February 2012

In a CEQA challenge to the City of Berkeley’s approvals to demolish an existing single-family home and replace it with a larger one and an attached 10-car garage, Division 4 of the First District Court of Appeal held in an opinion filed February 15, 2012, and certified for publication, that the proposed project was not categorically exempt from CEQA. (Berkeley Hillside Preservation, et al. v. City of Berkeley, et al. (2/15/12) 203 Cal.App.4th 656, Case No. A131254.)  Applying the “fair argument” standard to its review of the City’s and trial court’s contrary conclusion, the Court held that whenever there is substantial evidence of a fair argument that a significant environmental impact may occur, this automatically satisfies the “unusual circumstances” exception and therefore precludes reliance on a categorical exemption.
Continue Reading CEQA Categorical Exemptions Defeated by Mere “Fair Argument” of Impact, First District Holds

The CEQA “baseline” rules have received a lot of judicial attention in the last several years, and rightly so.  The baseline or “environmental setting,” is the fundamental “benchmark” from which a project’s environmental impacts are measured.  The baseline also determines the scope of the “reasonable range of [project] alternatives” required to be considered in an EIR, since “alternatives shall be limited to ones that avoid or substantially lessen any of the significant effects of the project.”  (14 Cal. Code Regs., § 15126.6(f), emph. added.)  By definition, adverse environmental conditions already existing as part of the baseline are not significant impacts of the proposed project.
Continue Reading First District Holds CEQA Baseline For Chevron Marine Terminal Lease Renewal Includes Existing Conditions and Structures, Finds No CEQA or Public Trust Violation In Lands Commission’s Alternatives Analysis