applicable parts of the record.
We also appreciate, though we do not necessarily require, when the parties explain the
acronyms that they use. Appellants, however, have fallen short in all these respects.
Fourth, Appellants challenge the County’s analysis of mobile-source emissions
from project operations. Appellants assert that the County relied on a numerical
threshold of significance in the draft EIR for mobile-source emissions, but then, when the
final EIR revealed greater emissions than initially estimated, it abandoned its initial
threshold of significance and instead said that no threshold existed. They then contend
that the County’s approach was unlawful in two respects: First, the County wrongly
abandoned the threshold of significance in its draft EIR; and second, the County
inappropriately attempted to analyze impacts from mobile-source emissions without
using any threshold of significance. We reject both arguments.
Starting with Appellants’ first contention, we reject their claim that the draft EIR
established a numerical threshold of significance for mobile-source emissions.
Appellants argue otherwise based on a table in the draft EIR that discussed emissions
from stationary, mobile, and area sources. The table was divided into two parts, with
stationary sources on the top and mobile and area sources on the bottom. It estimated, for
each of these three sources, the amount of emissions for certain types of pollutants and,
for stationary sources, also stated the applicable thresholds of significance for the listed
pollutants. For example, the table stated that the project would emit about 274 pounds
per day of carbon dioxide from stationary sources and that the threshold of significance
for carbon dioxide from stationary sources is 2,500 pounds per day. In Appellants’ view,
however, this table established the applicable thresholds of significance for more than
just stationary sources; it also established the applicable thresholds for mobile and area
sources.
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We find differently. The table, again, was divided into two sections, with
stationary source listed on the top and mobile and area sources listed on the bottom. But
it only described the applicable thresholds of significance in the top section dealing with
stationary sources. It noted no threshold of significance in the bottom section dealing
with mobile and area sources. Other parts of the draft EIR, consistent with the table,
stated that “[s]tationary source emissions of [criteria air pollutants] are considered
significant if they exceed the thresholds presented in [the table].” But the draft EIR said
nothing comparable about mobile-source emissions. “[T]o further clarify the
applicability of the thresholds” in the table to stationary sources only, the final EIR
“separate[ed] the emissions from stationary sources and mobile and area sources into two
separate tables.” Considering this record, we reject Appellants’ claim that the referenced
table established numerical thresholds of significance for mobile-source emissions.
We also reject Appellants’ separate contention that the County inappropriately
analyzed impacts from mobile-source emissions without using any threshold of
significance. The County, in its discussion of its thresholds for determining the
significance of impacts to air quality, stated that impacts to air quality would be
considered significant if the project would, among other things, “[c]onflict with or
obstruct implementation of the applicable air quality plan” or “[v]iolate any air quality
standard or contribute substantially to an existing or projected air quality violation.” The
County then, applying these thresholds to the project, found that impacts from mobile-
source emissions would be insignificant because they “would not conflict with any
policies of the [local air district], violate any air quality standard, or contribute
substantially to an existing or projected air quality violation.” Appellants may not like
the County’s chosen thresholds for evaluating air quality impacts in this regard, but they
cannot claim that the County applied no standard at all.
Lastly, Appellants assert that the County should have redone its health risk
assessment—which assessed potential impacts from toxic air contaminants—after the
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final EIR revealed an increase in air emissions. They offer two reasons in support. First,
they note, the health risk assessment assumed that the project would involve 100 daily
trips for “heavy-heavy duty” trucks, but the final EIR estimated a greater number of daily
trips for lighter trucks and thus a greater amount of emissions. In particular, the final EIR
showed 103 daily trips for heavy-heavy duty trucks and 47 additional trips for medium-
heavy and light-heavy duty trucks. Second, Appellants add, the health risk assessment
assumed that about two-thirds of truck traffic would come from the north of the plant and
about one-third of truck traffic would come from the south, but the final EIR instead said
that all truck traffic would come from the north. Because, Appellants allege, the final
EIR showed a greater amount of emissions and a different location for these emissions,
the County should have redone its health risk assessment to account for these changes.
We reject Appellants’ argument. First, in attempting to show that the increase in
estimated emissions in the final EIR warranted a revised health risk assessment,
Appellants largely ignore or understate the facts supporting the County’s decision not to
redo the assessment. Appellants, for example, briefly note that the County’s consultant
concluded “that if the [health risk assessment] were to be re-run, it would still come out
below the significance levels.” But the consultant actually said that “if the [health risk
assessment] were to be re-run [to account for new information], the resulting diesel
emissions would be at least 30% lower. . . .” It reasoned that the health risk assessment
did not account for a new state rule that “effectively requires that, beginning January 1,
2018, all heavy-duty diesel trucks operating within the State of California be equipped
with either factory or retrofit diesel particulate filters.” The consultant added that, if the
[health risk assessment] were to be re-run to account for the modernization of the
trucking fleet over time, rather than “assume that the current fleet makeup remains
constant for the next 30 years,” then the resulting diesel emissions would be even lower
over time. For example, emissions of diesel particulate matter from heavy-heavy duty
diesel trucks would be “over 85 percent lower than the 2017 rates assumed in the [health
24
risk assessment].” The consultant then explained that this detail is significant because
“the health risks calculated in the [health risk assessment] are based on 20-30 years
exposure.” Largely for these reasons, the consultant concluded that “no additional
analysis is necessary.”
