Coastal Hills Rural etc. v. Co. of Sonoma ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 8/31/16
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    COASTAL HILLS RURAL
    PRESERVATION,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                  A145573
    v.                                                (Sonoma County
    COUNTY OF SONOMA et al.,                          Super. Ct. No. SCV255694)
    Defendants and Respondents;
    JACK PETRANKER et al.,
    Real Paries In Interest.
    This action was brought under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA)1
    to challenge the proposed expansion of a Buddhist retreat center approved by defendant
    County of Sonoma (County). The County adopted a mitigated negative declaration
    (MND) in lieu of a formal environmental impact report (EIR) in approving the third in a
    series of master use permits (MUPs) for real parties in interest Jack Petranker and the
    Head Lama of the Tibetan Nyingma Meditation Center (TNMC). Plaintiff Coastal Hills
    Rural Preservation (CHRP) is a citizens’ group that contends the County violated CEQA
    by approving the master use permit without an EIR. CHRP petitioned the trial court for a
    writ of mandate, maintaining that an EIR was required because the proposed project
    greatly expands an existing printing press operation that is housed on the subject
    property, which is located in a rural area. CHRP also asserted the approval was made in
    1
    Public Resources Code sections 21000 through 21178. Unless otherwise
    indicated, all further statutory references are to that code.
    violation of the County’s general plan and related zoning provisions. The trial court
    denied the petition. We affirm.
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    I.     Background
    In 1975, TNMC purchased a property on Tin Barn Road in Cazadero, which it
    uses as a monastery and retreat center for senior members of its community (Odiyan
    Retreat Center). Since the 1970’s, a significant religious practice of TNMC has been the
    printing of sacred Buddhist texts in the Tibetan language for shipment to Asia and free
    distribution to Buddhist monks, nuns, and lay practitioners whose libraries have been
    destroyed by Chinese authorities.
    In 1983, the County approved a conditional use permit for Timberhill Ranch
    (Timberhill), a resort also located in Cazadero.2 The property is within an area
    designated as Resources and Rural Development (RRD) in the County’s general plan.
    Timberhill’s use permit allowed for the construction of a lodge facility, a dining room,
    and 15 guest cabins.
    In 2000, the County’s Permit and Resource Management Department (PRMD)
    adopted an MND allowing the expansion of Timberhill to include five additional cabins,
    a new dining room and other guest facilities, and 10 dwelling units for staff housing.
    In 2004, TNMC purchased Timberhill and designated the property as the Ratna
    Ling Retreat Center (Ratna Ling).3 We hereafter refer to real parties in interest
    collectively as Ratna Ling.
    II.    History of Ratna Ling’s Use Permits
    A. 2004 Master Use Permit Application
    On April 15, 2004, Ratna Ling submitted a modified master use permit application
    (2004 MUP) to construct 19 additional cabins, a library, a healing center, a therapeutic
    pool, and a new 18,750-square-foot printing press facility on the Timberhill site. The
    2
    The Timberhill Ranch property is 107 acres in size.
    3
    Ratna Ling means “jeweled crest.”
    2
    proposed maximum number of occupants was set at 60, comprised of up to 20 residents
    and 40 retreatants. The application also sought permission to convert the existing
    13,394-square-foot lodge into a meditation hall with a kitchen and dining facilities, as
    well as to continue utilizing the property’s other existing structures. Ratna Ling
    estimated the total number of truck trips for the press operation and for supplies to be 0.5
    per day, with total round trips for retreatants and staff at an average of 17 per day. The
    application was unopposed.
    On July 21, 2004, the PRMD filed an initial study, indicating that an MND would
    be prepared. Out of 17 environmental factors considered, the seven deemed potentially
    affected by the proposed project were (1) aesthetics, (2) biological resources,
    (3) utilities/service systems, (4) cultural resources, (5) hydrology/water quality, (6) air
    quality, and (7) transportation/traffic.
    On September 9, 2004, the County’s Board of Zoning Adjustments (BZA) adopted
    an MND (2004 MND) and approved the 2004 MUP, subject to 58 conditions of approval.
    Within the conditions of approval, the printing press operation was designated as a
    noncommercial “ancillary use.” Maximum occupancy for the printing press facility was
    limited to 27 persons, with hours of operation from 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. seven days a
    week. The staff report prepared in conjunction with the 2004 MND states: “Total
    production at the press facility is estimated at a little under 100,000 books (including art)
    per year. To print this many books requires approximately twelve 40-foot truckloads of
    paper, or about one truckload per month. The other supplies required, such as ink and
    plates, would come in smaller trucks, at a rate of about one every three months.”4 The
    staff report also reflects that the facility was intended to house a single printing press,
    along with related pieces of equipment.
    4
    These estimates are identical to estimates provided by Ratna Ling in its MUP
    application.
    3
    B. Post-2004 MUP Proposals and Activities
    Not long after the 2004 MUP was approved, Ratna Ling’s printing press activities
    intensified. In 2006, the TNMC publishing entity known as Dharma Publishing closed its
    printing facility in Berkeley. TNMC transported five printing presses from Berkeley to
    Ratna Ling and placed them alongside the existing printing press in the 18,750-square-
    foot building. Ratna Ling initiated communications with the County, seeking to further
    expand its onsite printing operation. An e-mail message to Petranker sent by a deputy
    director with PRMD on November 27, 2006 opined that Ratna Ling’s tentative proposal
    to construct a four-story 95,000-square-foot “text treasury” “would appear to make the
    printing and warehouse the predominant use,” rather than a permissible “accessory use”5
    under the County’s general plan and zoning regulations. The e-mail further noted:
    “Your use permit allows the printing press and 18,000 sf of storage space, which we
    consider about the limit of what is reasonable for an accessory use.” The message
    explained: “An accessory use must be incidental to the primary use and must not
    ‘significantly change the character, appearance or operation of the principal use of the
    building or property.’ ”
    On August 1, 2007, the PRMD approved Ratna Ling’s zoning permit application
    for a small residential care facility to house up to six persons.
    C. 2008 Planning Application and Permits
    On February 26, 2008, Ratna Ling submitted a planning application seeking a
    general plan amendment/special area policy and a use permit to construct two large
    underground caves for text storage, as well as a large exhibition/assembly hall.
    On March 26, 2008, Ratna Ling received a temporary zoning permit for two steel-
    frame membrane storage tents to house its “Sacred Text Treasury.” The permit was later
    revised to include two additional storage tents. The four storage tents have a combined
    5
    The County reportedly uses the terms “ancillary use” and “accessory use”
    interchangeably.
    4
    square footage of 39,270 square feet, which is more than double the size of the printing
    press facility. The permit was to expire on March 25, 2011.
    On June 19, 2008, Ratna Ling acquired an adjacent 13-acre parcel, increasing the
    retreat center’s total land area to 120 acres.
