COASTAL COMMISSION RESPONSE TO MONTEREY COUNTY DEIR
FOR PEBBLE BEACH COMPANY PROJECTS

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Click HERE for a hyperlink to the related attachments referenced at the end of these letters (below)


11-18-04 - During the Public Hearing, the County Subdivision Committee and Planning Department ignored California Coastal Commission Staff advise and recommendation, "...that the project (PB Co. applications for major construction projects in Del Monte Forest) not be heard until after there have been final Coastal Commission decisions on the LCP (Local Coastal Plan to include Measure "A" zoning and other changes) and coastal permit amendments (to previous Spanish Bay development) that would be required for the [PB Co.] project to proceed.

  • Click to read the November 17, 2004 Coastal Commission staff letter which states, "We continue to strongly advise that the project not be heard until after there have been final Coastal Commission decisions on the LCP (Measure A) and coastal permit (Spanish Bay) amendments that would be required for the project to proceed"

  • Click to read the November 10, 2004 Coastal Commission staff letter which states, "As has only become clearer with the PRDEIR, the proposed project would significantly and adversely affect coastal resources, including significant environmentally sensitive habitat area (ESHA) resources."

  • Click to read the March 22, 2004 Coastal Commission staff letter which states, "In addition, we recommend that PBC first pursue the required amendments to the Spanish Bay permits (and related easements), and wait until after the County and the Commission have acted on them, before the County further considers or acts on the PBC project.

STATE OF CALIFORNIA -THE RESOURCES AGENCY - - - -ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER, Governor

CALIFORNIA COASTAL COMMISSION
CENTRAL COAST DISTRICT OFFICE
725 FRONT STREET, SUITE 300
SANTA Cruz, ca 95060
(831) 427-4863

November 17, 2004

Thom McCue
Monterey County Planning and Building Inspection Department, Coastal Office
2620 First Avenue
Marina, CA 93933

Subject: Monterey County Public Hearings on "Pebble Beach Company's Del Monte Forest Preservation and Development Plan" Project (PLN 010254, PLN 010341, and PLN 040160)

Dear Mr. McCue:

Thank you for forwarding the County Subdivision Committee hearing notice to our office last week regarding the above-referenced project, as well as forwarding the County's staff report for that hearing to our office this week. According to these materials, the County Subdivision Committee intends to have a hearing on the Pebble Beach Company project on November 18, 2004, to be followed by Planning Commission and Board of Supervisor hearings starting in January 2005. The Subdivision Committee is being asked to recommend (to the Planning Commission and Board of Supervisors) that the project, including required changes to the County's Spanish Bay permit, be approved.

We continue to strongly advise that the project not be heard until after there have been final Coastal Commission decisions on the LCP (Measure A) and coastal permit (Spanish Bay) amendments that would be required for the project to proceed.

We note that the draft CEQA documents acknowledge these Coastal Commission review requirements, and we further note that the County's staff report also acknowledges these requirements. However, the current staff recommendation then proceeds to identify a portion of the project that could proceed absent any further Commission action on Measure A and Spanish Bay, and a portion of the project that cannot. This is implemented by suggested conditions of approval that are structured to require evidence of Commission certification of Measure A and approval of the Spanish Bay coastal permit amendment (prior to issuance of grading and building permits) for only a segment of the project. Presumably the intent is to allow the rest of the project to proceed without such Commission action. In both cases, such approval appears structured to precede submittal of Measure A.

Such an approach is problematic and we strongly recommend that project approval not precede required Commission approvals, and not be segmented in this manner.

It is inappropriate for project approval to be conditioned on future Coastal Commission approvals, and it is inappropriate for an interrelated project of this magnitude to be segmented into a portion that requires Measure A certification and a portion that purportedly does not. We disagree with the analysis that a portion of the project is consistent with the existing LCP. Furthermore, conditioning the project approval in whole or in pan in this manner presupposes that the Commission will certify the Measure A LCP amendment as submitted, and will modify the Spanish Bay coastal permit as proposed. As you are aware from our previous comments, we continue to have serious reservations about the project and the LCP amendment, and it is unwise to presume that LCP and permit amendments would be approved as submitted. In short, the outcomes of a Measure A amendment to the LCP and an associated amendment to the Spanish Bay coastal permit are uncertain, and the specifics of these outcomes will necessarily affect the manner in which all aspects of the project (both those deemed consistent and those not in the staff report's segmentation of the project) can be found consistent with the LCP and past permits. County decision makers at each level need to have the benefit of this information prior to making final decisions on the project. Without it, their understanding of this large and contentious project, and their discussions on the merits of it in relation to the LCP, will be significantly hampered. Because of this, a final County action on the project prior to final Commission action is not appropriate.

Given the inextricable link between the LCP amendment and the proposed project, we understand why the County would want to use the ongoing CEQA review process to help develop information both for the permit review and to support an LCP amendment submittal. To a point, such a combination makes sense as a way to pool scarce County resources on common questions. However, it is now time that these review processes be separated. To do otherwise seems to us to be poor use of time and resources because any series of County hearings on the project now will be without the benefit of knowing what the Coastal Commission will do later. In other words, if the County' holds a series of hearings leading to an action now (as is the intended approach according to the notice and staff report that we received), these hearings will not have the benefit of critical information for making coastal permit decisions. Any "final" decisions made after this series of hearings will need to be revisited at additional hearings following Coastal Commission actions, and are thus premature.