In response to all this, Appellants are generally silent. They decline to
acknowledge, for example, that the health risk assessment did not account for a new state
rule requiring “all heavy-duty diesel trucks operating within the State of California be
equipped with either factory or retrofit diesel particulate filters.” Nor do they
acknowledge that the health risk assessment did not account for the modernization of the
trucking fleet over time. Nor do they acknowledge the consultant’s actual conclusions
based on these considerations. Because of Appellants’ incomplete and misleading
representation of the facts, we find they forfeited their argument that insufficient
evidence supported the County’s decision not to redo the health risk assessment. (See
Pfeiffer, supra, 200 Cal.App.4th at p. 1572 [“ ‘ “[A]n appellant challenging an EIR for
insufficient evidence must lay out the evidence favorable to the other side and show why
it is lacking. Failure to do so is fatal.” ’ ”)
Appellants’ second argument concerning the location of emissions falls short too,
and for a familiar reason: Appellants fail to support their claim with sufficient citations
to the record. Appellants, again, claim that the health risk assessment improperly
assumed that one-third of truck traffic would come from the south of the plant, even
though all truck traffic would actually come from the north. But to support this claim,
they cite to nothing in the health risk assessment. They instead cite to 14 pages in the
record, most of which (11 pages) consists of a commenter’s resume, part of which (3
pages) consists of the commenter’s comments, and none of which supports Appellants’
position. We reject their unsupported claim as a result.
25
C. Climate Change
Appellants next, for a variety of reasons, challenge the EIR’s discussion and
mitigation of climate change impacts.
Their first claim concerns CEQA’s recirculation requirements. CEQA requires a
lead agency to recirculate an EIR for public review when “significant new information”
is added to the EIR after the draft EIR has been released to the public for review and
before certification. (Pub. Resources Code, § 21092.1.) An EIR includes “significant
new information” if, among other things, it (1) reveals “[a] new significant environmental
impact [that] would result from the project,” (2) reveals “[a] substantial increase in the
severity of an environmental impact [that] would result unless mitigation measures are
adopted that reduce the impact to a level of insignificance,” or (3) shows that “[t]he draft
EIR was so fundamentally and basically inadequate and conclusory in nature that
meaningful public review and comment were precluded.” (CEQA Guidelines, § 15088.5,
subd. (a).)
In this case, the County initially estimated in its draft EIR that the project would
result in greenhouse gas emissions of 35,486 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent
(MTCO2e) per year. Because this amount would exceed the County’s established
threshold of significance of 10,000 MTCO2e per year, the County concluded that the
proposed project’s emissions would result in a significant impact. In its final EIR, the
County continued to conclude that the proposed project’s emissions would result in a
significant impact. But it estimated a far higher level of emissions: 61,281 MTCO2e per
year. The County, however, found that this was not significant new information that
required recirculation. It reasoned that because the draft EIR already found that project
emissions would be significant and unavoidable even with mitigation, the final EIR’s
upward revision in greenhouse gas emissions did not change the EIR’s ultimate
conclusions.
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Appellants contend, and we agree, that the County could not decline to recirculate
the EIR under these circumstances. A lead agency could not say that greenhouse gas
emissions in excess of 10,000 MTCO2e per year are significant, but then, at the same
time, conclude that greenhouse gas emissions over 25,000 MTCO2e per year are
insignificant. Yet that is what the County did here. It said that greenhouse gas emissions
in excess of 10,000 MTCO2e per year would result in a significant impact. But it then
concluded that an increase in estimated greenhouse gas emissions of 25,795 MTCO2e per
year (the difference between 61,281 and 35,486) was an insignificant detail. Considering
the County’s own standard for determining significance, however, we hold that this
finding is not supported by substantial evidence. (See Vineyard Area Citizens for
Responsible Growth, Inc. v. City of Rancho Cordova (2007) 40 Cal.4th 412, 448
[county’s decision not to recirculate was not supported by substantial evidence]; see also
Cleveland Nat. Forest Foundation, supra, 3 Cal.5th at p. 514 [“an EIR’s designation of a
particular adverse environmental effect as ‘significant’ does not excuse the EIR’s failure
to reasonably describe the nature and magnitude of the adverse effect.”].)