    On August 22, 2008, the PRMD adopted an MND (2008 MND) and approved a
    use permit allowing Ratna Ling to construct a 20-acre-foot reservoir for the site’s water
    system, and to modify the size and location of the healing center.
    D. Neighbor Opposition and Response
    On January 8, 2009, a petition supported by 99 signers was filed with the PRMD
    in opposition to Ratna Ling’s planning application for the underground caves and
    exhibition/assembly hall.
    On February 25, 2010, the “Steering Committee to Oppose Ratna Ling
    Expansion” (ORLE) filed a complaint with 172 signatures (Complaint) with the PRMD.
    The Complaint alleged Ratna Ling had been operating in violation of the conditions of
    approval contained in the 2004 MUP, as well as in violation of the County’s general plan
    and zoning regulations. Specifically, ORLE alleged the printing press operation had
    exceeded its ancillary function, noting that the current combined square footage of the
    printing facility and the four temporary storage tents was equal to the square footage of
    Ratna Ling’s retreat-related facilities. Its six printing presses were allegedly operating 24
    hours a day, six days a week, with up to 40 workers on site per day. Additionally, truck
    traffic had increased 12 to 16 times over Ratna Ling’s reported 2004 estimate. ORLE
    included extensive background information and documentation of the alleged violations.
    In an April 19, 2010 letter to Supervisor Efren Carrillo, Petranker responded to the
    Complaint’s allegations, observing the term “ ‘ancillary,’ reinforced by the Oxford
    English Dictionary, is that it means ‘providing essential support.’ Our book production is
    a central religious practice and provides essential support to the primary purpose of Ratna
    Ling and Odiyan as places for retreat, contemplation, meditation, prayer, and the spread
    of the Dharma.” In noting the many permits Ratna Ling had obtained since 2004,
    Petranker stated: “Over the years, we have repeatedly demonstrated our willingness to
    5
    co-operate with the County. Most ironically, the very fact the neighbors cite as a
    ‘problem’—that we have obtained more than 200 permits—demonstrates that we have
    sought and the County has provided thorough, careful oversight of our operations.
    We’ve paid the County over $195,000 in fees. We’ve attended dozens of meetings, filed
    hundreds upon hundreds of pages of reports, plans, analyses, environmental compliance
    documents and the like. And that cooperation will continue.”6
    E. Ratna Ling’s 2011 Revised Planning Application
    On March 15, 2011, Ratna Ling submitted a revised planning application and
    proposal statement to the PRMD (2011 Project). The revised application omits the
    underground caves and the exhibition/assembly hall that were proposed in 2008. In
    addition to securing permanent status for the four temporary storage tents, Ratna Ling
    proposed to construct a six-bedroom residence on the newly acquired 13-acre parcel to
    house 12 occupants.7 It also proposed to erect up to eight tent cabins “to house a number
    of volunteers needed to support peak production periods for the sacred text activity,” and
    sought authorization to raise the total occupancy limit for the retreat to 98 persons, with
    24 additional persons to be allowed on a seasonal basis.8
    As to the printing facility, Ratna Ling sought to quantify production based on a
    limit of one 24-foot truck per day to bring in supplies and transport out finished works for
    shipment, rather than limiting the number of books to be produced. The proposal
    requested a storage use not to exceed the combined square footage of the four temporary
    storage tents. Additionally, it provided that authorization for the printing facility would
    terminate if the property were to be conveyed to a third party not affiliated with the
    6
    The total volume of reports, plans, analyses, and environmental documentation
    contained in the administrative record is quite substantial. It is unclear whether the
    Complaint itself was ever formally addressed.
    7
    The proposed size of the house was later reduced to five bedrooms.
    8
    Ratna Ling requested that occupancy for the printing facility be increased from
    27 to 60 persons for all months except June and July, when the limit would be raised to
    80 persons.
    6
    traditions and practices of Tibetan Buddhism. In such case, Ratna Ling would dismantle
    and remove the printing equipment.
    On March 26, 2011, the PRMD approved a one-year time extension for the storage
    tent permits.
    On July 31, 2011, ORLE submitted revisions to its extensive (over 400-page)
    opposition to Ratna Ling’s 2011 Project proposal.
    On December 20, 2011, Ratna Ling submitted supplemental information regarding
    the printing facility, addressing energy efficiency, storage of hazardous materials, and the
    color of the four storage tents. An accompanying chart shows the printing operation
    occupies 1.25 percent of the retreat’s total land area, uses 24 percent of the energy at the
    site, accounts for 37 percent of Ratna Ling’s business property value, and generates 5.72
    percent of the total vehicular traffic. The document reiterates the importance of sacred
    text preservation to the Ratna Ling community, noting “[t]he entire community of press
    volunteers observes strict rules of behavior; they also join in daily rituals held at the press
    building.” These rituals include chanting traditional Buddhist prayers in the Tibetan
    language, silent meditation, yoga, traditional water and incense offerings, daily spiritual
    practices, chanting of mantras, and closing prayers.
    F. BZA Proceedings
    On February 14, 2012, the PRMD released a notice of public hearing and
    intent to adopt an MND (2012 MND) for the 2011 Project. The notice indicated the
    PRMD had identified potential environmental impacts in the following areas: biological
    resources, greenhouse gas emission, and transportation/traffic. That same month, a
    petition circulated in opposition to the 2011 Project. The petition appears to have been
    signed by as many as 390 individuals. Many letters, both in support and in opposition,
    are contained in the administrative record.
    On April 5, 2012 and June 7, 2012, the BZA conducted public hearings on the
    2012 MND. At the conclusion of public testimony, the BZA, by a five-to-zero vote,
    adopted the 2012 MND and approved the MUP for the 2011 Project.
    7
    On June 7, 2012, Ward Anderson filed an appeal with the board of supervisors
    (Board), claiming the BZA had failed to address the 2010 Complaint. Anderson also
    alleged that in approving the 2011 Project, the BZA overlooked “comprehensive
    rebuttals” that had been advanced against adoption of the 2012 MND.
    On October 4, 2012, the attorney for CHRP amended Anderson’s appeal to
    include the claim that the 2011 Project was inconsistent with the County’s general plan
    and zoning regulations. CHRP also asserted the BZA had violated CEQA by adopting an
    MND instead of requiring the preparation of an EIR.
    G. Subsequent Mitigated Negative Declaration
    On March 26, 2013, Ratna Ling submitted an updated proposal statement for the
    2011 Project. While the updated proposal statement acknowledges Ratna Ling was
    seeking permanent status for the four storage tents, it does not include the tents in its list
    of proposed new structures.9
    On December 2, 2013, an officer with the Timber Cove Fire Protection District
    (TCFPD) submitted a letter to the PRMD questioning whether the storage tents were in
    compliance with building code regulations.
