Category Archives: City Council

ESP Calls on City to Install Split Sewer System Not the Vault

East Sacramento Preservation Neighborhood Association opposes the city’s proposed water vault solution for flooding in McKinley Park and calls on the City of Sacramento to install split sewer systems throughout the city. A modern, growing city like Sacramento must do this. We are one of only three cities on the west coast that has not up dated its system. Even significantly older municipalities in the north east United States are undertaking this task.

Council Member Harris and the city are pushing to excavate a 25 to 30 feet deep sewer/water tank to be placed in 3.2 acres of McKinley Park. The project will take about three years and will disrupt traffic, quality of life, and safety of neighbors. Not to mention the impact on recreational users. Joggers, picnicking families, strolling moms and their infants, and many walkers from throughout Sacramento will be displaced. McKinley Park is the most heavily used and greatly loved park in the city.

The vault would hold the overflow runoff and sewage on rainy days, so some streets don’t flood, but its capacity during major storms is not proven.  Sacramento needs updated, split sewer systems in all the neighborhoods throughout the city.

In split sewer systems, the waste flows from household plumbing pipes to a dedicated sewer line that connects to the water treatment plant. At the plant the waste is cleaned out and the water is ready to be processed into potable water. The plant discharges any excess, sewage-free water, into the river. The key to this design is the separate, dedicated pipe that takes sewage to treatment plants. The storm drains connect to a separate pipe that carries rainwater and runoff to the river. Unfortunately, our East Sacramento and other older neighborhoods, sprinkled throughout the city, rely on a very old combined system.,

Historic McKinley Park is the most highly used neighborhood park in Sacramento. Thousands and thousands of people from throughout the city recreate, marry, eat, play and relax on its green lawns. The baseball field (slated for destruction) is one of the few left in East Sacramento.  The building of the vault is a huge disruption and not necessary. It’s a patch.

Do the right thing. Replace the system to a split system, over time. Spread out the construction and the cost, like the water meter project, and bring our city into the modern age, like the rest of the country.

Do the right thing.

Posted in City Council, McKinley Park, Parks, Trees | Comments Off on ESP Calls on City to Install Split Sewer System Not the Vault

Courts Rule Against McKinley Village on Traffic—Action Needed by Neighborhood

Slide5The neighborhood has an opportunity to redress McKinley Village traffic concerns. Please read the below message and documents and reach out to city officials.

Friends and Neighbors––
We already know that more and more traffic from more and more development will continue to flood our neighborhood streets.
Traffic––like water––will flow wherever it can go.
California’s highest courts have ruled on traffic in favor of East Sacramento Partnerships for a Livable City (ESPLC) in its legal challenge to the City and the developers of the McKinley Village Project.
Essentially, the landmark ruling means that FAILING TRAFFIC considered OK under the City’s general plan alone is NOT OK!
             “. . . The general plan alone does not constitute substantial evidence that there is no significant impact. . . .”
But, before the Court’s ruling could be implemented, the City and the developers first tried blocking its publication. 
Failing that, they now are attempting to rush through a “Revised Draft EIR for McKinley Village,” which does NOT COMPLY with either state law under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), or the published ruling of the Court of Appeal of the State of California––upheld by the California State Supreme Court.
Join neighbors in support of ACTION before 4:00 PM this FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 2017.
     • PLEASE READ the attached files.
     • VOICE YOUR CONCERNS to the City Council.
     • SUBMIT A LETTER requiring the City to comply with the Court of Appeal’s ruling.
                
     • DELIVER to:  Dana Mahaffey, Associate Planner
                              City of Sacramento, Community Development Department
                              Environmental Planning Services
                              300 Richards Boulevard, Third Floor
                              Sacramento, CA  95811
                              E-MAIL: dmahaffey@cityofsacramento.org
     • DEADLINE:   March 3, 2017 at 4:00 PM.
 
Following is a detailed letter explaining the case.
A chart containing key dates and events in McKinley Village litigation, including requests for depublication, along with two of ESPLC’s representative Letters filed in the California State Supreme Court is forthcoming.

February 26, 2017

Dear Friends and Neighbors,

On November 7, 2016, the Court of Appeal of the State of California for the Third Appellate District, ruled in favor of East Sacramento Partnerships for a Livable City (ESPLC) in its lawsuit challenging the City of Sacramento and the developers of the McKinley Village project in connection with certain traffic impacts.  The Court of Appeal ruled that the City of Sacramento’s failure to properly analyze these traffic impacts violated the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).

The Court of Appeal has directed the Superior Court to issue an Order to the City requiring that it:

  • decertify the existing Environmental Impact Report (EIR);
  • correct deficiencies in the existing EIR;
  • recirculate a CEQA-compliant EIR before recertification.

It appears that the City is attempting to circumvent the Court of Appeal’s ruling by adopting a “Revised Draft EIR for McKinley Village” before the Superior Court can issue the Order.  The Revised EIR does not contain the traffic analysis required by the Court of Appeal.

We encourage residents throughout the City who are concerned about unmitigated traffic from intensifying development flooding our neighborhoods to submit a letter or email to the City urging the City to reject the inadequate Revised EIR, and requiring that the City comply with the Court of Appeals decision.  Please see the end of this update for guidelines on communicating your concerns to the City, on the record, before the March 3rd deadline.