The County, its board of supervisors, and Crystal Geyser (collectively,
Respondents) counter that the County’s approach was appropriate because the EIR’s
ultimate conclusions were left unchanged—greenhouse gas emissions would remain
significant and unavoidable. But that is hardly any justification at all on the facts before
us. On that logic, a lead agency could conclude in a draft EIR that a project would result
in the loss of one endangered animal, and that this loss would be significant and
unavoidable; but it could then, in the final EIR, conclude that it is insignificant that the
project would actually result in the extinction of the entire species. No matter,
Respondents suggest, that the loss is magnitudes greater than disclosed in the draft EIR; it
is enough that the loss remains significant and unavoidable in both the draft EIR and the
final EIR. That type of approach, however, wrongly deprives the public of a meaningful
opportunity to comment on a project’s substantial environmental impacts. (Laurel
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Heights Improvement Assn. v. Regents of University of California (1993) 6 Cal.4th 1112,
1120 [recirculation is “required when the information added to the EIR changes the EIR
in a way that deprives the public of a meaningful opportunity to comment upon a
substantial adverse environmental effect of the project”].) It also fails to acknowledge
the internal inconsistency in the lead agency finding that the loss of a single endangered
animal is significant in its draft EIR, but then finding that the loss of many more
endangered animals is insignificant in its final EIR. The County’s decision making here
suffers from these same types of fatal defects.3
Second, Appellants contend that the County potentially understated the amount of
greenhouse gas emissions resulting from the project. Their argument concerns the
County’s decision not to account for the greenhouse gas emissions associated with the
production of unblown bottles (called performs), which Crystal Geyser will purchase and
then use for making finished bottles.
According to the County, it had no need to account for these emissions because
the production of preforms would be an indirect and uncertain consequence of the
project. (See Save the Plastic Bag Coalition v. City of Manhattan Beach (2011)
52 Cal.4th 155, 175 [a lead agency need not consider “an indirect and uncertain
consequence” of a project]; but see CEQA Guidelines, § 15064, subd. (d) [a lead agency
must consider “reasonably foreseeable indirect physical changes in the environment
which may be caused by the project”].) Its reasoning was twofold. First, it stated, the
demand for (and thus production of) preforms would remain the same with or without the
project because, without the project, competing beverage suppliers would increase their
3 At oral argument, Respondents appeared to accept that the increase in the emissions
estimate was not an “insignificant detail.” But because the EIR’s ultimate conclusions
were left unchanged—emissions would remain significant and unavoidable—they
maintained that recirculation was still unnecessary. For the reasons covered, however,
we find this argument unpersuasive.
28
own demand for preforms to “provide the necessary supply to meet the market demand
for beverage products.” Second, it added, although the production of preforms could
change with the project if the project stimulated demand by producing enough bottled
drinks to cause a significant drop in prices, that would not happen here. It reasoned that
Crystal Geyser could not possibly supply enough bottled drinks, relative to the total
supply of bottled drinks, to significantly impact market prices.
Challenging the County’s decision, Appellants argue that the County could
reasonably calculate the emissions associated with these preforms because it had
estimates of “the number of bottles [Crystal Geyser] will use each year” and estimates
about “the amount of CO2 that is generated by the production of preforms.” They then
assert that “the County may not avoid the analysis of the known cumulative, global
impacts associated with the identifiable number of preforms the Project will consume
each year.”
But in the course of making their argument, Appellants never discuss or even
acknowledge the County’s actual reasoning for declining to consider these emissions—
which was not that it lacked information about the number of preforms that the project
would use or the emissions associated with preform production, but that it was uncertain
whether the production of preforms with the project would be greater than without the
project. Again, the County reasoned that Crystal Geyser’s competitors would have an
incentive to produce more bottled drinks, and thus would likely purchase more preforms,
if Crystal Geyser did not proceed with the project. Apart from ignoring the County’s
actual reasoning, Appellants also fail to point to any evidence supporting a necessary
premise of their position. As part of their argument, they implicitly assume that each
preform that Crystal Geyser purchases for the project would necessarily be a preform that
would not otherwise have been produced. But because they cite nothing in the record to
support this assumption, Appellants appear to rely on nothing more than speculation. For
these reasons, we reject Appellants’ largely unsupported and little explained claim.
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Third, Appellants claim that the County wrongly assumed, without supportive
evidence, that the project’s heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) system
would run “two hours a day, 160 days annually.” Appellants suggest that the HVAC
system would likely be used more than the County estimated and then argue that the
County must evaluate the greenhouse gas emissions from this additional use. But
although true that the County initially assumed that the HVAC system would run only
two hours a day for a period of six months, it ultimately assumed that the project’s
HVAC system would run “18 hours each day for a period [of] 6 months.” It also
explained that use of the HVAC system should be relatively limited because “the plant
will include significant insulation” and be “Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design (LEED) certified.” Considering these revisions, which Appellants declined to
disclose, we reject their challenge to a stale set of facts.
Fourth, for several reasons, Appellants challenge the EIR’s mitigation measures
for the project’s greenhouse gas emissions. First, they argue that the County should have
reevaluated its mitigation measures when the final EIR revealed a significant increase in
estimated emissions. The record, however, shows that the County both reevaluated and
revised its mitigation measures in the final EIR. In any event, we find that Appellants’
claim is premature at this point. Because we find the County will need to allow further
public review of the EIR’s discussion of greenhouse gas emissions, the County may very
well be required to further reevaluate its mitigation measures in response to public
comments.