    On January 21, 2014, Ratna Ling submitted documentation regarding the fire
    resistance ratings for the storage tents.
    On February 12, 2014, the County fire marshal submitted a memorandum to the
    PRMD stating that sufficient evidence had been provided to show the storage tents were
    in compliance with required fire resistive requirements for membrane structures.
    Reportedly, the tents are equipped with sprinkler systems, and the tent fabric has been
    treated with a flame-retardant chemical.
    On February 24, 2014, CHRP refiled the 2010 Complaint. CHRP focused on the
    industrial character of Ratna Ling’s printing operation, asserting it was inconsistent with
    County land use regulations.
    9
    In the updated statement, Ratna Ling noted it had donated a new fire truck
    costing $280,000 to the Timber Cove Fire Protection District, along with $15,000 worth
    of supplemental equipment.
    8
    On February 28, 2014, PRMD released a 46-page subsequent mitigated negative
    declaration (SMND) to the 2004 MND and the 2008 MND, superseding the 2012 MND.
    The 2014 SMND assesses the potential environmental effects of the 2011 Project using
    the 18-factor initial study checklist taken from the CEQA Guidelines. The PRMD found
    the 2011 Project would have no impact as to six of these factors, and a less-than-
    significant impact as to 12 of these factors.10 The SMND identifies measures designed to
    mitigate all of the identified less-than-significant impacts. PRMD also concluded the
    storage tents would not expose the area to a significant risk of wildland fires because the
    structures were built in compliance with the fire safety regulations that were in effect at
    the time their permits were issued.
    H. Appeal to the Board
    On April 1, 2014, CHRP submitted its “Master Issue Statement” in support of its
    appeal to the Board. The related portion of administrative record contains hundreds of
    e-mails and comments from various parties.
    On April 8, 2014, the Board held a hearing on the appeal of the BZA’s 2012
    approval of the 2011 Project. After receiving public comments and testimony, the Board
    closed the hearing and conducted a vote, preliminarily denying the appeal and approving
    the 2011 Project by a vote of three to two. The Board also directed staff to meet with
    Ratna Ling to discuss possible revisions to some of the SMND’s conditions of approval.
    On June 24, 2014, the Board conducted a second public hearing. This hearing was
    limited to consideration of the revised conditions of approval. The changes included
    altering the times for operating the printing press, providing $2,500 annually to the
    TCFPD, and requiring Ratna Ling to coordinate with the County fire marshal and the
    TCFPD to review its onsite firefighting infrastructure. Again by a three-to-two vote, the
    10
    The six no-impact factors relate to agricultural and forest resources, biological
    resources, mineral resources, population and housing, recreation, and the “mandatory
    findings of significance.” The 12 less-than-significant impact factors pertain to
    aesthetics, air quality, cultural resources, geology/soils, greenhouse gas emission, hazards
    and hazardous materials, hydrology/water quality, land use and planning, noise, public
    services, transportation/traffic, and utilities/service systems.
    9
    Board formally denied the appeal, adopted the SMND, and approved the 2011 Project
    subject to 96 conditions of approval.
    On June 25, 2014, the County recorded a Notice of Determination.
    III.   Trial Court Proceedings
    On July 24, 2014, CHRP filed a petition for writ of mandate and a complaint for
    declaratory and injunctive relief challenging the Board’s action. CHRP alleged the
    Board’s decision to forgo preparation of an EIR violated CEQA because the SMND
    incorporated previously unpermitted activities into the baseline of its analysis. CHRP
    also argued substantial evidence in the record demonstrated that the 2011 Project will
    create new and significant environmental impacts with respect to fire hazards, public
    safety, public services, and land use, impacts that had not previously been analyzed in
    any CEQA document. Alternatively, CHRP claimed the SMND was not supported by
    substantial evidence. It also asserted the 2011 Project was inconsistent with the County’s
    general plan and zoning code. Finally, CHRP contended the SMND violates CEQA by
    deferring the implementation of mitigation measures, and by failing to analyze the
    cumulative impact of Ratna Ling’s activities.
    The trial court issued a tentative order denying the petition, and a hearing occurred
    on March 30, 2015.
    On April 7, 2015, the trial court filed its ruling denying the writ. CHRP timely
    appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Standard of Review
    “ ‘[Code of Civil Procedure] [s]ection 1094.5 makes administrative mandamus
    available for review of “any final administrative order or decision made as the result of a
    proceeding in which by law a hearing is required to be given, evidence is required to be
    taken and discretion in the determination of facts is vested in the inferior tribunal,
    corporation, board or officer.” ’ [Citation.] ‘[I]mplicit in section 1094.5 is a requirement
    that the agency which renders the challenged decision must set forth findings to bridge
    the analytic gap between the raw evidence and ultimate decision or order.’ ” (West
    10
    Chandler Boulevard Neighborhood Assn. v. City of Los Angeles (2011) 
    198 Cal. App. 4th 1506
    , 1517 (West Chandler).)
    “ ‘In reviewing an agency’s decision under Code of Civil Procedure section
    1094.5, the trial court determines whether (1) the agency proceeded without, or in excess
    of, jurisdiction; (2) there was a fair hearing; and (3) the agency abused its discretion.
    [Citation.]’ [Citations.] ‘Abuse of discretion is established if the respondent has not
    proceeded in the manner required by law, the order or decision is not supported by the
    findings, or the findings are not supported by the evidence.’ [Citation.] ‘The trial court
    and appellate court apply the same standard; the trial court’s determination is not binding
    on us.’ ” (West 
    Chandler, supra
    , 198 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1517–1518, fn. omitted.)
    II.    CHRP Waived Its Religious Preference Arguments
    Before we address CHRP’s land use and environmental claims, we observe CHRP
    spends much of its opening brief arguing that the County’s adoption of the SMND and
    approval of the 2011 Project violates California Constitutional provisions relating to the
    establishment of religion. This issue was not raised before the Board and is therefore not
    ripe for our review.11 Recognizing this defect, CHRP urges us to exercise our discretion
    to consider its argument because the issue involves “a pure question of law” and
    implicates important issues of public policy. We decline the invitation.
    Typically, constitutional issues not raised in earlier civil proceedings are waived
    on appeal. (Hale v. Morgan (1978) 
    22 Cal. 3d 388
    , 394; see Sea & Sage Audubon
    11
    CHRP asserts it did exhaust its administrative remedies, citing to isolated
    statements made over many years by various individuals that are found in noncontiguous
    portions of the 13,603-page administrative record. Significantly, neither Anderson nor
    CHRP expressly identified religious preference as a ground for the appeal to the Board.
    We further observe any argument based on religion was essentially disclaimed in
    CHRP’s opening brief in the trial court: “Petitioners do not object to the religious nature
    of the site, and are fully supportive of Ratna Ling as a Buddhist retreat center. Petitioners
    object to the location of an industrial printing operation in a rural area of Sonoma County
    that lacks the infrastructure to manage industrial fires and potentially hazardous
    emergencies associated with industrial operations.”