Moreover, even the existing "known" body of information is in question, and this also indicates that decisions on the project now would not be prudent. Specifically, the aforementioned CEQA documentation, and the current County staff report analysis that incorporates and relies upon it, is incomplete and has been compromised by an incorrect evaluation foundation. This is particularly the case in terms of the DEIR's identification of environmentally sensitive habitat area (ESHA) and its ESHA impact evaluation methodology (please see our March 22, 2004 letter on the original DEIR and our November 10, 2004 letter on the PRDEIR for specific reasons for this). We continue to highlight that the DEIR's evaluation has not been sufficiently inclusive of Del Monte Forest ESHA, and has not been clearly premised on Coastal Act and LCP requirements That impacts to ESHA be avoided. Likewise, and related to County staff report references to legal lots and certificates of compliance (whether conditional or unconditional), we have not seen supporting documentation for determining the number of legal lots of record that are a part of this application (most recently requested in our DEIR comments), and thus there remains significant uncertainty in this regard. Remember, too, that conditional certificates of compliance require coastal development permits. Any decisions on whether a certificate is conditional or unconditional is also a question of whether a coastal permit is required and subject to Coastal Commission concurrence in this regard. In sum, as we have advised since March of this year, and most recently reiterated in our November 10, 2004 PRDEIR comments, we continue to recommend that the DEIR be revised and recirculated for public review and comment.

We strongly recommend that hearings (if there arc any at all) at this time at the County level be limited to perfecting supporting information for the LCP amendment (including perfecting project CEQA information), and that any such hearings explicitly not include any decisions on the project in advance of final Commission actions on both the Measure A LCP amendment and the Spanish Bay coastal permit amendment.

We continue to believe that good planning and public policy require that the review process for the LCP amendment and the Spanish Bay coastal permit amendment conclude and precede any coastal permit decisions on the project itself. To do otherwise appears to us a poor use of scarce staff and decision-maker time and resources, would diminish die value of the project deliberations at each decision-making level leading to a final Board decision, and would only serve to unnecessarily complicate and delay an ultimate decision on the project itself. That said, if the County decides to proceed with the project review schedule and recommendations noted in the hearing notice and staff report despite our recommendation, please note that any ultimate Board approval of the project should be considered tentative and cannot be forwarded to the Commission as a final action. At a minimum, the Board would have to hold at least one additional coastal permit hearing (preceded by at least one hearing on the LCP in the case Measure A is not approved by the Commission as submitted) after Coastal Commission action to take final action on the coastal permits and then send them to the Coastal Commission to start the ten-day appeal period. This needs to be made explicit in any staff report and/or approval documents, and any approval conditions requiring future Coastal Commission actions should be omitted. In the case that the County proceeds with hearings, please provide this letter, and our DEIR and PRDEIR letters, to the Subdivision Committee members, Planning Commissioners, and Supervisors for those hearings.

We hope that this letter has again helped to frame the LCP and coastal permit context for this project. We, like the County and the Pebble Beach Company, are anxious to come to final resolution on the project and on the LCP. As we have said before, the proposed project is one of the largest to be proposed in the Central Coast in recent years, it involves significant impacts to important coastal resources, and it remains the subject of considerable public debate. It would be unfortunate if the final outcome was unnecessarily hindered and complicated by a flawed process. We are optimistic that this can be avoided.

As always, feel free to contact me if you would like to discuss this matter further.

cc: Pebble Beach Company

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STATE OF CALIFORNIA -THE RESOURCES AGENCY - - - -ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER, Governor

CALIFORNIA COASTAL COMMISSION
CENTRAL COAST DISTRICT OFFICE
725 FRONT STREET, SUITE 300
SANTA Cruz, ca 95060
(831) 427-4863

November 10, 2004

Thom McCue
Monterey County Planning and Building Inspection Department, Coastal Office
2620 First Avenue
Marina, CA 93933

Subject: Partial Revision of the Draft Environmental Impact Report titled "Pebble Beach
Company's Dcl Monte Forest Preservation and Development Plan" (SCH Number 2002021130)

Dear Mr. McCue;

Thank you for forwarding the above-referenced Partial Revision of the Draft Environmental Impact Report (PRDEIR) TO our office for review. In sum, please note that we continue to have serious reservations about the Local Coastal Program (LCP) amendment necessary for Pebble Beach Company's proposed project (Measure A), and the project itself (see also our previous correspondence to this effect, including our recent March 22, 2004 letter on the original DEIR). As has only become clearer with the PRDEIR, the proposed project would significantly and adversely affect coastal resources, including significant environmentally sensitive habitat area (ESHA) resources. This PRDEIR, like the DEIR before it, neglects to identify all ESHA as ESHA, and fails to account for the LCP and Coastal Act ESHA requirements in this regard, including continuing a reliance on mitigation as opposed to avoidance. The EIR's utility for LCP amendment and project review is compromised as a result. Nonetheless, we continue to provide comment here with the intent of helping the County in its preparation of the underlying information necessary for further project review and discussion. We hope that these comments prove helpful in this regard.