Appellants also argue that the EIR’s mitigation measures are not enforceable,
focusing on two requirements in particular. First, they claim that part of mitigation
measure 4.6-1 requires only the “possibility” of installing solar arrays, which is not
meaningful mitigation. But nothing in that measure discusses solar arrays. Nor does it
even use the word “possibility”—at least not on the pages Appellants cite. Second,
Appellants claim that another part of this same measure requires only “a plan to establish
30
carpooling for employees,” which they argue is insufficient. But again, Appellants
misrepresent the record. The mitigation measure states that Crystal Geyser “shall
establish and administer a carpool or rideshare program” and “shall monitor the success
of the of the program for one year and submit an annual report to the County.” It adds
that “this measure could reduce CO2e emissions by 16.5 MT of CO2 annually” with 25
percent employee participation, but states that “[i]f the rideshare or carpool program does
not achieve its intended goal, then [Crystal Geyser] shall subsequently purchase the
corresponding number of credits from a carbon registry.” The measure, then, requires a
program anticipated to achieve a quantifiable reduction in greenhouse gas emissions,
along with a backstop in case the program proves ineffective. It does not merely require
the preparation of “a plan,” as Appellants claim.
Appellants further, on the topic of enforcement, assert that “the County has no
authority to enforce these mitigation measures outside of the context of [Crystal
Geyser’s] use of the caretaker’s residence.” But rather than explain this argument,
Appellants direct us to look to an unspecified part of their argument “above.” Reviewing
Appellants’ arguments “above,” we understand their point to be this: Although the EIR’s
mitigation measures “are enforceable ‘as a condition of exercise of the permit’ ” for the
caretaker’s residence, because Crystal Geyser “has no real need for the caretaker’s
residence, and the structure[] is not habitable as a residence, . . . ‘exercising’ that permit
is irrelevant.” Appellants, in other words, appear to believe that the County will only be
able enforce the EIR’s mitigation measures if Crystal Geyser decides to exercise its
permit for the caretaker’s residence—and that will never happen because Crystal Geyser
“has no real need for the caretaker’s residence, and the structure[] is not habitable as a
residence.”
But apart from neglecting to provide any legal authority for this conclusion,
Appellants also decline to offer any evidentiary support for their claim, stating instead
that the support for their claim is “noted” elsewhere in their brief. But in the end, all we
31
can find is Appellants’ statement that children are not allowed to inhabit the caretaker’s
residence. And although that is true—one of the mitigation measures states that only
employees over the age of 18 may occupy the caretaker’s residence—it does not show, as
Appellants claim, that Crystal Geyser “has no real need for the caretaker’s residence, and
the structure[] is not habitable as a residence.”
Lastly, Appellants suggest that the County should have considered and adopted
“other feasible measures” after it declined to require solar arrays. But the County did
consider and adopt other feasible mitigation measures, including a measure requiring a
carpool program, as discussed, and another measure requiring the purchase of carbon
offset credits. We thus reject this claim too.
D. Noise Impacts
Appellants next challenge the EIR’s discussion of noise impacts.
They first assert that the County wrongly relied on standards developed by the
Federal Interagency Committee on Noise (FICON). In support, they point to a letter from
their noise consultant, who stated that “FICON thresholds . . . are out-of-date and
inappropriate for industrial noise sources” and “have been superseded . . . by incremental
thresholds developed by the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) for transportation
noise sources.” The consultant appeared to reason that FICON standards “are out-of-date
and inappropriate” because the FTA standards “are more stringent.”
But as the County explained in response, although the FTA standards may be more
stringent, nothing in CEQA requires lead agencies to use the most stringent standards in
existence when evaluating impacts. And as the County further indicated, although
different experts may disagree about the best methodology for evaluating noise
impacts—with the County’s consultant, in this case, preferring the FICON standards and
Appellants’ consultant preferring the FTA standards—pointing out a “ ‘[d]isagreement
among experts does not make an EIR inadequate.’ [Citation.]” (Laurel Heights
Improvement Assn. v. Regents of University of California (1988) 47 Cal.3d 376, 409; see
32
also North Coast Rivers Alliance v. Marin Municipal Water Dist. Bd. of Directors (2013)
216 Cal.App.4th 614, 642 [“ ‘that different methods of gathering and compiling statistics
could have been employed[] is not determinative in a substantial evidence review’ ”].)