    11
    Society, Inc. v. Planning Com. (1983) 
    34 Cal. 3d 412
    , 417 (Sea & Sage); Thomas v.
    Duggins Construction Co., Inc. (2006) 
    139 Cal. App. 4th 1105
    , 1114.) A court may relax
    this rule to permit a party to raise belatedly “ ‘a pure question of law which is presented
    on undisputed facts.’ ” (Sea & Sage, at p. 417.) Only when the issue presented involves
    purely a legal question, on an uncontroverted record and requires no factual
    determinations, is it appropriate to address new theories. (Palmer v. Shawback (1993)
    
    17 Cal. App. 4th 296
    , 300.) “This forgiving approach has been most frequently invoked
    when ‘important issues of public policy are at issue.’ ” (Sea & Sage, at p. 417.) Its
    application nevertheless “is largely a question of an appellate court’s discretion.”
    (Richmond v. Dart Industries, Inc. (1987) 
    196 Cal. App. 3d 869
    , 874.)
    Furthermore, it also is “the long-established rule that an appellate court will not
    enter upon the resolution of constitutional questions unless absolutely necessary to a
    disposition of the appeal.” (Bayside Timber Co. v. Board of Supervisors (1971)
    
    20 Cal. App. 3d 1
    , 5–6.) Accordingly, a new constitutional issue may be raised on appeal
    only if it involves a pure question of law that is absolutely necessary to the disposition of
    this appeal, and concerns a matter of public interest based on undisputed facts. The
    present case does not satisfy this criteria.
    In arguing that the County’s approval of the 2011 Project violates federal and state
    constitutional prohibitions against the establishment of religion, CHRP asserts: “Here,
    the County approved [TNMC’s] massive industrial storage operation and drastic print
    facility expansion even though the Project would not otherwise be allowed in RRD land,
    according to the County’s own words.” We are unable to evaluate the constitutionality of
    this assertion without examining the record to assess whether the storage operation is
    indeed a “massive industrial” one, and whether the Board’s decision really does allow for
    a “drastic print facility expansion.” Not surprisingly, Ratna Ling and the County both
    take exception to this characterization of the record. Thus, the underlying facts are not
    uncontroverted.
    Additionally, the issue does not present itself to us on a clean slate. TNMC’s
    religious aspirations were clear when it first acquired the Timberhill site and obtained
    12
    County approval for its printing activities in 2004. It is undisputed that the publication of
    sacred texts has long been understood to be an outgrowth of Ratna Ling’s spiritual
    practice. According to Ratna Ling, “[m]any people go on retreat primarily for the
    purpose of working on the sacred texts because ongoing transmission of the Dharma is a
    central practice of this spiritual community.”
    Against this backdrop, which includes several prior County approvals that were
    never challenged, we are being asked to evaluate whether the incremental increase in
    activities authorized under the SMND, in and of itself, violates constitutional principles
    concerning the establishment of religion. Framed as such, this narrow, fact-specific issue
    does not concern a matter of public interest.12 And even if we could properly exercise
    our discretion to overlook CHRP’s failure to raise this issue in the administrative
    proceeding below, we would decline to entertain its arguments based on this complex
    factual background alone.
    III.   Consistency With The County’s General Plan
    A. General Principles and Standard of Review
    The Board specifically found the 2011 Project to be consistent with the applicable
    provisions of the County’s general plan and zoning code. CHRP challenges that finding
    on appeal. This challenge is based on the Planning and Zoning Law (Gov. Code, § 65000
    et seq.), rather than CEQA. (See Santa Teresa Citizen Action Group v. City of San Jose
    (2003) 
    114 Cal. App. 4th 689
    , 707.)
    “Government Code section 65300 requires each county . . . to ‘adopt a
    comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the county . . . .’
    12
    Courts typically find public policy justifies appellate consideration when a
    ruling’s impact will extend beyond the parties to the case. (See, e.g., Cedars-Sinai
    Medical Center v. Superior Court (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 1
    , 6 [whether to recognize a tort
    cause of action for intentional first party spoliation]; De Anza Santa Cruz Mobile Estates
    Homeowners Assn. v. De Anza Santa Cruz Mobile Estates (2001) 
    94 Cal. App. 4th 890
    ,
    908 [whether Civ. Code, § 798.86 was intended to provide the exclusive penalty for a
    violation of the provisions of the Mobilehome Residency Law, thus precluding an award
    of punitive damages for statutory violations].)
    13
    The general plan consists of ‘a statement of development policies . . . diagrams and text
    setting forth objectives, principles, standards, and plan proposals . . .’ and includes, at a
    minimum, the following seven elements: land use, circulation, housing, conservation,
    open-space, noise, and safety. [Citation.] The general plan and each of its elements must
    ‘comprise an integrated, internally consistent and compatible statement of policies . . . .’
    [Citation.] Furthermore, zoning ordinances must be consistent with the general plan.”
    (No Oil, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles (1987) 
    196 Cal. App. 3d 223
    , 242 (No Oil).)
    “When we review an agency’s decision for consistency with its own general plan,
    we naturally accord great deference to the authoring agency’s determination. [Citation.]
    The agency has broad discretion, especially regarding general plan policies, which reflect
    competing interests. [Citation.] ‘A reviewing court’s role “is simply to decide whether
    the [agency] officials considered the applicable policies and the extent to which the
    proposed project conforms with those policies.” ’ [Citations.] If the agency’s decision is
    not arbitrary, capricious, unsupported, or procedurally unfair, it is upheld.” (Anderson
    First Coalition v. City of Anderson (2005) 
    130 Cal. App. 4th 1173
    , 1192.) We resolve
    reasonable doubts in favor of the administrative decision. (Topanga Assn. for a Scenic
    Community v. County of Los Angeles (1974) 
    11 Cal. 3d 506
    , 514–515; Wollmer v. City of
    Berkeley (2009) 
    179 Cal. App. 4th 933
    , 940.)
    We show this deference because the body adopting a general plan has unique
    competence to interpret those policies when applying them to a proposed project.
    (Pfeiffer v. City of Sunnyvale City Council (2011) 
    200 Cal. App. 4th 1552
    , 1563; San
    Francisco Tomorrow v. City and County of San Francisco (2014) 
    229 Cal. App. 4th 498
    ,
    515 (San Francisco Tomorrow).) Given this expertise, it is not our role to micromanage
    a local agency’s development decisions. (California Native Plant Society v. City of
    Rancho Cordova (2009) 
    172 Cal. App. 4th 603
    , 638; Sequoyah Hills Homeowners Assn. v.
    City of Oakland (1993) 
    23 Cal. App. 4th 704
    , 719.)