CEQA Process
We were surprised to see a PRDEIR as opposed to a completely revised DEIR as we previously requested. We continue to believe that the CEQA evaluation process has been compromised by an incorrect evaluation foundation - most significantly in terms of the DEIR's identification of ESHA and its ESHA impact evaluation methodology (please see our March 22, 2004 letter on the original DEIR for specific reasons for this). In particular, the DEIR's evaluation has not been sufficiently inclusive of Del Monte Forest ESHA, and has not been clearly premised on Coastal Act and LCP requirements that impacts to ESHA be avoided. We continue to recommend that a complete revised DEIR would be the most appropriate means to rectify these problems. This is particularly the case if, as the County has indicated in the past, the CEQA document is being developed for both the proposed project and The Measure A LCP amendment supporting it. Moreover, due to degree to which the fundamental changes necessary would lead to a substantial increase in the severity of project environmental impacts, CEQA requires recirculation in this case (including but not limited to CEQA guidelines section 15088.5(2) and (4)). Please revise the DEIR (in response 10 previous comments received as well as information developed and comments received on this PRDEIR) and recirculate it for public review and comment.

PRDEIR
We appreciate the depth of additional information developed in the PRDEIR. Other than our basic CEQA objection described above, we found the PRDEIR to be informative and helpful on the limited subset of issues that it evaluated. That said, other than our request for additional water data and our request for additional information regarding potential indirect impacts to Yadon's piperia (on page 5 of our March 22, 2004 letter), the PRDEIR does not otherwise respond to the questions and comments from our March 22, 2004 letter. Accordingly, any subsequent CEQA documents must respond to all other comments in our previous letter, and our comments here are limited accordingly. To the extent that there is any question in this regard, then we incorporate our March 22, 2004 letter in its entirety as a part of this letter by reference, and consider it to have been submitted on this PRDEIR as well. We have the following comments specific to the PRDEIR:

I. The PRDEIR water impact evaluation appears to be premised at least partially on limiting annual Cal-Am Carmel River diversions from the Carmel River to 11,285 AFY per State Water Resource Control Board (SWRCB) Order WR 95-10, and on the effect of the project as related to current withdrawals from the River.

(a) The PRDEIR omits a copy of SWRCB Order WR 95-10. Please ensure that any subsequent CEQA documents include a copy of SWRCB Order WR 95-10, and any relevant attachments, amendments, and/or other SWRCB documentation affecting the order.

(b) The PRDEIR appears to indicate that Cal-Am has not perfected a legal water right to 11,285 AFY from Carme1 River. As the PRDEIR indicates, SWRCB has indicated that Cal-Am has legal rights to only 3,376 AFY (see also SWRCB March 17, 2004 letter commenting on the DEIR), Please provide a clear explanation of, and supporting documentation for, Cd-Am's existing legal water rights pertaining to Camel River.

(c) The PRDEIR does not explain how (including from what source) water will be provided to serve the proposed project in the event Cal-Am cannot perfect a legal right to its existing Carmel River diversions. This information is necessary for understanding water impacts due to the project. Please ensure that subsequent CEQA documents include this information.

(d) The PRDEIR does not make a compelling case that existing withdrawals (nor the 11,285 AFY figure) are an appropriate baseline from which to measure project impacts. We note that the PRDEIR appears to acknowledge as much (though the analysis baseline isn't changed in light of this) when it indicates that existing withdrawals both exceed Cal-Am legal rights and have resulted in adverse biological impacts. Rather, we need to understand the effect of the project related to the estimated maximum amount of water that could be withdrawn from the River without affecting River resource values (fisheries and otherwise). Please provide this information, including any supporting assumptions and information as well as the most current recommendations in this regard from the resource agencies involved (including the California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG), NOAA Fisheries, United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), SWRCB, etc.).

2 It is clear from the PRDEIR that Cal-Am's withdrawals from the Seaside Basin have increased in recent years, and it appears clear from the PRDEIR that this has had and is continuing to have an adverse impact on this groundwater resource.

(a) The PRDEIR briefly touches on the types of problems associated with overpumping of the Basin (such as saltwater intrusion), but does not provide a clear baseline description of the existing condition of the Basin in this regard. Please provide information on the Basin's water quality trends, including at a minimum a clear description/assessment of the effect of historical pumping levels on saltwater intrusion in the Basin, and potential responses being considered (i,e., limits in pumping, importation of water, etc.). Please provide any supporting documentation and maps as well.

(b) Similar to Carmel River resources, the PRDEIR does not make a compelling case that existing Seaside Basin withdrawals are an adequate baseline from which to measure project impacts. Rather, as with Carmel River, we need to understand the effect of the project related to the maximum amount of water that could be withdrawn from the Basin without affecting its resource value, If trends indicate this figure to be changing (as indicated in the PRDEIR where "safe yield" estimates have been lowered just this year), then please extrapolate such trends in this regard. Although it is not clear from the PRDEIR whether the Basin's estimated "safe yield" (currently estimated in the PRDEIR at 4.375 AFT) represents this maximum potential withdrawal amount, at a minimum, the project impacts as compared to the basin's safe yield should be evaluated. Please provide this information including any supporting assumptions and information as well as the most current recommendations in this regard from the resource agencies involved (again, CDFG, NOAA Fisheries, USFWS, SWRCB, etc.).

3. The PRDEIR water impact evaluation also appears to be premised at least partially on the Pebble Beach Company's water entitlement agreement with the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District (MPWMD).

(a) The PRDEIR omits a copy of the agreement. Please ensure that any subsequent CEQA documents include a copy of the agreement, and any relevant attachments, amendments, andlor other documentation affecting it.

