BILL ANALYSIS Ķ AB 52 Page 1 ASSEMBLY THIRD READING AB 52 (Gatto) As Amended May 30, 2013 Majority vote NATURAL RESOURCES 6-0 ----------------------------------------------------------------- |Ayes:|Chesbro, Garcia, | | | | |Muratsuchi, Skinner, | | | | |Stone, Williams | | | |-----+--------------------------+-----+--------------------------| | | | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- SUMMARY : Provides a process for a Native American tribe to engage in the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) review process to avoid significant effects on tribal cultural resources. Specifically, this bill : 1)Requires a lead agency to consult with affected Native American tribes prior to determining whether a negative declaration or environmental impact report (EIR) is required for a project pursuant to CEQA. 2)Requires, pursuant to criteria developed and proposed by the Office of Planning and Research (OPR) in the CEQA Guidelines, a public agency to find that a project may have a "significant effect on the environment" if a proposed project may have a significant effect on a "tribal cultural resource," including a sacred place. 3)Requires, on or before January 1, 2015, OPR to prepare and develop, and the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency to certify and adopt, revisions to the CEQA Guidelines that help preserve and protect, or mitigate impacts to, tribal cultural resources as specified. 4)Adds a "tribal cultural resource" to the definition of a "unique archaeological resource" under CEQA. 5)Establishes that a project may have a significant effect on the environment if the project has the potential to cause a substantial adverse change in the significance of a tribal cultural resource. Because Native American tribes may have AB 52 Page 2 expertise in identifying, interpreting, and determining significance of tribal cultural resources and whether an impact of a proposed project to a tribal cultural resource is significant, requires the lead agency to consult with the relevant Native American tribes in making a "significant effect" determination. 6)Requires the lead agency to engage in early consultation with the affected tribe before or during the environmental review process to resolve the potentially adverse impacts of a project if a Native American tribe notifies a lead agency prior to the commencement of the CEQA public review period or if the lead agency determines that a project may adversely affect a tribal cultural resource. 7)Authorizes a lead agency and any responsible agency for a proposed project to issue a permit for a project with a significant impact on an identified tribal cultural resource if any of the following occurs: a) There has been meaningful consultation between the affected Native American tribes and the lead agency; the lead agency has given major consideration to preventing impacts to tribal cultural resources; and the lead agency has demonstrated best efforts to protect and preserve sacred places in a culturally appropriate manner with dignity so as not to further debilitate tribal religious practices, traditions, and identities; b) The affected tribe has been given notice and failed to comment on the proposed mitigation measures; or c) The lead agency determines that there is no legal or feasible way to accomplish the projects purpose without causing a significant effect upon a sacred place; that all feasible mitigation or avoidance measures have been incorporated; and that specific overriding economic, legal, social, technological, or other benefits of the project outweigh the significant effects on the environment. 8)Requires the state lead agency, prior to completing an EIR, to consult with, and obtain comments from, affected Native American tribes. AB 52 Page 3 EXISTING LAW : 1)Requires, pursuant to CEQA, a lead agency with the principal responsibility for carrying out or approving a proposed project to prepare a negative declaration, mitigated negative declaration, or EIR for this action, unless the project is exempt from CEQA (CEQA includes various statutory exemptions, as well as categorical exemptions in the CEQA guidelines). 2)Requires, pursuant to CEQA, that any project that causes substantial adverse change in significance of a historical resource or a unique archaeological resources, is a "significant effect" requiring the preparation of an EIR. The CEQA Guidelines require a mandatory finding of significance where a project has the potential to eliminate important examples of the major periods of California history or prehistory. If a project may cause a significant effect to a historical resource or a unique archaeological resource, CEQA requires the lead agency to consider means to mitigate that effect. The law favors leaving the resource in place or in an undisturbed state. 