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Protect Telegraph Hill Opening Brief 514060

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    ____________________________________________________________________________________________________

    Opening Brief in support of Petition for Writ of Mandamus

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    Susan Brandt-Hawley/SBN 75907BRANDT-HAWLEY LAW GROUPP.O. Box 1659Glen Ellen, CA 95442707.938.3900, fax 707.938.3200

    [email protected]

    Attorneys for PetitionerProtect Telegraph Hill

    SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

    FOR THE COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO

    Protect Telegraph Hill,an unincorporated association;

    Petitioner,

    v.

    City and County of San Francisco; Boardof Supervisors of the City

    and County of San Francisco,and Does 1 to 5;

    Respondents._____________________________/

    Jeremy Ricks, Tracy Kirkham,and Joe Cooper, and Does 6 to 10;

    Real Parties in Interest._____________________________/

    Case No. CPF-14-514060

    Opening Brief in support ofPetition for

    Writ of Mandamus

    Hearing Date: November 19, 2015Time: 1:30 p.m.Dept: 503

    Hon. Teri L. Jackson

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    ____________________________________________________________________________________________________

    Table of Contents i

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    Table of Contents

    Introduction ................................................................................................................. 1

    Statement of Facts ....................................................................................................... 3

    Environmental Setting........................................................................................ 3

    Project Approval Process................................................................................... 6

    Statement of the Case ................................................................................................. 8

    Discussion ................................................................................................................... 9

    A. The Categorical Exemption is Unlawful ............................................................. 9

    1. Mitigation Measures Preclude Categorical Exemption ............................... 10

    Case Law and Regulatory Authority........................................................... 10

    The City Adopted Mitigation Measures ....................................................... 12

    2. The Project Description is Incomplete ........................................................ 16

    3. The Unusual Circumstances Exception Applies........................................ 17

    Procedure for Applying the Exception ......................................................... 17

    Evidence of Unusual Circumstances .......................................................... 19

    a. Sensitive Intersection ........................................................................ 19

    b. Public Views ...................................................................................... 20

    c. Unusual Topography ......................................................................... 23

    The Record Contains a Fair Argument of Significant Impacts ....................25

    B. The Conditional Use Authorizations are Unsupported ..................................... 25

    Conclusion ........................................................................................................................ 26

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    ____________________________________________________________________________________________________

    Table of Authorities ii

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    Table of Authorities

    Case Law PageAzusa Land Reclamation Company v. Main San Gabriel Basin Watermaster(1997)

    52 Cal.App.4th1165 ......................................................................................................10

    Berkeley Hillside Preservation v. City of Berkeley(2015)60 Cal.4th1086 ...................................................................................................17,18,19

    City of Pasadena v. State of California(1993)14 Cal.App.4th810 ........................................................................................................10

    County of Inyo v. City of Los Angeles(1977)71 Cal.App.3d 185 ..................................................................................................... 16

    Friends of B Street v. City of Hayward(1980)

    106 Cal.App.3d 988 .....................................................................................................11

    Lotus v. Department of Transportation(2014)223 Cal.App.4th 645 ....................................................................................................11

    Salmon Protection and Watershed Network v. County of Marin(2004)125 Cal.App.4th1098 ................................................................................................. 10

    Save Our Schools v. Barstow Unified School District Board of Education(September 2, 2015)__Cal.App.4th_ ...........................................................................................................18

    Wollmer v. City of Berkeley(2011)193 Cal.App.4th 1329 ...................................................................................................11

    Public Resources Code Sections21084(a) ................................................................................................................................ 9

    CEQA Guidelines

    15070(b)(1) .......................................................................................................................... 1115070(b)(2) ......................................................................................................................... 1115300.2(c) ........................................................................................................................... 17

    15301 .................................................................................................................................... 915303(b) ................................................................................................................................ 91530115333 .......................................................................................................................... 9

    San Francisco Planning Code Sections101.1(b) ........................................................................................................................... 20,25Residential Design Guidelines ............................................................................................ 21

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    ____________________________________________________________________________________________________

    Opening Brief in support of Petition for Writ of Mandamus 1

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    Introduction

    !Garfield Elementary School![is] located on a really steep slope. Itsso steep that normal school buses cannot make it to our school!Thedeveloper intends to pump concrete from this location up to the project

    site further up the Filbert Steps. This will take several months, entailcountless truck trips,![and] will have significant noise, pollution, safety,and accessibility issues to the entire Garfield School community !The

    project should not have been!exempted from environmental review!Irespectfully urge you to!require environmental analysis! (AdministrativeRecord (AR):1044-1045 [Jason Owens, Principal of Garfield Elementary School].)

    The members of Protect Telegraph Hill come before the Court in the public interest.

    They seek mandated environmental review of the 115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard project via

    enforcement of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) on behalf of San Franciscans

    tourists from around the world, and young children attending Garfield Elementary School.

    A split vote of the Board of Supervisors approved the project: three super luxury

    [$10 million each!] 4000 square-foot condominiums and a 3-car underground garage adjacent

    to the evocative Filbert Steps. The site lies directly across Telegraph Hill Boulevard from the

    popular Pioneer Park stairs that climb Telegraph Hill to Coit Tower. Ascending the heavily-

    travelled sets of steps, City residents and world-wide visitors constantly stop to marvel at the

    dramatic City vista spread out below. This project would destroy that iconic public view.

    (AR:25.)