Second, Appellants contend that although the County should have applied the FTA
standards when evaluating noise impacts, it actually would have acted inappropriately
had it done so. They reason: “[A] noise expert pointed out to the County in comments
on the FEIR that neither the FTA nor the FICAN thresholds are applicable to industrial
noise sources. Noise from industrial sources is not ‘broadband in nature.’ It has a
completely different frequency spectrum than background levels that in most cases are
dominated by transportation sources.” In support of this claim, they point to a part of the
EIR noting that one commenter said, “Noise from industrial sources is not ‘broadband in
nature.’ ” But even it is true that “[n]oise from industrial sources is not ‘broadband in
nature,’ ” Appellants cite nothing in the record showing the relevance of that detail to
their claim. We reject their undeveloped argument as a result. (Badie, supra,
67 Cal.App.4th at pp. 784-785.)
Third, Appellants claim that to be less than significant for CEQA purposes, project
noise levels must be “inaudible to its residential neighbors throughout the day, especially
during nighttime hours.” In support, they cite a part of the EIR noting that one
commenter said, “Any audible increase, or noise increase perceived as annoying, should
be considered a significant noise impact.” But nothing in CEQA requires a lead agency
to adopt a noise threshold of “[a]ny audible increase” simply because one commenter
suggested it. (King & Gardiner Farms, LLC v. County of Kern (2020) 45 Cal.App.5th
814, 884 [“ ‘The lead agency has substantial discretion in determining the
appropriate threshold of significance to evaluate the severity of a particular impact.’ ”].)
Fourth, Appellants suggest that the County could not rely on “City and County
noise thresholds as a standard of significance for the Project.” They reason that this
follows from Berkeley Keep Jets Over the Bay Committee v. Board of Port
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Com’rs (2001) 91 Cal.App.4th 1344 and East Sacramento Partnerships for a Livable
City v. City of Sacramento (2016) 5 Cal.App.5th 281. But neither of these cases bars lead
agencies from looking to local ordinances, as the County did here, when evaluating noise
impacts. They simply, as relevant here, stand for the proposition that “a threshold of
significance cannot be applied in a way that would foreclose the consideration of other
substantial evidence tending to show the environmental effect to which the threshold
relates might be significant.” (Id. at p. 303; see also Berkeley Keep Jets Over the Bay
Committee, supra, 91 Cal.App.4th at p. 1380 [CEQA did not define “significant noise
impacts simply in terms of whether a project would violate applicable local, state, or
federal noise standards”].)
Fifth, Appellants claim that “the County apparently charged its noise experts to
figure out a way” to undermine CEQA. In support, citing one of their consultants, they
assert: “[T]he County arbitrarily omitted analysis of vibrational noise and decided not to
analyze the combined impact of traffic and industrial noise from plant operations.” They
also claim: “The Revised Noise Analysis picks and chooses between the noise levels
predicted by the FHWA [an unexplained acronym] Model and the ambient noise
measurements in order to eliminate the significant and unavoidable traffic noise impacts
that were contained in the Draft EIR.” But Appellants never follow through to cite any
part of the EIR to support their allegations of impropriety. We reject their
unsubstantiated claim as a result.
Finally, Appellants assert that the County’s “responses to comments dismissed
concerns about exceedance of noise standards, claiming that a 1-4 dB exceedance is
minor.” They then argue that this was improper, reasoning that “[e]ven a 1 dB increase
in 24-hour levels represents a potentially significant impact to local sensitive receptors
that may require mitigation.” But in making their argument about the County’s
“responses,” Appellants never cite to the County’s actual responses. They cite instead a
draft document attached to an internal County email. One County employee emailed
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another and said, “Let’s discuss the printing again, etc.,” and attached several documents.
One of those documents was the County’s sound consultant’s “draft responses” to
comments—which is the only document that Appellants cite to as evidence of the
County’s responses. Because Appellants never cite the County’s actual responses to
comments, but instead cite only this draft document emailed between County employees,
we cannot accept their characterization of the County’s responses and thus must reject
their argument based on this unsupported characterization.
E. Hydrology
Lastly, in terms of impacts, Appellants challenge the County’s discussion of
hydrology impacts for a variety of reasons.
Appellants first argue that the County used an improper threshold of significance
for evaluating hydrology impacts. The County set forth nine different thresholds of
significance for hydrology and water quality impacts. One of these thresholds, as
relevant here, stated that impacts to hydrology would be considered significant if the
project would “substantially deplete groundwater supplies or interfere substantially with
groundwater recharge such that there would be a net deficit in aquifer volume or a
lowering of the local groundwater table.” In Appellants’ telling, “[b]y using this
standard, the County was able to accept the analysis based upon outdated models, ignore
the standards of significance the Tribe attributed to the Resource, and avoid having to do
any actual studies on the impacts of the proposed pumping at DEX-6 and the nearby
domestic wells.” Appellants add that, in using this standard, the County applied a
standard “that did not analyze the water extraction increase ‘in light of existing
conditions’ ” and “did not take into account the complexity of the groundwater system
and the fact that the aquifer is a Tribal Cultural Resource and that there are many local
residents relying upon it for domestic water.”
But Appellants never explain why all this follows from the County’s chosen
standard for evaluating impacts. They never explain, for example, why the County’s
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evaluation of groundwater impacts based in part on whether the project would
“substantially deplete groundwater supplies” allowed the County to rely on “outdated
models” and “avoid having to do any actual studies.” Nor do they bother to explain the
standards that the Tribe allegedly “attributed to the Resource.” Nor do they show, as they
allege, that the underlying aquifer is a “Tribal Cultural Resource.” We reject their
unexplained argument as a result. (Badie, supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at pp. 784-785.)
