California Supreme Court rules voter initiatives exempt from CEQA

August 8, 2014
Ernie Dalidio

Ernie Dalidio

By STEW JENKINS and KAREN VELIE

The California Supreme Court ruled Thursday that land use planning by voter qualified initiative is exempt from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA); even if a city council adopts the voter initiative to avoid holding a special election. Thursday’s ruling could impact the development of properties, such as the Dalidio Ranch, which have already received the approval of local voters.

For almost 20 years, Ernie Dalidio battled to develop his land along U.S. Highway 101 near Madonna Road in San Luis Obispo. In 2006, 65 percent of San Luis Obispo County voters approved a ballot initiative (Measure J) to allow Dalidio to incorporate business, retail, and residential without requiring annexation by the city of  San Luis Obispo on his 131-acre site.

In Thursday’s ruling that applies to counties, cities and districts in California, the Supreme Court barred Tuolumne Jobs & Small Business Alliance from suing Walmart and the city of Sonora.

In 2007, Walmart sought to expand its Sonora store to a super-center of 27,491 square feet. By the end of 2009, an Environmental Impact Report was unanimously approved by the city’s planning commission.

However, a Walmart supporter announced plans to circulate an initiative petition which would have adopted a specific plan for the construction of the super-center without the need for further processing or compliance with the California Environmental Quality Act. In Sept. 2010, the Sonora City Council considered the petition that had been signed by 20 percent of Sonora’s registered voters.

Justice Corrigan, who authored the unanimous opinion of the Court, said the “Elections Code requires” that when a voter initiative is presented with sufficient signatures to a city council it must “do one of three things: (1) adopt the initiative without alteration; (2) submit it to a special election; or (3) order an abbreviated report on the initiative.” If the city council orders the abbreviated report, “upon receipt of the report, it must then either adopt the initiative (without alteration) or hold a special election.”

According to Justice Corrigan, in Sonora, the city council did direct that a report be prepared “to examine the initiative’s consistency with previous planning commission approvals for the Wal-Mart expansion.” And at the following city council meeting, the Sonora City Council adopted the ordinance permitting the development.

Tuolumne Jobs & Small Business Alliance then sued for a writ of mandate, claiming that the city had violated CEQA “by adopting the ordinance without first completing its environmental review,” and “that the initiative … conflicted with the city’s general plan.”

The Superior Court tossed the case out of court based on a motion filed by the City of Sonora, Walmart, and the initiative’s proponent James Grinnell, holding said that the plaintiffs had no legal claim.

Tuolumne Jobs & Small Business Alliance appealed, and were apparently quite persuasive because the Third District Court of Appeal reversed the trial court, and had held that even if a land use ordinance was brought by voter initiative, the city council had no power to head off a special election by simply adopting the ordinance proposed by that initiative petition without performing a full CEQA review. This set up a conflict between Appellate Courts, since the Fourth District Court of Appeal had held in 2004 that CEQA did not apply to a voter initiative to authorize development of a private school. In that case the City Council of San Juan Capistrano had similarly adopted rather than setting it for special election.

The Supreme Court held that the “Elections Code provides the exclusive procedures for voter initiatives,” the Elections Code’s “statutory language precludes application of CEQA, application of CEQA to voter initiatives is contrary to legislative intent, and direct Adoption of a development ordinance without CEQA review does not offend public policy.”

Thursdays ruling says voters, through direct democracy initiatives, have the power to do land use planning without being constrained by the process and limitations imbedded in the CEQA even if an elected governing body like a city council chooses to avoid the cost of a special election on the initiative by adopting the land use planning ordinance proposed by the voters’ initiative petition.

Early drawings of the proposed Measure J development.

Early drawings of the proposed Measure J development.

Currently, Dalidio’s property is in escrow with developer Gary Grossman, who had been promoting plans to scrap the initiative in favor of a development with more residential and less retail space. If Grossman proceeds with his plan to scrap the 2006 voter approved development, further CEQA review potentially could be required. The property’s escrow is slated to close in November.

Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling could significantly affect how the developers, investors, and potential purchaser move forward on the Dalidio property.

Stew Jenkins is an attorney practicing in San Luis Obispo since 1978 providing estate planning and family law representation. Jenkins obtained preliminary injunction against the City of San Luis Obispo for the SLO Homeless Alliance in 2012, dismissal of Torres v Brennler as an SLAPP suit designed to impair press freedom in 2013, and the overturned unconstitutional California Elections Code statutes in Barta v. Debra Bowen, California Secretary of State, in 2014.


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Wait. Developers have no rights. Only altruistic NIMBYs have rights.


Two planes fell in over 20 years? Get real. This is a huge victory for the people over big government and small-minded politicians!


What’s most interesting is how this ruling will be interpreted with respect to all voter initiatives in California. Prop 8 comes to mind, and there are many, many more.


Prop 8 requires CEQA analysis? Tell us how that’s related, please.


No…Prop 8 is one of many contentious initiatives that have gone before the supreme court. The recent land use initiative decision may in fact set precedence thus potentially affecting voter led initiatives.


Very interesting. I see numerous third party lawsuits on the horizon.


Sorry, Stu, but I don’t read it the way you do. This decision has nothing to do with the Dalidio property.


It has long been the law that initiatives that go to election are exempt from CEQA. The issue in Sonora was whether initiatives adopted by a city council, instead of by voters, are also exempt from CEQA. The court’s decision is a logical extension of standing law, not something new that changes the game at Dalidio.


Dalidio’s initiative went to an election. Ergo, this decision has zero impact there. The Dalidio initiative was never subject to CEQA — in fact, if you remember, that was one of the big arguments against voting for it.


That said, CEQA is the least of the Dalidio property’s problems. That initiative-approved scheme is impossible to build, and will never be built — that’s why Grossman, who’s smarter than Dalidio, has abandoned it.


Grossman’s project including more residential in the SLO Airport flight path is problematic in my opinion. It was about 20 years ago when an airplane hit the power lines over 101 and fell onto the freeway. Last year an airplane fell on Granda Lane. People die in under flight paths.

This is why there is an Airport Land Use Commission and CEQA to measure the risks to the public at large.


There was a jet crash right on the property where he wants to build houses. All aboard were killed. What if people had been below it?


What if the sun fails to rise tomorrow? Sheesh, what puerile arguments.


Some things are predictable. We have controls on construction at the end of runways for a reason — that’s the most dangerous place for development to be. The county will not permit certain types of development at this site.


Maybe you’d feel differently if the plane fell on your loved ones and wiped them out. Puerile? Takes one to call one, as puers say.


I’ve been here most of my life and I can’t recall a jet crashing on that site…when did that occur?


OK. Now I remember. I also remember the Wings West mid air accident west of there in the Los Osos valley in 1984.