BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



                                                                  SB 1380
                                                                  Page  1


          SENATE THIRD READING
          SB 1380 (Rubio)
          As Amended  August 21, 2012
          Majority vote 

           SENATE VOTE  :36-2  
           
           TRANSPORTATION      13-0        NATURAL RESOURCES   6-2         
           
           ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
          |Ayes:|Bonnie Lowenthal,         |Ayes:|Chesbro, Knight,          |
          |     |Jeffries, Achadjian,      |     |Brownley, Dickinson,      |
          |     |Bonilla, Buchanan, Eng,   |     |Huffman, Skinner          |
          |     |Furutani, Galgiani,       |     |                          |
          |     |Logue, Wagner, Norby,     |     |                          |
          |     |Portantino, Solorio       |     |                          |
          |     |                          |     |                          |
          |-----+--------------------------+-----+--------------------------|
          |     |                          |Nays:|Grove, Halderman          |
          |     |                          |     |                          |
           ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
           APPROPRIATIONS      15-1                                        
           
           ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
          |Ayes:|Gatto, Harkey, Bradford,  |     |                          |
          |     |Charles Calderon, Campos, |     |                          |
          |     |Davis, Fuentes, Hall,     |     |                          |
          |     |Hill, Cedillo, Mitchell,  |     |                          |
          |     |Nielsen, Norby, Solorio,  |     |                          |
          |     |Wagner                    |     |                          |
          |     |                          |     |                          |
          |-----+--------------------------+-----+--------------------------|
          |Nays:|Donnelly                  |     |                          |
          |     |                          |     |                          |
           ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
           SUMMARY  :  Exempts from the California Environmental Quality Act 
          (CEQA) bicycle plans developed for urbanized areas.  
          Specifically,  this bill  :  

          1)Establishes an exemption from CEQA for bicycle plans prepared 
            for an urbanized area for plans that contain only the 
            following types of projects:  the restriping of streets and 
            highways, bicycle parking and storage, signal timing to 
            improve street and highway intersection operations, and 








                                                                  SB 1380
                                                                  Page  2


            related signage for bicycles, pedestrians, and vehicles.  

          2)Requires the lead agency, prior to determining that a project 
            is exempt, to do both of the following:  

             a)   Hold noticed public hearings in areas affected by the 
               bicycle transportation plan to hear and respond to public 
               comments as specified; and,  

             b)   Include measures in the bicycle transportation plan to 
               mitigate potential bicycle and pedestrian safety impacts.  

          3)Requires the lead agency to file the CEQA notice of the 
            determination with the Governor's Office of Planning and 
            Research (OPR).  

          4)Requires OPR to post information on its Internet Web site 
            notices of determination that are filed by lead agencies, as 
            specified.  

          5)Sunsets the bill's provisions on January 1, 2018.  
           EXISTING LAW  :  

          1)Requires lead agencies with the principal responsibility for 
            carrying out or approving a proposed project to prepare a 
            negative declaration, mitigated negative declaration, or 
            environmental impact report (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 a local agency that determines that a project is not 
            subject to CEQA pursuant to certain exemptions and approves or 
            determines to carry out that project, to file notice of the 
            determination with the OPR.  

          3)Authorizes local agencies to prepare bicycle transportation 
            plans with specified elements.  

           FISCAL EFFECT  :  According to the Assembly Appropriations 
          Committee, minor, absorbable costs to OPR to post exempted 
          bicycle plans on its Web site.  

           COMMENTS :  In June, 2005, San Francisco County adopted their 








                                                                  SB 1380
                                                                  Page  3


          2005 Bicycle Plan, determining that the plan was exempt from 
          CEQA based upon their finding that there was no possibility that 
          the bicycle plan would have significant impacts on the 
          environment.  During the same month, the county adopted the 
          bicycle plan's Network Improvement Document, a five-year plan 
          for funding and implementing the bicycle plan.  Petitioners 
          challenged adoption of the 2005 Bicycle Plan and Network 
          Improvement Document under CEQA and the court granted the 
          Petitioner's petition, finding that the plan and document should 
          have been reviewed under CEQA together as one project - and that 
          considered as a whole could have a significant impact on the 
          environment.  The court issued a Preemptory Writ of Mandate June 
          18, 2007, requiring San Francisco to conduct adequate 
          environmental review of the plan and document, and enjoined the 
          city from implementing any individual improvement projects until 
          the review was completed.  

          After revising the plan, the court upon its review indicated 
          that "The bulk of the draft EIR's analysis concerned impacts on 
          transportation, particularly impacts from the 60 near-term 
          improvements on 63 different intersections located throughout 
          San Francisco, as well as impacts on 12 transit corridors, 10 
          transit spot studies, and 13 parking and loading corridors."  
          The court also noted that the EIR identified mitigation measures 
          to minimize or eliminate many of the significant environmental 
          impacts identified in the EIR, including measures such as adding 
          or modifying traffic signals at intersections (lengthening green 
          light time or adding a green arrow), or modifying roadway 
          striping (changing shared lanes to exclusive turn lanes, 
          narrowing travel lanes, or eliminating or restricting on-street 
          parking).  Subsequent to ruling against another appeal, the 
          court determined that the report met the CEQA requirements on 
          August 6, 2010.  