3)Requires, prior to the adoption or any amendment of a city or county's general plan, the city or county to conduct consultations with California Native American tribes that are on the contact list maintained by the Native American Heritage Commission for the purpose of preserving or mitigating impacts to places, features, and objects listed in the California Native American Heritage Commission Sacred Lands File that are located within the city or county's jurisdiction. From the date on which a California Native American tribe is contacted by a city or county pursuant to this subdivision, the tribe has 90 days in which to request a consultation, unless a shorter timeframe has been agreed to by that tribe. FISCAL EFFECT : According to the Assembly Appropriations Committee, additional costs to OPR and the Natural Resources Agency in the hundreds of thousands of dollars to expand the CEQA guidelines. OPR is scheduled to begin updating CEQA Guidelines in 2014. COMMENTS : Author's Intent . According to the author, existing laws lack a AB 52 Page 4 formal process for tribes to be involved in the CEQA process as tribal governments. CEQA projects that impact tribal resources have experienced uncertainty and delays as lead agencies attempt to work with tribes to address impacts on tribal resources. With this bill, it is the author's intent to establish certainty and standards for assessment and treatment of tribal sacred places and cultural resources during the CEQA process. Examples of the Problem . Last legislative session, the Legislature considered two bills (AB 742 (Lowenthal) and SB 833 (Vargas)) that proposed to stop two large-scale projects planned on or near Native American sacred sites. According to the Senate Natural Resources and Water Committee analysis, AB 742 proposed to prohibit the permitting of a 155-acre rock quarry in Riverside County planned to produce up to five million tons of aggregate each year for 75 years. The facility would have included the quarry, concrete and asphalt mixing, and various other ancillary activities. The proposed pit would have been approximately one mile long and 1,000 feet deep. The project proposed to obtain aggregate from rock that would have been crushed after explosives were blasted to loosen the material. A major problem with the quarry is that it would have been located in an area that the Pechanga Tribe of Luiseņo Peoples considers the most important sacred place, the place considered to be the Place of Creation. The bill was introduced after the project proponents had drafted an 8,500 page draft environmental report and spent several years following the permitting process. The tribe sponsoring the bill clearly did not feel that its concerns were being adequately considered during the planning process. Recognizing the problems with the way tribal issues are treated as part of the permitting process, the Senate Natural Resources and Water Committee analysis for AB 742 suggested that the author consider a more comprehensive statewide solution to the issue posed in the bill. The analysis further stated that "[s]uch a solution could include an improved local or regional planning process that could include stronger protections for Native American sacred sites?" The bill was sent to the Senate Rules Committee, where it ultimately died. A few months later, AB 52 Page 5 the Pechanga Tribe purchased the property and settled its lawsuit with the mining company. The deal cost the tribe over $20 million-the tribe paid $3 million for the property and another $17.35 million as part of a separate agreement to end the quarry dispute. SB 833 proposed to stop the development of a landfill and recycling center located at Gregory Canyon in San Diego County. The entire landfill project is approximately 308 acres. The proposed landfill, which has an estimated 30 year life, will add approximately 30 million tons of landfill capacity to the solid waste disposal system in San Diego County. Located in Gregory Canyon is Gregory Mountain, called "Chokla" by the Luiseņo. The mountain is one of the most spiritually important places in the Luiseņo world. It is believed to be one of the residing places of "Taakwic," a powerful and feared spirit that is the guardian spirit of many Shoshonean shamans. The entire mountain, including the area within the proposed landfill boundary, is considered an important place for fasting, praying, and conducting ceremonies by the Luiseņo. As in the case with the quarry project in AB 742, the affected tribe did not feel like its concerns were adequately handled through the planning process. SB 833 was ultimately vetoed by the Governor, who felt compelled to let the project go forward because of local support and adequate environmental planning. The Governor's veto message expressed the angst he felt over his decision by stating the following: I am deeply concerned about the objections raised with respect to the sacred site, but I don't believe it is appropriate for the Legislature to now intervene and overturn this hard fought local land-use decision. This dispute pains me given the unspeakable injustices the native peoples have endured and the profound importance of their spirituality and connection to the land. There's no question that more thought needs to be given to how we resolve this inherently difficult decision and to find ways for native peoples and their fellow Californians to coexist in an inexorably AB 52 Page 6 modernizing world. As indicated in the AB 742 Senate Natural Resources and Water Committee analysis and the Governor's SB 833 veto message, the current planning process needs reform to provide stronger protections for Native American cultural resources. Without such reform, we may see more bills in the future that attempt to defeat projects after they have gone through a lengthy and costly permitting process (and in some cases, lawsuits) simply because an affected tribe was not brought into the planning process in a meaningful way. The purpose of this bill is to reform the planning process by bringing tribes into the CEQA process in a manner that will avoid legislation at the eleventh hour to kill projects. Analysis Prepared by : Mario DeBernardo / NAT. RES. / (916) 319-2092 FN: 0001343