    B. The Resources and Rural Development Designation
    As noted above, the Ratna Ling site has a RRD land use designation under the
    County’s current general plan, known as “General Plan 2020.” The stated purpose of the
    14
    RRD land use designation is to “protect lands used for timber, geothermal and mineral
    resource production and for natural resource conservation.” The RRD category is
    intended, in part, to guard against intensive development in fire and flood prone areas,
    and to protect county residents from proliferation of growth in areas where there are
    inadequate public services and infrastructure. The RRD designation expressly permits
    “[l]odging, campgrounds, and similar recreational and visitor serving uses,” provided
    they are not inconsistent with the resource purposes of the area.13 The County considers
    the Ratna Ling’s operation, like the Timberhill Ranch before it, as a “visitor-serving” use.
    The related zoning ordinance also permits visitor-serving uses “where compatible
    with resource use and available public services.” (Sonoma County Code of Ordinances
    (Sonoma County Code), § 26-10-005.) Allowable uses can include “[a]ccessory”
    buildings, as well as uses that are appurtenant to the operation of allowable uses. (Id.,
    § 26-10-010, subd. (p).) Uses allowed under an approved use permit include
    “[n]oncommercial clubs and lodges.” (Id., § 26-10-020, subd. (v).)
    C. The Board’s Findings
    In its resolution approving the 2011 Project, the Board found the proposed uses to
    be consistent with the County’s land use regulations because, by that point, Ratna Ling
    was merely seeking “clarifications and expansions of the previously approved uses”
    (italics added), all of which had been found by the BZA in 2004 to be consistent with
    relevant land use policies and regulations. In particular, the Board found the printing
    facility “has been and will continue to be an accessory use permitted under Section
    26-10-010(p) of the Zoning Code since it is related to, subordinate to, and appurtenant to
    the retreat use.”14 The Board further found various arguments seeking to reopen the prior
    “accessory use” determination for the print facility were untimely.
    13
    The RRD designation also allows public and private schools and places of
    religious worship.
    14
    Sonoma County Code section 26-10-010, subdivision (p) is titled, “Accessory
    buildings and uses appurtenant to the operation of the permitted uses.” It provides, in
    part: “Accessory buildings may be constructed on vacant parcels of two (2) acres or more
    15
    In the resolution approving the 2004 MUP, the BZA found the mitigation
    measures set forth in the permit rendered Ratna Ling’s use “consistent with the RRD . . .
    General Plan land use designation and the zoning district regulations as a non-
    commercial retreat center because it would not detract from or impinge upon lands used
    for timber, geothermal and mineral resource production or natural resource
    conservation.” The 18,750-square-foot religious printing facility was described as “non-
    commercial,” and was deemed “an ancillary use to the monastery and non-commercial
    retreat center.” The BZA also found Ratna Ling’s overall activities to be consistent with
    the RRD land use designation because the retreat operation was “similar to a
    noncommercial club or lodge.”
    D. Argument on Appeal
    On appeal, CHRP asserts the project is inconsistent with the County’s general plan
    and related zoning provisions. It contends the County’s continued categorization of
    Ratna Ling as the equivalent of a “noncommercial club or lodge” is unsupported by
    substantial evidence. CHRP claims the Board’s approval “sanctions rampant commercial
    activity already taking place and permits [Ratna Ling] to store commercial products, as
    they are produced, in the immense warehouses as inventory.” Specifically, it points to
    the “extraordinary levels of manufacturing productions (books and objects), massive
    storage structures and commercial Internet sales.”
    As the County notes, there is no evidence in the record that Ratna Ling’s printing
    activities are undertaken for profit. The undisputed evidence is that 89 percent of Ratna
    Ling’s total revenue is generated by its retreat use, with 11 percent coming from the
    printing press use. Ninety-eight percent of its total printing output is given away for free.
    Two percent of this output is used to produce religious texts in English, which are offered
    for sale. The revenue generated by these sales is then used to support the production of
    more religious texts. The record shows that Internet sales generated $6,000 per month for
    in advance of a primary permitted use.” “Accessory use” is defined in Sonoma County
    Code section 26-02-140 as “a use of land or a building that is related to and subordinate
    to the primary use of the land or building located on the same lot.”
    16
    Ratna Ling in 2014. By contrast, the retreat use produces an average of $450,000 in
    income per year, or $37,500 per month. Notably, CHRP does not argue that the retreat
    use is a commercial activity, even though that use generates six times more income per
    year for Ratna Ling than the printing use. Accordingly, we disagree with CHRP’s claim
    that Ratna Ling’s printing operation is inconsistent with its primary function as a
    religious retreat merely because some of its output enters the stream of commerce.
    CHRP also urges that the “industrial-size storage structures and expanded press
    operations” should be deemed “industrial” uses for purposes of land use regulation, and
    that the County erred in finding these uses to be consistent with the RRD criteria.15
    While it is undeniable that Ratna Ling’s printing activities have intensified over time, we
    cannot say the County abused its discretion in categorizing the printing use as ancillary to
    the retreat center use. As a qualitative matter, the printing press use has been permitted
    since 2004, and the time within which to make any challenge to that qualitative
    determination has passed.
    Further, our review of the administrative record, including the Board’s 15-page
    resolution dated June 24, 2014, confirms that the Board fully considered the County’s
    land use policies and the extent to which the 2011 Project conforms to those policies.
    The Board specifically found Ratna Ling’s housing of sacred texts in the storage tents
    was not an industrial use, but was an accessory use to the religious retreat. CHRP
    stresses that the 2011 Project “exposes county residents to a fire department unequipped
    for industrial fires and narrow rural roads burdened by large trucks and increased traffic.”
    Suffice it to say, our review of the administrative record shows the Board fully
    considered the “industrial” aspects of Ratna Ling’s printing operation, including the
    potential impacts related to fire safety.
    15
    Industrial uses are not necessarily prohibited in RRD zones. As the County
    notes, with a conditional use permit the RRD designation and related zoning regulations
    allow for intensive industrial uses, including large-scale geothermal power plants, energy
    transmission facilities and pipelines, biomass energy facilities, oil and gas production
    wells, mining, hardrock quarries, and lumber mills. (Sonoma County Code, § 26-10-020,
    subds. (t), (jj).)
    17
    We acknowledge the decision to allow for the printing press expansion was
    controversial, as evidenced by the Board’s three-to-two vote in favor of approval.
    Nevertheless, under the deferential standard that governs our review, we will not reweigh
    conflicting evidence nor substitute our views for those of the Board. (San Francisco
    
    Tomorrow, supra
    , 229 Cal.App.4th at p. 514.)