Court of Appeals Ruling on Traffic

The Court of Appeal’s decision was certified for publication, meaning that it can be cited in other cases as legal precedent.  Only about 10% of California Court of Appeal decisions are published.  Although the relevant traffic-related portion of the decision addresses a narrow issue, the ruling has implications far beyond the McKinley Village Project.  As written:

“. . . The general plan alone does not constitute substantial evidence that there is

no significant impact. . . .

. . . 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. . . .”

The Court of Appeal went on to prescribe the remedy:

“Because the EIR fails to explain or provide substantial evidence to support the finding of no significant traffic impact at these intersections, we must reverse the trial court’s denial of ESPLC’s petition for a writ of mandate and remand [return] the case for issuance of a writ directing the City to set aside its certification of the final EIR and to take the action necessary to bring the transportation and circulation section of the EIR into compliance with CEQA. . . .

. . . The City need only correct the deficiency in the EIR that we have just described before considering recertification of the EIR.”  (Emphasis added.)

The developer of the project first called the Appellate Court’s ruling a minor technicality, easily remedied.  Then, together with the City, the developer petitioned the Appellate Court for a rehearing on this issue.

The City’s request for rehearing was denied.  However, before the Appellate Court could deliver its decision to the Sacramento Superior Court (which is responsible for issuing the order directly to the City), the City and the McKinley Village developer launched a statewide campaign to delay issuance of the order––and to diminish the significance of the Court of Appeal decision––by petitioning the California State Supreme Court to “depublish” the Court of Appeal decision.  The City and legal counsel for McKinley Village were among the first groups of developers, state and local agencies, and building industry associations pressing for depublication.

After receiving multiple requests, the Supreme Court asked to see the record of the Appellate Court hearing, including the Administrative Record, which spans tens of thousands of pages.  In opposition to these depublication requests, ESPLC pointed out that the rule being advocated by the groups seeking depublication would:

“. . . enable California cities to circumvent CEQA by adopting LOS F (i.e., “failing”) traffic conditions as thresholds of significance in their general plans, and to thereby avoid any responsibility for analyzing a project’s impacts on traffic, to avoid requiring feasible mitigation measures to address such impacts, or to avoid adopting statements of overriding considerations where mitigation is infeasible.  Such a rule would undermine the fundamental goals of CEQA.”

After two months evaluating more than a dozen letters, the California Supreme Court denied all of the requests for depublication.  On its own motion, it declined to review the matter and declared that the opinion of the Court of Appeal “is now final.”

The Court of Appeal’s published opinion on traffic in favor of ESPLC is now the law of the land.

Revised Draft EIR 

During the months taken by the Supreme Court to reach its decision, the opinion of the Court of Appeal could not be delivered to the Superior Court for implementation.

During the delay, the City of Sacramento issued its “Revised Draft EIR for McKinley Village.”  Yet, the Revised EIR contains no new traffic analysis.  The lack of analysis in the Revised EIR does not address the Court’s direction to properly analyze traffic impacts, and does not reduce those impacts in any way in our neighborhoods and in the central core.

ESPLC believes that the City’s latest action violates not only the letter and spirit of CEQA, but also the express directions given by the Court of Appeal in its published decision.

The Court of Appeal’s decision––as confirmed by the Supreme Court––is significant and, quite literally, precedent setting.  It requires cities and developers state-wide to respect the health and well-being of the People by properly evaluating the environmental impacts of new developments before they are approved.  The decision confirms that which should have been obvious: the developers––and the government at the behest of the developers––cannot paper over significant environmental impacts by simply declaring those impacts to be “acceptable” without proper study and disclosure to the people who will be impacted.  Here, however, the decision will be meaningless if the City is allowed to circumvent the Court of Appeal’s ruling before it takes effect.  To avoid that, we need your help.

Voice your concerns to the City Council!

ESPLC encourages all who are impacted negatively in any way by unmitigated traffic to voice your concerns to the City Council in a letter or e-mail, which must be received by the City on or before 

March 3, 2017.

Letters and e-mails should be focused on the issues currently before the City Council which conflict with the Court of Appeal’s decision.  Specifically:

  • Express opposition to the “Revised EIR for the McKinley Village Project,” noting that it does not contain a new traffic analysis, and no new mitigation that would lessen the significant traffic impacts of the project on the area neighborhoods and roadways.
  • Significant traffic impacts continue to be unmitigated.  Describe how you, your family, and neighbors are experiencing traffic issues even now, during construction of the Village project.
  • Urge the City to comply with the decision of the Court of Appeal in the case of East Sacramento Partnerships for a Livable City (ESPLC) v. City of Sacramento, et al. by decertifying the current EIR, conducting a full, independent traffic analysis, and recirculating the EIR for additional public comment.
  • Failure to follow the law will lead to further unnecessary taxpayer expense if the City must again be compelled to comply with state laws governing the environment.

Deadline:March 3, 2017 at 4:00 PM

Deliver Letter to:Dana Mahaffey, Associate Planner

City of Sacramento, Community Development Department

Environmental Planning Services

300 Richards Boulevard, Third Floor

Sacramento, CA 95811

-or-

E-mail Letter to:dmahaffey@cityofsacramento.org

 

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