Second, Appellants contend that the County failed to consider whether project
pumping of groundwater would cause short- or long-term damages to groundwater levels
at nearby wells. But although they may disagree with the County’s conclusions and
methods, they cannot accurately claim that the County altogether failed to consider these
issues. The County’s hydrogeology expert, to start, provided historical data showing
“static water levels” (i.e., non-pumping water levels) at DEX-6 from 2004 through
2013—which covered the last seven years that Dannon operated the well and the bottling
facility. The first data point during this period, from 2004, showed a water level just
under 3,577 feet. Over the next seven years during Dannon’s operations, the vast
majority of data points showed water levels between 3,576 and 3,577 feet. Only a few
data points showed water levels below 3,576 feet—and even then, they showed levels
only slightly below 3,576 feet.
The expert noted that, while this data shows limited drawdown at DEX-6 during
Dannon’s operation of the facility, nearby wells would have experienced even less of a
drawdown during this period. It explained that “the pumping well [DEX-6] is the center
of the cone of depression and as a result all other water level drawdowns at wells located
at any distance radially outward from that pumping well will be less than that in the
pumping well.” Considering this type of information “collected over many years,” the
County found that “it is possible to make confident and accurate estimates of the effects
of the proposed pumping on groundwater levels,” as the proposed pumping would be at
“rates comparable” to past rates.
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Apart from reviewing this historical data, the County’s expert also estimated the
effect of Crystal Geyser’s proposed pumping on water levels using a program called
PUMPIT. The expert assumed in the program that the project would extract an average
of 150 gpm for 365 days straight, which aligned with the EIR’s statement that the project
would use about “150 gpm on a monthly average basis with two production lines.”
Under those conditions, the expert estimated that several nearby residential wells would
experience a “maximum” drawdown between 0.16 and 0.45 feet. The expert added that
“drawdown impacts in nearby wells induced by pumping of wells under real-world
conditions tend to be significantly less than those which have been
theoretically[ ]calculated using the same model software.”
Considering the County’s review of historic groundwater data and its expert’s
modeling of the impacts from future use, we cannot find, as Appellants allege, that the
County failed to consider whether “pumping at DEX-6 on the Project site causes short
and/or long-term damage to groundwater levels at the many nearby off-site residential
wells, City wells, and proposed City wells.” Again, Appellants may not like the County’s
conclusions and methods, but they cannot claim that the County simply declined to
consider short-and long-term impacts to groundwater levels.
Third, Appellants challenge the model that the County’s expert used to evaluate
potential groundwater drawdown. In their view, the expert’s model was “obsolete and
oversimplified.” Although they never explain why they believe the model obsolete, they
argue that the model was oversimplified because of “the lack of knowledge about the
upper and lower aquifers.” But in the course of making this argument, Appellants never
describe the information that is allegedly lacking. Nor do they explain why the lack of
this unspecified information undermined the accuracy of the expert’s estimates. We
reject their unexplained argument as a result. (Badie, supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at pp. 784-
785.)
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Fourth, Appellants suggest that the County’s EIR is inadequate because no one
“test[ed] at all to determine what the impacts will be to neighboring wells.” But the
County’s expert did perform testing to determine the impacts to neighboring wells. After
the expert estimated groundwater drawdown using the PUMPIT program, it further
conducted a pump test at one of the two project wells. Again, the project would involve
the use of two wells—one that would be used for bottling drinks (DEX-6), and another
that would be used for domestic operations (the domestic well). In the pump test, the
expert found it best to focus on the domestic well because, unlike DEX-6, which only
extracts groundwater from the deeper aquifer system, the domestic well extracts
groundwater both from the deeper aquifer system and “a ‘shallower’ aquifer system.” As
part of the pump test, the expert first measured the baseline water levels at seven nearby
wells on Crystal Geyser’s property. Next, the expert pumped about 247 gpm minute
from the domestic well for three days straight. Finally, the expert monitored water
recovery. Following the pump test, the expert observed drawdowns of 0.6 feet at the
domestic well and between 0.07 and 0.3 feet at the seven nearby wells. Considering this
testing, we reject Appellants claim that no one “test[ed] at all to determine what the
impacts will be to neighboring wells.”