    IV.    The Board Did Not Violate CEQA
    A. The CEQA Review Process
    We now turn to CHRP’s CEQA claims. “CEQA is a comprehensive scheme
    designed to provide long-term protection to the environment. [Citation.] In enacting
    CEQA, the Legislature declared its intention that all public agencies responsible for
    regulating activities affecting the environment give prime consideration to preventing
    environmental damage when carrying out their duties. [Citations.] CEQA is to be
    interpreted ‘to afford the fullest possible protection to the environment within the
    reasonable scope of the statutory language.’ ” (Mountain Lion Foundation v. Fish &
    Game Com. (1997) 
    16 Cal. 4th 105
    , 112.)
    “The ‘heart of CEQA’ is the EIR, whose purpose is to inform the public and
    government officials of the environmental consequences of decisions before they are
    made.” (San Franciscans Upholding the Downtown Plan v. City and County of San
    Francisco (2002) 
    102 Cal. App. 4th 656
    , 687–688.) With certain limited exceptions, a
    public agency must prepare an EIR whenever substantial evidence supports a fair
    argument that a proposed project “may have a significant effect on the environment.”
    (§§ 21100, 21151, 21080, 21082.2; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14 (Guidelines), §§ 15002,
    subd. (f)(1), (2), 15063;16 No 
    Oil, supra
    , 13 Cal.3d at p. 75.) A “ ‘[s]ignificant effect on
    16
    The Guidelines are regulations “prescribed by the Secretary for Resources to be
    followed by all state and local agencies in California in the implementation of” CEQA.
    (Guidelines, § 15000; § 21083.) “In interpreting CEQA, we accord the Guidelines great
    weight except where they are clearly unauthorized or erroneous.” (Vineyard Area
    Citizens for Responsible Growth, Inc. v. City of Rancho Cordova (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 412
    ,
    428, fn. 5.)
    18
    the environment’ ” means “a substantial, or potentially substantial, adverse change in the
    environment.” (§ 21068; see Guidelines, § 15382.)
    If conditions imposed upon the project “avoid the effects or mitigate the effects to
    a point where clearly no significant effect on the environment would occur,” and “there is
    no substantial evidence in light of the whole record before the public agency that the
    project, as revised, may have a significant effect on the environment,” an MND may be
    adopted in lieu of an EIR. (§ 21064.5.)
    B. The Fair Argument Test Does Not Apply
    CHRP and amicus curiae Friends of the Gualala River and Forest Unlimited
    (FoGR) argue that the “fair argument” test applies to our review of the Board’s decision
    to proceed with an SMND in lieu of an EIR because the change in the status of the
    storage tents from temporary to permanent constituted a new project under CEQA, as
    opposed to a modification of Ratna Ling’s prior MUPs. We elect to apply substantial
    evidence review to the Board’s decision to adopt the SMND. (See Latinos Unidos de
    Napa v. City of Napa (2013) 
    221 Cal. App. 4th 192
    , 202.)17
    In Laurel Heights Improvement Assn. v. Regents of University of California (1993)
    
    6 Cal. 4th 1112
    , 1135, our Supreme Court observed: “[T]he ‘fair argument’ test has been
    applied only to the decision whether to prepare an original EIR or a negative declaration.”
    “Section 21166[18] provides that once an agency prepares an EIR, no EIR shall thereafter
    17
    We note the issue of whether an agency’s decision to forgo preparation of an
    EIR under section 21166 is reviewed under a substantial evidence standard or subject to
    an initial de novo determination is currently before the California Supreme Court.
    (Friends of the College of San Mateo Gardens v. San Mateo Community College Dist.
    (Sept. 26, 2013, A135892 [nonpub. opn.]), review granted Nov. 5, 2013, S214061).)
    18
    Section 21166 provides: “When an environmental impact report has been
    prepared for a project pursuant to this division, no subsequent or supplemental
    environmental impact report shall be required by the lead agency or by any responsible
    agency, unless one or more of the following events occurs: [¶] (a) Substantial changes
    are proposed in the project which will require major revisions of the environmental
    impact report. [¶] (b) Substantial changes occur with respect to the circumstances under
    which the project is being undertaken which will require major revisions in the
    environmental impact report. [¶] (c) New information, which was not known and could
    19
    be required for the project unless certain statutorily prescribed circumstances occur, such
    as substantial changes to the project or to the circumstances under which the project is
    being undertaken. Guidelines section 15162 [citation] provides a similar limitation on
    subsequent environmental review following an agency’s adoption of a negative
    declaration. Guidelines section 15162 has been held to be a valid regulation that
    implements the principles contained in section 21166.” (Abatti v. Imperial Irrigation
    Dist. (2012) 
    205 Cal. App. 4th 650
    , 653, fn. omitted, citing Benton v. Board of Supervisors
    (1991) 
    226 Cal. App. 3d 1467
    , 1479–1481 (Benton).)
    CHRP relies on Sierra Club v. County of Sonoma (1992) 
    6 Cal. App. 4th 1307
    ,
    1316 (Sierra Club). That case is distinguishable. In Sierra Club, the county had certified
    a program EIR for a resource management plan that regulated mining. The plan specified
    lands available for future mining and provided for preservation of identified agricultural
    lands. (Sierra Club, at pp. 1313–1314.) Years later, a mining company proposed to
    amend the EIR to designate for mining a large parcel that had been identified as
    agricultural in the EIR. (Id. at p. 1314.) We held that the deferential review provided by
    section 21166 did not apply in this context because the proposed project was not “either
    the same as or within the scope of” the program described in the EIR (id. at p. 1321),
    which had expressly exempted the agricultural land from future mining. (Id. at p. 1320.)
    The present case is more similar to Benton. In Benton, a county board of
    supervisors had previously issued an MND in connection with a use permit for the
    construction of a winery on a particular parcel of land. 
    (Benton, supra
    , 226 Cal.App.3d
    at p. 1473.) The owner of the land acquired an adjoining parcel and nine months later
    applied for another use permit, seeking permission to build the winery on the new parcel.
    The planning commission compared what the owner could construct under the first
    permit to what it requested in the new application, approved grading and use permits, and
    adopted a new MND. (Ibid.) The appellant sought to set aside the MND and the use
    permit, and compel the preparation of an EIR. (Id. at p. 1474.)
    not have been known at the time the environmental impact report was certified as
    complete, becomes available.”
    20
    On appeal, the Benton court found even though the county staff labeled the new
    application as one for a new permit, the planning commission had treated the application
    as if it were a request for modification of the already permitted project. 
    (Benton, supra
    ,
    226 Cal.App.3d at p. 1476.) Staff explained that the owner had already acquired vested
    rights to build under its initial use permit and could build the existing winery as
    previously approved, and the commission limited its review to a comparison between
    what had already been approved and what was being proposed. (Ibid.) Because the new
    application was a modification, a limited review was appropriate: “[The winery’s] initial
    project received full CEQA review; only those aspects of the proposal that were changed
    as a result of the modified winery plan were subject to later CEQA review.” (Id. at
    p. 1477, fn. 10; see Fund for Environmental Defense v. County of Orange (1988)
    
    204 Cal. App. 3d 1538
    , 1552–1553; Temecula Band of Luiseño Mission Indians v. Rancho
    Cal. Water Dist. (1996) 
    43 Cal. App. 4th 425
    , 438–439.)