(b) It is not clear from the PRDEIR how or why this agreement translates into a right to water; something that is governed by water law and not by agreements made between water management districts and private companies. Please provide clear explanation of how this entitlement translates into a water right.

c ) It is not clear from the PRDEIR how or why the agreement should be read to allow Pebble Beach Company to use water that is not actually physically available. We note that the agreement is based on two primary suppositions: that the Pebble Beach Company will use less Cal-Am water because it is using reclaimed water instead, and that the entitlement of 365 AFY of Cal-Am water is available. Pebble Beach Company has greatly reduced its reliance on Cal-Am water for irrigation purposes, but in only one year so far reached the target of 800 AFY saved, upon which the agreed upon entitlement was based. If reclamation efforts are not yielding expected water savings, commitments to reserve water based on reclamation may no longer be appropriate; particularly in light of resource impacts to Carmel River and the Seaside Basin due to existing (and proposed) withdrawals. It appears that the agreement needs to be updated to reflect the current impact (from withdrawals) and reclaimed water use realities. This is particularly the case given that the agreement's 365 AFY was apparently developed based on estimates of Del Monte Forest buildout that do not appear to have adequately accounted for the number of legal lots of record and resource constraints on them otherwise (see also March 22, 2004 comments in this regard), and was developed well before the agreement itself. Please provide a clear analysis of how and why the agreement helps demonstrate a long-term water supply to serve the project when even existing withdrawals of water are leading to resource degradation and have not themselves been legally perfected (see also above). Please also provide evidence of input from MPWMD in this regard.

(d) PRDEIR Table G.2-6 indicates that the Company has used only 9.9 AFY out of an original agreement for 365 AFY. Please provide a breakdown for how the 9.9 AFY has been allocated, including underlying information documenting that amount of use for the projects to which the allotment has been directed.

4. The PRDEIR relies in large part upon Recycled Water Project (R-WP) Phase II improvements to offset water use impacts due to the proposed project.

(a) The PRDEIR omits an analysis of how project impacts will be offset if Phase 11: (a) is not developed for whatever reason; or (b) is less successful than estimated. Given the track record with reclaimed water use in the Forest (where use of same has not generally achieved all of the potable water savings predicted, and the PRDEIR indicates that approximately 30% of the RWP water currently supplied is actually potable water), it seems unwise to rely so heavily on such a mitigation without some sort of mechanism for ensuring that expected savings are achieved, and if they aren't, a companion mechanism for offsetting shortfalls. Please perform an expanded analysis and mitigation assessment that is based upon a spectrim from complete success with Phase II in effect down to it not being developed at all (i.e., The current reclaimed water status quo). Such analysis should include rational demarcation points for scenarios in-between (e.g., using success rates of 25%, 50%, 75%, etc), perhaps based on the current track record of success with recycled water in the Forest.

(b) Except in very dry years, the PRDEIR indicates that all water supplied for irrigation in the Forest would be from recycled water (PRDEIR Table PI-6), and refers to Appendix G for details and assumptions supporting this. It is not clear to us from the PRDEIR discussion how and/or why such irrigation use quantities would be achieved, and we couldn't find a clear explanation of this in Appendix G. Please provide a clear explanation (including maps and figures) as to what constitutes the irrigation use within the Forest to which Table PI-6 corresponds, and please also clarify the Appendix G explanation for why this would be the case. Please also explain and provide a description of the implementing mechanisms that would be used to ensure that only recycled water is used in this regard.

5. Please modify the EIR's overall water supply impact assessment (and mitigation framework), including that relative to cumulative impacts, to address the above comments,

6. We appreciate the PRDEIR's improved information regarding indirect impacts to Yadon's piperia due to the project, but we continue to disagree with the ESHA identification and impact assessment methodology applied to this federally-listed endangered species, The PRDEIR does not identify Yadon's piperia and its habitat as ESHA. As we have previously indicated, most recently in our March 22, 2004 letter, Yadon's piperia must be evaluated as ESHA and impacts to this species avoided (we note here that all comments regarding ESHA in our March 22, 2004 letter are included in their entirety in this comment by reference). Toward this end we cannot agree that project impacts on piperia can be mitigated to a less than significant level. According to the PRDEIR, the project would directly remove 36 acres of occupied Yadon's piperia habitat (and over 36,000 individual plants). Such project direct impact includes removal of the world's largest known occurrence of piperia at the site of the proposed golf course; an occurrence appropriately recognized by the PRDEIR as "considered important to the recovery of the species." Project direct impacts in this regard represent destruction of over a quarter of the known Yadon's piperia population in the Forest and 21% of the known population in the world. In addition, the PRDEIR indicates that the project would result in indirect adverse impacts to 24 acres of occupied piperia habitat (some 17,000 individual plants), and to 63 acres of other potential piperia habhat. Accordingly, future CEQA documents must be modified: to identify this species and its habitat (see also below) as ESHA; must be premised on avoidance of impacts to it; and must consider impacts to Yadon's piperia to be significant and unmitigatable (please also refer to our March 22, 2004 letter),

7. The PRDEIR begins to discuss the habitat conditions for Yadon's piperia, including identifying Monterey pine forest areas as potentially suitable habitat, but stops short of providing conclusions or a useable methodology in this regard. Rather, the PRDEIR relies on a methodology that uses a 50-foot "occurrence buffer" around piperia plants and clusters to determine an "occurrence area" for piperia. Although the 50-foot buffer can be used to acknowledge some "habitat" surrounding individuals found above ground, we don't believe it can be used to meaningfully estimate Yadon's piperia habitat areas. Rather, based on the sensitivity of the species, it is incumbent upon the EIR documents to clearly explain its habitat characteristics, and to delineate the acreage of the area within which such characteristics are present in order to quantify the area of piperia habitat. In this respect, the PRDEIR appears to support applying at least a conservative approach where areas of Monterey pine forest are deemed to provide habitat for piperia. Given the endangered status of the species, and the fact that its known population is almost entirely limited to the Del Monte Forest, such a cautious approach seems appropriate here. Please provide an analysis of Yadon's piperia habitat characteristics, and an evaluation of the Forest areas containing such characteristics, including updated maps and acreage tables. For any Monterey pine forest areas deemed not to exhibit such characteristics, please provide an explanation as to why this is the case.