Fifth, Appellants claim that the County wrongly ignored several local residents
who alleged that their wells were impacted during Dannon’s operation of the plant
between 2001 and 2010. In Appellants’ telling, the County characterized these comments
as anecdotal and then moved on. But that is not an accurate characterization. The
County acknowledged that some commenters claimed their pumps “burned out” or wells
went dry during prior plant operations. But, for several reasons, the County explained
that these assertions did not require further environmental review. First, it explained that
“no well failures were reported to the County” during this period and that none of the
commenters could provide, among other things, “documentation to show when such
events might have occurred.” For these reasons, the County found it impossible to
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independently evaluate the commenters’ claims. Second, the County stated that
“ ‘[b]urned out pumps’ is an issue with deep pumping levels” and may occur for
“mechanical reasons” that have nothing to do with water levels. Third, it stated that
although a well could go dry because of low water levels, “[t]here is no evidence of any
long-term or continuous decline in water levels during actual pumping of the wells for the
Plant between 2001 and 2010.” Finally, considering its expert’s pump test and modeling
of potential impacts during operation of the bottling plant, the County stated that the plant
“would result in drawdowns of less than one foot in the immediate vicinity of DEX-6 and
the Domestic Well, with potential drawdowns decreasing as the distance from the
pumped well increased.” Considering the County’s extensive response, which Appellants
entirely ignore, we cannot say, as Appellants allege, that the County simply “ignore[d]”
the concerns of local residents.
Sixth, Appellants suggest that the County’s expert offered a misleading assurance
“that the groundwater extractions at the plant would not draw down nearby wells.”
According to Appellants, the County’s expert made this assurance when explaining why
well monitoring was unnecessary; but because the expert later clarified that this
conclusion relied on several assumptions, “there is no guarantee at all that the prediction
is correct.” Appellants focus, in particular, on the expert’s statement that it assumed that
“the fractures in the volcanic rocks at the Domestic Well remain open, extensive and
continuous in the subsurface area beneath the region; the elevations of the perforated
intervals in the wells being considered are the same; and the same stratigraphic horizons
in the Domestic Well have been perforated in the other wells in the region.”
Appellants, however, misrepresent the record and ignore critical details. The
County’s expert never said that the plant “would not draw down nearby wells,” as
Appellants claim. It instead, at the one-page Appellants cite, said that use of the domestic
well would draw down nearby wells by “less than 0.6 ft.” And although the expert
qualified this statement, saying it was premised on certain assumptions, Appellants have
39
not shown that these assumptions were unreasonable. To start, two of the expert’s three
assumptions appear to be conservative assumptions that potentially overstated the likely
level of drawdown. The expert, again, assumed that the perforated interval elevations
and the perforated stratigraphic horizons are the same in the domestic well and the nearby
wells. But the expert also explained elsewhere that wells with “screened/perforated
interval elevations” similar to the domestic well would generally experience greater
drawdown from operation of the domestic well. (See San Diego Citizenry Group v.
County of San Diego (2013) 219 Cal.App.4th 1, 25 [finding no flaw in an EIR that “relied
on conservative assumptions”].)
The expert’s third assumption—that “the fractures in the volcanic rocks at the
Domestic Well remain open, extensive and continuous in the subsurface area beneath the
region”—appears reasonable too. On this point, the County indicated elsewhere in its
EIR that the project would not alter the underlying geologic conditions. It explained that
because the project “would not substantially affect the water supply available in the
aquifer,” “[t]his would ensure that affects to the underlying sediment and rock would not
be substantially affected by the extraction of groundwater for the Proposed Project.” And
although the County acknowledged that the bottling facility is located adjacent to an
active volcano and that a future eruption could certainly impact geologic conditions, it
stated that Mount Shasta “is not expected to erupt for another 300 to 1,000 years.”
Considering the evidence in support of the expert’s assumptions, which Appellants fully
ignore, we see no reason to conclude that these assumptions were unreasonable. (See
CEQA Guidelines, § 15384, subd. (b) [“Substantial evidence shall include,” among other
things, “reasonable assumptions predicated upon facts.”].)
Seventh, Appellants assert that the County’s expert stated that the County need not
monitor neighboring wells because “monitoring wells is ‘fraught with both logistical and
even legal issues.’ ” They then claim that “[t]his is not a valid reason to abandon the
effort of gathering the necessary data to determine impacts.” But Appellants neither
40
explain why this is so nor cite supportive authority, which is reason enough to reject their
argument. (See Badie, supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at pp. 784-785.) Appellants also never
acknowledge the whole of the expert’s reasoning. True, the expert said that “monitoring
is fraught with both logistical and even legal issues,” including “lack of access to the well
sites,” “need for the wells to be shut down for extended time periods,” “liability
associated with the modification of those private wells and the frequent site visits by
geologic personnel to obtain the data,” among other things. But the expert also found
that there was already a “network of existing groundwater monitoring wells” and that this
network “is considered to be adequate to obtain the necessary data to monitor and
evaluate long-term changes in water levels.”
Finally, Appellants challenge the relevancy of the expert’s pump test for two
reasons. They first argue that the test was flawed because “neither the pumped well nor
the observation wells are the same (or even close to) the wells of interest, which are
DEX-6 . . . and residential wells to the east.”