    As in 
    Benton, supra
    , 
    226 Cal. App. 3d 1467
    , here we deal with a purported
    modification to a project after initial environmental documents, i.e., the 2004 MND and
    the 2008 MND, had been adopted. The printing press operation was authorized in 2004
    after an initial study was conducted and an MND was prepared. The Board concluded
    the 2011 Project would not result in any significant changes in circumstances or impacts
    under Guideline section 15162, concluding only an addendum to the 2004 and 2008
    MNDs was required. However, since addendums are not circulated to the public, the
    County elected to prepare the SMND.
    The County’s decision was proper. While the storage tents were not included in
    the prior environmental documents, it is undisputed that these structures are integral to
    Ratna Ling’s existing printing press operation. Further, unlike the mining of exempt
    agricultural land in Sierra 
    Club, supra
    , 
    6 Cal. App. 4th 1307
    , the storage tents do not
    violate any prior approved conditions. Moreover, as we discuss below, there is
    substantial evidence that the 2011 Project will not expose people or structures to a
    significant risk of loss, injury or death involving wildland fires. Accordingly, we review
    21
    the record to determine if substantial evidence supports the County’s adoption of the
    SMND.
    C. The SMND Is Supported by Substantial Evidence
    1. Scope of Our Review
    In considering whether the Board’s decision to adopt the SMND is supported by
    substantial evidence, the scope of our review is identical with that of the superior court.
    (Desmond v. County of Contra Costa (1993) 
    21 Cal. App. 4th 330
    , 334.) We examine all
    relevant evidence in the entire record, considering both the evidence that supports the
    administrative decision and the evidence against it, in order to determine whether or not
    the findings of the agency are supported by substantial evidence. (Id. at p. 335.)
    Substantial evidence is evidence of ponderable legal significance, reasonable in nature,
    credible, and of solid value, evidence that a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to
    support a conclusion. (Ibid.) The burden is on the appellant to show there is no
    substantial evidence to support the findings of the agency. (Id. at p. 336.)
    2. Wildland Fire Impact
    CHRP asserts the Board improperly concluded that the 2011 Project will not have
    a significant impact with respect to wildland fires. While acknowledging the region
    benefits from a community-wide mutual aid agreement that provides supplemental fire
    protection in the event of an emergency, CHRP faults the Board for failing to analyze the
    response times of the other districts or their ability to “fight an industrial fire at the
    Project site.” It also faults the Board for relying on statements made by the current fire
    marshal because she indicated that fire officials expected to engage in continued
    discussions with Ratna Ling to assess fire risks, hazards, and mitigation measures.
    Our review of the record shows substantial evidence supports the Board’s
    conclusion that the fire risks posed by the storage tents were adequately mitigated. For
    example, as we have already noted, the membrane covering the steel framed storage tents
    22
    was found to have met applicable fire protection standards.19 There is evidence in the
    record that the fabric is self-extinguishing and “cannot support combustion nor contribute
    fuel to a fire.” The tents also have heat detection and fire sprinkler systems, along with a
    backup generator. Ratna Ling has 200 to 300 feet of defensible space around each tent.
    A condition of approval requires Ratna Ling to provide and maintain its own onsite fire
    engine.
    19
    FoGR contends the 2014 SMND fails to apply the appropriate California
    Building Standards Code provisions (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 24) (CBC) to its analysis of the
    storage tents, noting the tents do not meet the wildfire protection standards in Chapter 7A
    of the CBC. It notes that no membrane fabric structures currently meet the higher
    standards imposed by Chapter 7A. However, it is undisputed that the stricter standards
    did not become effective until January 2010, well after the storage tents were permitted.
    During oral argument, appellant contended the now permanent tents were not
    covered by the 2007 CBC but by the 2011 CBC. The county maintained the structures
    approved in the 2008 MUP were regulated by the 2007 CBC. The county’s position was
    previously detailed in a letter from DeWayne Starnes, Chief Building Official for
    Sonoma County, to counsel for Ratna Ling, dated October 10, 2013. Under Chapter 7 of
    the Sonoma County Code, the existing CBC in place at the “time an application for
    building permit is submitted shall apply to the plans and specifications for, and to the
    construction performed under, that permit. . . .” (Sonoma County Code, § 7.13, quoting
    CBC, § 101.9; see CBC, § 102.6.) The permits to store manuscripts and books were
    submitted during 2008. Hence, the 2007 CBC applied. Any change arising by a later
    modification in the 2010 CBC does not apply, according to the PRMD. Starnes’s letter
    also states that “changing the classification of the tent structures from temporary to
    permanent has no practical effect. When PRMD reviewed and checked the plans for the
    tent structures, PRMD required that the tent structures meet all criteria for permanent
    structures [under the existing CBC]. The change from temporary to permanent is not a
    change of occupancy under the CBC that triggers any additional requirement.” (Italics
    added.)
    The determination of the applicable features of the CBC to a county project was an
    appropriate conclusion by Starnes in his position as the Chief Building Official of the
    county. As such it is entitled to deference. (MHC Operating Limited Partnership v. City
    of San Jose (2003) 
    106 Cal. App. 4th 204
    , 219.) “We have generally accorded respect to
    administrative interpretations of a law and, unless clearly erroneous, have deemed them
    significant factors in ascertaining statutory meaning and purpose.” (Nipper v. California
    Auto. Assigned Risk Plan (1977) 
    19 Cal. 3d 35
    , 45.) Counsel for appellants presents no
    case authority for us to deviate from this position.
    23
    Additionally, Vern Losh, a qualified fire professional with 40 years of experience,
    who previously served as the Chief/Director of the County’s Department of Emergency
    Services from 1995 through 2008, testified that he had never seen a large-scale fire or
    even a significant fire event originate from a structure that has heat detection, automatic
    sprinklers, and defensible space. In sum, we find substantial evidence supports the
    Board’s conclusion that the conditions of approval contained in the SMND adequate
    address any outstanding fire safety concerns.
    3. Baseline Argument
    CHRP and FoGR claim the county improperly included the storage tents in the
    baseline assumptions of its environmental impact analysis. “To decide whether a given
    project’s environmental effects are likely to be significant, the agency must use some
    measure of the environment’s state absent the project, a measure sometimes referred to as
    the ‘baseline’ for environmental analysis.” (Communities for a Better Environment v.