8. The PRDEIR is equivocal in terms of quantifying indirect impacts to Yadon's piperia. As previously indicated, we believe the most conservative approach would be to analyze such indirect impacts as direct impacts if it is not clear whether indirectly impacted resources will continue to provide habitat/resource value due to the project. In this case, the PRDEIR makes a compelling case that indirect impacts will result in adverse impacts. This is particularly obvious where large areas of habitat would be fragmented by the project (e.g., as is perhaps most obvious with the proposed golf course fragmentation as shown in Appendix E Figure E- 9-YP). As such, the more conservative approach is even more compelling in this case. Please supplement the piperia impact analysis with tables (modeled on PRDEIR Tables P2-1, P2-2, and P2-3) that quantify indirect piperia impacts in this regard and that can be used in to an additive manner (avoiding overlap with direct impacts).

9. The PRDEIR indicates that the 2004 Yadon's piperia survey methodology differed from that done in 1996, and that this has resulted in a 2004 estimated acreage of occupied habitat that is roughly 1/10 the size of that estimated in 1996. Please provide documentation indicating that the California Department of Fish and Game and the United States Fish and Wildlife Service concur with the methodology and conclusions documenting Yadon's piperia habitat, including that based upon the requested habitat characterization method above.

10. The PRDEIR identifies two new areas - the Company's Old Capitol and Aguajito (Jack's Peak) sites - where conservation easements would be applied to offset project impacts. The PRDEIR indicates that Yadons piperia surveys would be done to identify that portion of these sites that would be subject to such easement, Please ensure that any such delineation process also be based upon habitat characterization (as discussed above), and that it be clear in any final documents what portion of these sites would be subject to easement. For example, the PRDEIR indicates that only one acre of the much larger Aguajito site would have such an easement applied to it, though this seems counterintuitive to us given that this area is covered in Monterey pine forest that appears otherwise conducive to Yadon's piperia. Please supplement any subsequent CEQA documents with this information.

11, For any subsequent CEQA documents, please include clear maps, acreage figures, and narrtive description of all of the areas to which protective legal instruments (e.g., conservation easements, property restrictions, outright dedications, etc.) would be applied, accompanied by the relevant controlling text of any such instruments.

Final CEQA Documents
The utility of final CEQA documents (for use by decision makers and the interested public) is often compromised by the use of a final EIR document that isn't actually "final" but rather represents acknowledgement of a suite of changes in response to comments received on a draft. Such a "final" EIR necessitates painstaking and difficult cross-referencing between documents to be able to understand a project and its expected impacts. These difficulties are only exacerbated when there are multiple and/or atypical CEQA documents and substantial comments (such as in this case with a DEIR in two parts, a PRDEIR so far, and a significant amount of comments). The value of final CEQA documents for informing public debate on projects is decreased in such cases.

As you know, the proposed project is one of the largest to be proposed in the Central Coast in recent years, it involves significant coastal resources, and it remains very controversial. Because of this, and to provide for the most open and informed public discussion and debate on its merits, we recommend that any final CEQA documents be prepared in such a way that reference back to drafts is not necessary. In other words, the final CEQA document would include the final text and figures within which all changes (in response to comments or otherwise) are reflected. Comments and responses on drafts could be in a companion final appendix document of some sort, but would not require cross-referencing. The revised and recirculated DEIR requested offers an opportunity to begin organizing the document to be finaled in this way.

Thank you for the opportunity to comment. As with our prior DEIR comments, we hope that these comments help to frame the LCP and coastal permit context for this project and future development within the Del Monte Forest. We continue to be available for consultation in this regard. Although the project will no doubt remain controversial, we continue to believe it is important that the County and the Commission maximize the extent to which we are working from a common understanding of the environmental baseline, and potential project impacts, in our reviews. Good planning and public policy require as much, and informed public debate on the merits of LCP amendments and coastal permits is better accomplished when this is the case. As always, feel free to contact me if you'd like to discuss this matter further.

cc: Pebble Beach Company
State Clearinghouse (SCH # 2002021130)

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STATE OF CALIFORNIA -THE RESOURCES AGENCY - - - -ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER, Governor

CALIFORNIA COASTAL COMMISSION
CENTRAL COAST DISTRICT OFFICE
725 FRONT STREET, SUITE 300
SANTA Cruz, ca 95060
(831) 427-4863

March 22, 2004

Thom McCue
Monterey County Planning and Building Inspection Department, Coastal Office
2620 First Avenue
Marina, CA 93933

Subject: Draft Environmental Impact Report titled "Pebble Beach Company's Del Monte Forest Preservation and Development Plan" (SCH # 2002021 130)

Dear Mr. McCue:

Thank you for forwarding the above-referenced Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) to our office for review. We appreciate the information developed and presented in the DEIR, and the level of complexity and difficulty associated with an evaluation of a project of this magnitude. The Pebble Beach Company's (PBC) project is one of the largest to be proposed in the Central Coast in recent years, it involves significant coastal resources, and it remains very controversial. As you know, it is important that any Local Coastal Program (LCP) and coastal development permit (CDP) decisions in this matter be well-supported with clear and comprehensive evidence and analysis, and the CEQA process plays a critical role in this regard.