           Purpose of this bill  :  The author cites the benefits of bicycle 
          transportation plans that require limited public investment to 
          implement and improve conditions for bicycling in order to help 
          achieve numerous important health, safety, and environmental 
          goals.  Further, as mentioned earlier, he indicates that 
          litigation under CEQA challenging bicycle transportation plans 
          can be expensive and delay or prevent adoption of such plans and 
          that the San Francisco opponents "did not support accommodations 
          for cycling under any circumstances and used the CEQA process as 
          a tool to delay the plan."  The author contends that this bill 








                                                                  SB 1380
                                                                  Page  4


          would reduce the potential for CEQA litigation potentially 
          reducing the expenditure of taxpayer dollars needed by a public 
          agency to defend a CEQA challenge.  

           CEQA  :  CEQA provides a process for evaluating the environmental 
          effects of plans or applicable projects undertaken or approved 
          by public agencies.  If a plan or project is not exempt from 
          CEQA, an initial study is prepared to determine whether the plan 
          or project may have a significant effect on the environment.  If 
          the initial study shows that there would not be a significant 
          effect on the environment, the lead agency must prepare a 
          negative declaration.  If the initial study shows that the plan 
          or project may have a significant effect on the environment, the 
          lead agency must prepare an EIR.  Generally, an EIR must 
          accurately describe the proposed plan or project, identify and 
          analyze each significant environmental impact expected to 
          result, identify mitigation measures to reduce those impacts to 
          the extent feasible, and evaluate a range of reasonable 
          alternatives.  Prior to approving any plan or project that has 
          received environmental review, an agency must make certain 
          findings.  If mitigation measures are required or incorporated 
          into a plan or project, the agency must adopt a reporting or 
          monitoring program to ensure compliance with those measures.  

           Bike lane projects subject to environmental review  ?  Existing 
          law appears to contain alternatives to full CEQA review with 
          preparation of an EIR for bike lane projects.  First, there is a 
          statutory exemption for "a project for restriping of streets or 
          highways to relieve traffic congestion."  Second, the CEQA 
          Guidelines provide two possible categorical exemptions:  1) work 
          on existing facilities where there is negligible expansion of an 
          existing use, specifically including "(e)xisting highways and 
          streets, sidewalks, gutters, bicycle and pedestrian trails 
          (emphasis added), and similar facilities" and 2) minor public or 
          private alterations in the condition of land, water, and/or 
          vegetation which do not involve removal of healthy, mature, 
          scenic trees except for forestry or agricultural purposes, 
          specifically including the creation of bicycle lanes on existing 
          rights-of-way. (emphasis added)  Finally, if the project is not 
          exempt from CEQA, but the initial study shows that it would not 
          result in a significant effect on the environment, the lead 
          agency must prepare a negative declaration, and no EIR is 
          required.  









                                                                  SB 1380
                                                                  Page  5


           Restriping affects upon traffic  :  It is reasonable to conclude 
          that the creation of bike lanes on existing streets is not 
          likely to have extensive or complicated environmental impacts.  
          However, traffic impacts may be a worthwhile consideration and, 
          to the extent that a bike lane project increases vehicular 
          congestion, it could have a significant effect on local air 
          quality.  

           Support  :  

          1)Writing in support of this bill, the Silicon Valley Leadership 
            Group, the bill's sponsor, indicates that the CEQA challenges 
            on local bicycle transportation plans can be expensive and 
            that this bill would reduce the potential for litigation 
            delays, such as those experienced by San Francisco.  

          2)This bill has been strictly crafted to allow a bicycle plan, 
            developed only for urbanized areas as specified in law, to be 
            exempt from CEQA provided certain conditions are met and only 
            for certain bicycle projects as specifically identified.  
            Those bicycle projects currently enjoy CEQA exemptions and 
            this bill would basically allow those types of bicycle 
            projects to receive an exemption if considered in a 
            consolidated plan.  Further, the bill would authorize the 
            exemption for a limited five-year time period.  

           Opposition  :  Writing in opposition to the bill, the Sierra Club 
          California contends most, if not all of the bicycle plans, 
          probably would qualify for a mitigated negative declaration, if 
          not a negative declaration. But by exempting the plans, there is 
          no certainty that the impacts of these plans will be 
          appropriately reviewed and mitigated. This could lead to some 
          problems.  It further indicates that "the best way to create 
          robust bicycle plans is to do it in a way that ensures 
          environmental and community impacts are taken into consideration 
          and, where possible, reduced or mitigated."  

           Related bill  :  AB 2245 (Smyth) of 2012, passed the Assembly 
          Natural Resources Committee (8-0) and the Assembly (73-0).  That 
          bill with similar features is on the Senate Floor.  
           

          Analysis Prepared by  :   Ed Imai / TRANS. / (916) 319-2093 









                                                                  SB 1380
                                                                  Page  6



                                                                FN: 0004977