    South Coast Air Quality Management Dist. (2010) 
    48 Cal. 4th 310
    , 315 (Communities for
    a Better Environment).) Under the Guidelines, “the baseline ‘normally’ consists of ‘the
    physical environmental conditions in the vicinity of the project, as they exist at the time
    . . . environmental analysis is commenced . . . .’ ” (Communities for a Better
    Environment, at p. 315, citing Guidelines, § 15125, subd. (a).) “This is so even if the
    current condition includes unauthorized and even environmentally harmful conditions
    that never received, and, as a result of being incorporated into the baseline, may never
    receive environmental review.” (Center for Biological Diversity v. Department of Fish &
    Wildlife (2015) 
    234 Cal. App. 4th 214
    , 249.)
    Not surprisingly, the SMND notes that the storage tents were part of the existing
    physical conditions on the site. However, the storage tents were not simply carved out of
    the impact discussion in the SMND. Our review of the record shows the Board fully
    considered its own regulations and policies, as well as the fire hazards posed by the
    storage tents, conditioning its approval on compliance with comprehensive fire safety
    mitigation measures. We disagree with FoGR’s assertion that the county failed to
    analyze the potential environmental impacts created by the tents. Instead, we agree with
    24
    the County’s assertion that FoGR’s brief “simply ignore[s] the extensive fire protection
    and suppression measures that applied to the project.”
    The record indicates that the storage tents were fully evaluated by the Board. The
    SMND discloses that inspections and site visits had confirmed the structures were
    operating with appropriate fire safety measures. Moreover, the fire marshal required
    Ratna Ling to upgrade the tents’ existing sprinkler systems, which it agreed to do.
    Ultimately, the Board required Ratna Ling to have its own fire truck on site along with a
    minimum of two trained and qualified volunteer firefighters to respond to emergency
    calls. Even if the storage tents were improperly incorporated into the SMND’s baseline,
    we again find substantial evidence supports the conclusion that the SMND adequately
    addresses the fire safety concerns raised by the storage tents.
    4. Wildlife Hazard Mitigation Plan
    FoGR also asserts the County erred in not following chapter 4 (Wildfire Hazard
    and Risk Assessment) of its own Hazard Mitigation Plan. That plan provides, in part,
    “New buildings located in any Wildland-Urban Interface Fire Area designated by the
    enforcing agency shall comply with the Wildland-Urban Interface Fire Area Building
    Standards which establish minimum standards for buildings in Wildland-Urban Interface
    Fire Areas.” (Id., § 47.5, italics added.) The mitigation plan was adopted effective
    October 25, 2011, well after the four storage tents at issue here were permitted and
    constructed. FoGR does not cite to any provision that requires existing structures to
    comply with these building standards.
    5. Deferred Mitigation
    FoGR claims the County improperly deferred study of fire impacts until after
    adoption of the SMND. Condition 82 of the 2014 SMND provides: “The applicant shall
    coordinate with the Sonoma County Fire Marshal and the [TCFPD] to review the
    previously approved and existing onsite fire fighting infrastructure for the sacred text
    storage structures and to install any additional onsite infrastructure deemed appropriate
    by the Sonoma County Fire Marshal.”
    25
    CEQA usually requires mitigation measures to be defined in advance.
    (Guidelines, § 15126.4, subd. (a)(1)(B); Sacramento Old City Assn. v. City Council
    (1991) 
    229 Cal. App. 3d 1011
    , 1027.) But deferral is permitted if, in addition to
    demonstrating some need for deferral, the agency (1) commits itself to mitigation; and
    (2) spells out, in its environmental impact report, the possible mitigation options that
    would meet “specific performance criteria” contained in the report. (Id. at pp. 1027–
    1029; § 21100, subd. (b)(3).)
    In our view, Condition 82 does not constitute unlawful deferred mitigation. In
    Endangered Habitats League, Inc. v. County of Orange (2005) 
    131 Cal. App. 4th 777
    ,
    794–796, which addressed CEQA review of a proposed residential development, the EIR
    included several mitigation measures that required the developer to conduct studies and
    develop plans for regulating the fuel used during construction, tree restoration, and water
    runoff, subject to specified criteria and the approval of appropriate local agencies. The
    appellate court found no improperly deferred mitigation. (Ibid.)
    We reach the same conclusion here. The mitigation measure requires Ratna Ling
    to comply with all fire-related conditions, and does not defer the implementation of any
    of these requirements. Rather, it grants the County the right to impose new, stricter
    requirements should such requirements be deemed necessary, without first having to
    initiate an enforcement action. Accordingly, there is no unlawful deferred mitigation.
    V.     The County’s Approval Did Not Involve Spot Zoning
    Finally, we agree with Ratna Ling and the County that CHRP cannot argue on
    appeal that the County engaged in impermissible spot zoning when it approved the
    Project. As with its religious preference argument, this issue was not squarely raised
    during the administrative proceeding.
    Regardless, the case CHRP primarily relies on, Neighbors in Support of
    Appropriate Land Use v. County of Tuolumne (2007) 
    157 Cal. App. 4th 997
    (Neighbors) is
    inapposite. The precise issue in that case was whether Government Code section 65852
    “prohibit[s] a county from granting a parcel’s owner the right to engage in a use
    prohibited to all other parcels in the same zone, even though it does not rezone the
    26
    property, amend the ordinance to permit the use, grant a valid conditional use permit, or
    grant a variance[.]” (Neighbors, at p. 1008.) Government Code section 65852 provides:
    “All such [zoning] regulations shall be uniform for each class or kind of building or use
    of land throughout each zone, but the regulation in one type of zone may differ from
    those in other types of zones.” Nothing in the record or in the relevant zoning regulations
    suggests that the use the County has authorized with respect to Ratna Ling is prohibited
    as to all other parcels in the same zone.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    _________________________
    DONDERO, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    HUMES, P. J.
    _________________________
    MARGULIES, J.
    27
    Trial Court: Sonoma County Superior Court
    Trial Judge: Hon. Elliot Lee Daum
    Counsel:
    Provencher & Flatt LLP, Janis H. Grattan for plaintiff and appellant Coastal Hills Rural
    Preservation.
    O’Brien Watters & Davis LLP, Noreen Evans for Friends of the Gualala River and Forest
    Unlimited as amici curiae on behalf of plaintiff and appellant.
    American Athiests Legal Center, Amanda Knief for American Atheists as amicus curiae
    on behalf of plaintiff and appellant.
    County Counsel of Sonoma County, Bruce D. Goldstein, County Counsel, Verne Ball,
    Deputy County Counsel for respondents County of Sonoma, Sonoma County Board of
    Supervisors, Sonoma County Permit and Resource Management Department.
    Clement, Fitzpatrick & Kenworthy, Law Offices of Tina Wallis, and Christina Wallis for
    real parties in interest Jack Petranker and The Head Lama of the Tibetan Nyingma
    Meditation Center.
    A145573
    28