In light of this, we are concerned that some of the fundamental coastal resource issues raised by the PBC project are not framed correctly thus far in the DEIR, and that this significantly compromises the utility of the document for purposes of LCP and coastal development permit decision-making. In particular, we don't believe that the DEIR accurately frames the environmentally sensitive habitat area (ESHA) issues associated with the project and Measure A, and has mostly overlooked our previous comments in this regard. Because the EIR will be used by the County and the Commission for LCP and CDP decision making, we believe the process is better served by the County circulating a revised DEIR that is significantly changed as described below. Therefore, our comments here are brief, limited primarily to highlighting what we believe to be the significant DEIR problems in need of correction. For example, the DEIR continues to rely on mitigation for impacts as opposed to avoidance of ESHA as required by the Coastal Act. We have also attached our previous comments on PBC's proposal for development within the forest and its relation to Monterey County LCP requirements (i.e., the PBC Lot Program (predecessor) project and Measure A) and on the protection of the forest's Monterey pine habitat specifically (i.e., our periodic LCP review draft findings) that remain relevant inasmuch as they provide background information, draft discussion of Monterey pine forest habitat issues, and more detail with respect to the concerns summarized in this letter (see attached correspondence and our excerpted LCP periodic review findings). Please include these attachments within the CEQA record as a portion of our input on the DEIR.

Finally and more generally, we are concerned that the DEIR does not correctly identify the extent of ESHA within the forest and the proposed development areas, in part because it fails to adequately address the Coastal Act ESHA issues raised by the potential LCP amendments (pursuant to Measure A) upon which the project is contingent. As we have previously communicated, inasmuch as the PBC project is contingent on the LCP amendments of Measure A, these amendments must be submitted to the Commission for review and action under the Coastal Act before the PBC project could be affirmatively and finally acted on by the County. Similarly, the project relies in part on CDP amendments that have not yet been applied for by PBC. In the interest of facilitating the public review and the decision-making process, therefore, we recommend that the DEIR be revised to address the comments of this letter and the Commission's previous comments (see attached) and be recirculated for public review, particularly with respect to ESHA issues, and that the County first submit the Measure A LCP amendment request to the Commission (and wait for a final action) before taking any further action on the project .

Process

We recognize that PBC's proposed project and Measure A are entwined. We also recognize that PBC's project would require amendments to existing permits, including the Commission's Spanish Bay CDP. However, the DEIR is inadequate inasmuch as it relies on future Commission certification of Measure A and approval of permit amendments to address and mitigate various LCP inconsistencies and impacts due to the proposed project (see, for example, discussion in DEIR Chapter 3.1). Commission certification of Measure A and Commission and County CDP amendments should not be relied upon in this context,. Rather, these are separate processes where the outcome is both uncertain and critical to whether the proposed project can proceed, and in what form.

As such, we recommend that the County first submit the Measure A LCP amendment request, and wait until after the Commission has acted on it, before further considering or acting on the PBC project. The outcome of the LCP amendment will weigh heavily on whether a project is appropriate and in what form, and this broader planning context should proceed before further project level review. Moreover, if the County intends to use the DEIR to satisfy some of the LCP amendment submittal requirements (see also our November 21, 2000 and March 30, 2001 letters attached in this regard), then the DEIR should include an analysis of the LCP changes proposed as evaluated against the Coastal Act (which would be the primary standard of review for Measure A). It should also be modified to address the comments in this submittal.

In addition, we recommend that PBC first pursue the required amendments to the Spanish Bay permits (and related easements), and wait until after the County and the Commission have acted on them, before the County further considers or acts on the PBC project. Like Measure A, the decision rendered on any such amendment applications will necessarily inform whether portions of the proposed project are appropriate and in what form (see also our previous correspondence attached on these required amendments). On this point we note that because the County conditions of approval were incorporated into the Commission's Spanish Bay CDP, any changes to County conditions are also necessarily changes to Commission conditions and thus must go through the Commission. In addition, the DEIR should be corrected to indicate that such amendments are required, and not that they "may" be required.