But the County reasonably addressed this type of concern in the EIR. In declining
to perform a similar pump test on DEX-6, the County explained that “[l]ong-term
groundwater level monitoring data collected from DEX-6 and nearby wells, including
monitoring during the 10-year period of previous pumping operations by [Dannon],
provides more substantial evidence regarding the effects to groundwater levels from
pumping DEX-6 than a short-term pump test would achieve.” The County added that its
expert conducted “[a]nalytical modeling . . . to determine potential impacts from the
pumping of DEX-6 and the Domestic Well on nearby residential wells” and that this
modeling did not show significant impacts on nearby residential wells. Considering these
responses and the record before us, we do not find that the County violated CEQA simply
because it declined to run a pump test on DEX-6. As the County itself explained,
“CEQA does not require a lead agency to conduct every test or perform all research,
study, and experimentation recommended or demanded by commenters.” (See CEQA
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Guidelines, § 15204(a); see also Cadiz Land Co., Inc. v. Rail Cycle, L.P. (2000)
83 Cal.App.4th 74, 102 [“the County was not required to exhaust all suggested testing
before EIR certification [citation], particularly since there was expert opinion indicating
that further investigation was not necessary”].)
Appellants also allege that the pump test was flawed because it was too short—
only three days. They reason that the record shows “no factual basis” for selecting this
time period and that “the overly brief 3-day period precluded a serious examination of 4
out of 7 of the wells” that were monitored during the pump test.
But although it is true that the expert ultimately found the data from four wells
useless, Appellants have not shown that this was because the pump test was too short in
duration. And although true that the pump test was only three days, the County’s expert
explained why it believed it sufficient to conclude that “the impact to the local
groundwater resources by the pumping of the Domestic Well will not be significant.”
First, the expert explained that the test involved a far higher average rate of pumping than
would be expected under the proposed project. Under the test, again, the expert extracted
247 gpm from the domestic well; but under the proposed project, Crystal Geyser would
only extract an average of 16 gpm from this well. During the three days of the pump test,
then, the expert extracted more groundwater from the domestic well than Crystal Geyser
would likely extract over a 45-day period.4 Second, the expert found it significant that
the test involved continuous pumping, while the proposed project would likely require
only intermittent pumping. In particular, the expert stated that “the pump will likely be
cycling on and off during the day as the demand is needed” and, as a result, “when the
4 The expert extracted about 1,067,040 gallons of water during the test (247 gpm x 60
minutes x 24 hours x 3 days = 1,067,040 gallons). Under the proposed use of the
domestic well, Crystal Geyser would reach that amount in about 46 days (16 gpm x 60
minutes x 24 hours x 46 days = 1,059,840 gallons).
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pump is shut down, then the [static water levels] will have the ability to recover within a
short time period.” “Under these conditions,” the expert concluded, “the impact to the
local groundwater resources by the pumping of the Domestic Well will not be
significant.” Considering these expert findings, which Appellants never discuss or even
acknowledge, we decline to find that the length of the pump test alone rendered the EIR
inadequate.
V. Consistency with the County and City General Plans
Finally, we turn to Appellants’ contention that the project is inconsistent with the
County’s and the City’s general plans.
Under California law, each county and city must “adopt a comprehensive, long-
term general plan” for its “physical development” and “of any land outside its boundaries
which in the planning agency’s judgment bears relation to its planning.” (Gov. Code,
§ 65300.) Each county and city must then ensure that local development projects are
consistent with its general plan—which means that the project, “ ‘ “considering all its
aspects, [must] further the objectives and policies of the general plan and not obstruct
their attainment.” ’ [Citations.]” (Orange Citizens for Parks & Recreation v. Superior
Court (2016) 2 Cal.5th 141, 153.)
According to Appellants, the project here would be inconsistent with the County’s
and the City’s general plans. They reason that the draft EIR “found that the Project
would result in noise impacts to at least one residence that conflicts with the General Plan
noise standards.” We reject their argument. Considering the one page in the record that
they cite, Appellants appear to base their argument on the EIR’s statement that,
“according to the standards for determining a substantial increase in the ambient noise
environment presented in Table 4.10-7, the Proposed Project would result in a substantial
increase in ambient traffic noise levels along Mt. Shasta Boulevard from Ski Village
Drive to Nixon Drive and CGWC Drive. The nearest sensitive receptor to CGWC Drive
is located approximately 400 feet from the roadway centerline, resulting in low ambient
43
traffic noise levels at the sensitive receptor.” But the standards “presented in Table 4.10-
7” are the FICON standards, not the standards in the County’s and the City’s general
plans. Appellants, then, have at most shown that the EIR identified a substantial increase
in noise under the FICON standards, not a conflict with the applicable general plans.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed. The trial court is instructed to enter, consistent with this
opinion, a new judgment granting the petition for writ of mandate and specifying those
actions the County must take to comply with CEQA. Those actions include the need to
(1) revise the statement of the project objectives, (2) revise the alternatives analysis in
light of this new statement, and (3) recirculate the EIR’s discussion of greenhouse gas
emissions to allow comment on the new emission estimates. Appellants are entitled to
recover their costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a).)
\s\ ,
BLEASE, Acting P. J.
We concur:
\s\ ,
ROBIE, J.
\s\ ,
HULL, J.
44