ESHA and Avoidance

The DEIR continues to use the interpretation that the LCP's Del Monte Forest Land Use Plan (LUP) Figure 2 and Appendix A define all ESHAs within the forest. We continue to disagree with this methodology, and don't believe that it is the correct interpretation of how to identify ESHA within the forest under the certified LCP (please see our previous comments attached in this regard). The Del Monte Forest in general, and the proposed development area specifically, are home to a high number of sensitive species and/or significant habitat resources. Much of this habitat is interrelated understory and overstory (like the Monterey pine-Yadon's piperia association). We do not agree with the DEIR categorization that some of these resources are ESHA and some not based strictly on LUP Figure 2 and Appendix A. There are at least nineteen species of plants in the project area that are considered to be rare or endangered for the purposes of CEQA, and at least seven of these that are state and/or federally listed. Similarly there exists habitat for at least thirteen special-status wildlife species in the project area, and at least four listed species have been documented in the project area. The DEIR clearly shows that severe impacts to these resources would be expected with the proposed project. We cannot agree that only that portion of these species shown on LUP Figure 2 and Appendix A (circa 1984) are ESHA as defined by the LCP and the Coastal Act, and are the only habitats, therefore, to which ESHA protections apply. To take this approach lacks biological common sense. For example, Yadon's piperia, a federally-listed endangered species found almost exclusively on the Monterey peninsula and in the Del Monte Forest, had not yet even been discovered in 1984, and thus is not represented in the 1984 LUP references. Yet, listed endangered species habitat is, almost by definition, typically considered to be ESHA by the Commission. The fact that Federal and California Engendered Species Act "take" authorization would be required for species that would be displaced by the project but that are not listed in LUP Appendix A (like California red-legged frog) is a good indicator that there is more ESHA present than only that in the 1984 LUP references.

We recommend that the DEIR be modified to assess impacts to LCP and CEQA-recognized rare or endangered species habitat, including all listed species habitat, and all wetlands, particularly where associations of various sensitive species exist, as ESHA. This includes undeveloped areas of indigenous Monterey pine forest (identified by the California Native Plant Society as a List 13 species; see also attached letters, and attached LCP periodic review findings on Monterey pine in this regard). Please note that the LCP defines "rare and/or endangered species" in the Del Monte Forest as "those identified as rare, endangered, and/or threatened by the State Department of Fish and Game, United States Department of Interior Fish and Wildlife Service, the California Native Plant Society and/or pursuant to the 1973 convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna" (LCP Section 20.147.020(AA)). This LCP definition is clear, and is an appropriate method for defining which species' habitats in the forest are considered ESHA.

In addition, the proposed project and the DEIR rely overwhelmingly on mitigation for impacts to ESHA (and for impacts to "non-ESHA" (per the DEIR) sensitive habitat). In fact, the DEIR indicates that all project impacts can be mitigated to a less than significant level. This includes, for example, the impact from the project of removing over 27 acres of Yadon's piperia habitat (or about 20% of the entire Del Monte Forest population and about 12% of the known population). We do not agree with this treatment of rare and/or endangered species habitat impacts, including Yadon's piperia habitat impacts. The LCP requires habitat avoidance and buffering, not mitigation for habitat loss (again, see attached). Non-resource dependent development within ESHA is not allowed by the LCP, and 100-foot ESHA buffers are required. The DEIR's impact assessment should be modified so that it is premised on these avoidance and buffering principles. Furthermore, based on the Coastal Act and applicable LCP sections, we consider each of the following to be significant effects within the meaning of CEQA: any non resource-dependent development and/or use in ESHA; any resource-dependent development and/or use in ESHA that would result in a significant disruption of ESHA habitat values; and any development adjacent to ESHA that would result in impacts which would significantly degrade ESHA. For these, and at a minimum, we consider significant effects attributable to non resourcedependent development and/or use in ESHA to be unmitigatable. We recommend that the DEIR be modified to categorize and assess any such impacts according to this methodology.

Alternatives

Based on our current understanding, it appears that the proposed project raises serious Coastal Act and LCP issues in light of the significant resources that would be displaced by it (see also our previous comments attached in this regard). We recommend that an alternative project be evaluated and pursued (in the DEIR and otherwise) that is purely based on resource and constraint identification and avoidance. In other words, constraints should first be mapped (including, ESHA, other resources, steep slopes, etc.), LCP-required buffers should then be applied (including the 100-foot ESHA buffers), and then a project should be shaped based on the non-constraint and non-buffer area, where ESHA areas and buffers specifically are spared from anything but resource-dependent development that won't significantly disrupt the resources. In this regard, the project may take the shape of using existing developed areas more intensively (such as through the use of underground parking with other uses above, as is proposed in some parts of the project), and concentrating impacts in existing developed areas and where they will have the least impact on resources. We note that such a project would be much more consistent with the project objectives identified in DEIR Chapter 2 than is the proposed project.

Other DEIR issues

We are primarily concerned with the larger issues described above, but have a series of comments on individual portions of the DEIR as follows:

  • The Coastal Act definition of ESHA shown on pages 3.3-71 and E-12 is incorrect. The definition in the DEIR implies there are a subset of rare or especially valuable habitats that are considered ESHA, but that is not what the definition actually indicates. The DEIR needs to be corrected in this regard (see our attached correspondence, particularly the letter dated May 19, 1999 for the correct Coastal Act and LCP definitions for ESHA).
  • The DEIR does not appear to explicitly quantify indirect impacts to resources, such as to Monterey pine and Yadon's piperia (see, for example, DEIR pages 3.3-22 and 3.3-33). These indirect resource impacts should be explicitly identified in any DEIR impact assessment and tabular counts. The most conservative DEIR approach would be to analyze indirect impacts as direct impacts if it is not clear whether indirectly impacted resources will continue to provide habitat/resource value due to the project. Please supplement the DEIR in this regard.
  • The precise number and current legal status of the underlying PBC properties is not totally clear from the DEIR or otherwise (see also our attached comments, and specifically the October 23, 2000 letter on this point). We recommend that the DEIR be supplemented to include a clear description of the individual properties involved, including any chain of title and other information necessary to determine the number and configuration of legal lots. This information is important for understanding the basis from which project evaluation can proceed.
  • The DEIR mapping of the Huckleberry Hill Nature Preserve is from the 1984 LUP, and does not include an updated map that includes the Sawmill Gulch restoration areas added to the Preserve by the Spanish Bay permits (see also our attached comments, and specifically the May 19, 1999 letter). The DEIR should include a clear map of the current boundaries of the Preserve.
  • We appreciate the complexity of the water supply and demand issues as they relate to PBC's entitlement. This is clearly a complicated issue area, and we appreciate the information and analysis in the DEIR. That said, it is not clear to us from the DEIR information presented that the Carmel River would not be adversely affected by water use due to the proposed project. It is our understanding that existing river withdrawals have already resulted in significant resource degradation. We believe that additional information is necessary to understand the relation of the project to the withdrawals from the Carmel River and the health of the River as a result. Please supplement the DEIR to provide information and analysis regarding the health of the Carmel River, including an analysis of the effect of current withdrawals on listed and other species habitat there, the optimum River levels necessary to support these species' needs, and the effect of additional withdrawals on Carmel River health due to project-related demand. We would suggest that NOAA Fisheries, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, and California Department of Fish and Game (at a minimum) be consulted in this process.
  • A portion of the proposed golf course is located on what was apparently historically the Spyglass Quarry. The DEIR does not provide adequate information on the history of the quarry and subsequent development that has resulted in fill and use as a PBC corporation yard/landfill of sorts. Please supplement the DEIR with a history of this portion of the project area that includes, at a minimum, a description of (including dates associated with) past quarrying activities, all subsequent development (including the apparent fill that has created the level portion of this area), and all permits for any development.

  • The DEIR appears to significantly overestimate the amount of development that would be "allowed" in the Del Monte Forest at build out by the LCP. Because of this, the baseline against which the project is compared in this respect is not correct, and the impact assessment is thus skewed in this regard. It is inaccurate to take the acreage of the affected area and apply the maximum allowed zoning density to derive a total of potentially developable units. To do so ignores other policies of the LCP that also come into play (such as ESHA and other constraints, as discussed above), doesn't account for the number of legally developable lots, and seriously compromises the validity of the comparison of the project's effects in this regard. The DEIR should be modified to calculate an accurate representation of current build-out development potential by identifying the number of existing legal lots of record in the forest (see comment above), mapping out the environmental constraints for the affected properties (including necessary buffers, see also above comment on alternatives), and then identifying the remaining potential building envelopes (see also our attached comments, and specifically the October 23, 2000 letter on this point). To the extent that such an exercise raises Fifth Amendment "takings" questions, information on the investment-backed expectation for development should be presented in enough detail to allow at least preliminary conclusions to be drawn.
  • If "Resource Management Plans" (RMPs) are to be used as the basis for mitigating project impacts, then the DEIR needs to include the completed RMPs to allow assessment of the level of impact mitigation provided. Please supplement the DEIR accordingly.
  • We note that preservation of undeveloped resource areas (through legal instruments of some sort) does not necessarily mitigate for resources lost. Rather, such a scheme simply ensures that future development doesn't inappropriately result in future resource damage. Because resource areas being "preserved" are already "protected" by LCP resource-protective policies, it is not clear to us that preservation can be relied on as a mitigation tool in this respect. Rather, mitigation needs to offset resource damage; for example, by creating new resource areas where none currently exist. DEIR mitigation "value" should be adjusted to reflect this methodology, and any "preservation" mitigation be valued according to the amount of potential resource damage (due to LCP-allowed development, including any "takings" development) that would be eliminated by preservation.


In sum, we continue to believe that the proposed project area comprises a significant coastal resource area that includes an amazing variety and preponderance of interrelated rare and endangered species. Much of the area should be identified and evaluated as ESHA. The project as proposed would displace and otherwise damage these resources, and it raises significant concerns with respect to the resource protection policies of the LCP. We recommend that the DEIR be modified to acknowledge the sensitivity of project area resources as ESHA, that its evaluation of impacts be based on LCP-prescribed avoidance principles, that an alternative project that avoids ESHA be evaluated and pursued, and that, because of the magnitude of underlying ESHA assumptions that should be changed, a revised DE1R be recirculated for review. In terms of process, we recommend that Measure A be submitted and acted on, and that the required CDP amendments be applied for and acted on, before the County further considers or acts on the proposed project.

We hope that these comments help to frame the LCP and CDP context for this project and future development within the Del Monte Forest. In the interest of facilitating the decision processes of the County and the Commission to the maximum degree feasible, we would welcome and invite you to engage in more direct consultation with our planning staff with respect to the various biological and ESHA issues raised by the project. Although the project will no doubt remain controversial, it is important that the County and the Commission maximize the extent to which we are working from a common knowledge base, including biologic expertise, concerning the basic facts and science underlying the various resources at issue. We continue to be available to the County and PBC, within the restrictions of our limited staffing, for such consultation.

Attachments: Letters dated May 19, 1999, October 28, 1999, October 23, 2000, November 21, 2000, March 30, 2001, and April 3, 2002; December, 2003, Draft Periodic LCP Review Findings for "Protection of Monterey Pine Forest Habitat"

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Click on each of these dated letters (referenced above) for a hyperlink to each attachment.


March 26, 2004 - Click HERE to read response documents from Concerned Residents of Pebble Beach and other residents responding to this DEIR.

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