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    Opening Brief in support of Petition for Writ of Mandamus 2

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    The City relies on a categorical exemption from CEQA but such exemption is

    intended and allowed only for run-of-the-mill projects without significant environmental

    impacts. The administrative record proves that the Citys refusal to conduct environmental

    review for the problematic condominium project on Telegraph Hill violates CEQA:

    The City imposed many mitigation measures as part of its discretionary land

    use approvals. CEQA unequivocally disallows categorical exemption when a project needs

    mitigation measures, as such measures can fail and cause environmental harm.

    The City failed to address all project elements and deferred analysis and

    mitigation of many environmental impacts, including alteration of the Filbert Steps and a

    1906 cottage; vehicle and pedestrian traffic; construction staging; and geotechnical effects.

    The Citys General Plan mandates that our parks and open space and their

    ... vistas be protected from development. The Citys Residential Design Guidelines contain

    similar mandates. Yet the 115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard projectwould block the sweeping

    panoramic vista of San Francisco from the adjacent Pioneer Park.

    CEQA provides an exceptionto categorical exemptions when there is reasonable

    possibility that a project will have a significant effect due to unusual circumstances. Here, the

    record discloses abundant evidence qualifying for the exception due to significant effects of the

    deep excavation required for the underground garage; dangerous ingress and egress to the site

    affecting traffic and pedestrian safety; traffic impacts at Garfield Elementary School; and

    blocked public vistas from the Pioneer Park steps.

    Environmental review is mandated.Protect Telegraph Hill now respectfully seeks this

    Courts peremptory writ to secure the Citys compliance with CEQA and thus to protect the

    unique resources of Telegraph Hill. CEQA review will be wholly beneficial, providing objective

    analysis of environmental impacts, mitigations, and feasible alternatives in a public process.

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    Opening Brief in support of Petition for Writ of Mandamus 3

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    Statement of Facts

    ![T]he proposed luxury condominium project at 115 Telegraph HillBoulevard!would be a terrible planning mistake that will adversely impact SanFranciscos world-renowned Telegraph Hill, Coit Tower, and the surrounding

    4.89 acre Pioneer Park!This is not about any particular neighbors self-interestor views this is about the public interest and the publics views, parks,access and pedestrian safety. As San Francisco residents we have acollective duty to safeguard these treasures for future generations.(AR:576 [Resident Peter Dwares].)

    Environmental Setting. Telegraph Hill was named for the 1849 semaphore telegraph

    that once stood on its summit to signal ships entering the Golden Gate. (AR:2007, 1038.)

    Its stairways are a community asset now traversed by thousands of residents and visitors every

    month who enjoy spectacular panoramic views of the City and the San Francisco Bay.

    As explained on the Citys Recreation and Parks Department website, Telegraph Hill includes

    Pioneer Park, the site of world-famous landmark Coit Tower. At 4.89 acres,Pioneer Park

    offers wide, breathtaking views of the city and the bay. The park space was built in 1876 to

    commemorate the countrys centennial anniversary. (AR:1946, italics added.)

    (AR:27.)

    Telegraph Hill Boulevard narrowly winds up Telegraph Hill to Pioneer Park and

    Coit Tower. A bus stop is located at the project driveway at 115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard.

    (AR:29.) The project site is also accessed by the pedestrian Filbert Steps that comprise most of

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    Opening Brief in support of Petition for Writ of Mandamus 4

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    the project sites northern boundary, directly across the street from the Pioneer Park stairway

    climbing the hill to Coit Tower. Park visitors routinely pause on the stairway and look south

    over the project site to enjoy views of the City spread out below. (AR:585 [Stan Hayes]; 587,

    589-590, 1061, and 1899 [Judy Irving]; 1060-1061 [Nancy Shanahan]; 2006 [Planning

    Commissioner Kathrin Moore]; 1900-1901 [Katherine Petrin]; 2390 [Sandy Yasso].)

    Starting 20 years ago, a number of Telegraph Hill residents worked successfully with the

    Citys Departments of Public Works and the Recreation and Parks on the Pioneer Park Project,

    to fund rebuilt stairways, paths, and terraces, to restore natural habitat, and to address erosion

    and handicapped access. Over $1.6 million was raised and over 500 people contributed to the

    Pioneer Park stairways with risers faced with 757 etched named tiles. (AR:211, 582, 2007.)

    (AR:2008.)

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    The stairway leading down to the Filbert Street Steps, just above the project site, was sited to

    make the most of the expansive views from this early City park (AR:2007.) Resident Gerry

    Crowley explained that the project driveway is proposed just 40 feet maybe from where there

    are tiles and they have my granddaughters names on the steps forevermore, and I have a

    great interest in keeping it beautiful and in letting everyone enjoy the view. (AR:1063.)

    Further downhill at the base of the Filbert Steps, public Garfield Elementary School

    serves 250 students one block northwest on a steep slope at 420 Filbert Street. (AR:1044.)

    Garfield School was designed by prominent Bay Area architect Joseph Esherick. (AR:1288.)

    Because of the narrowness of Telegraph Hill Boulevard, the staging area for the projects

    concrete trucks and materials would be at Filbert and Kearny Streets, adjacent to the school.

    (AR:1043.) The streets are so narrow that only smaller special-education buses are able to drive

    to the campus; regular-sized school buses must drop students off a block away. The students

    walk up the hill because the street is too narrow to allow the buses to turn around. (Ibid.)

    (AR:1974.)

    Eleven small residences in five buildings previously stood on the project site at

    115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard, at low heights that did not impair the public views from Pioneer

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    Park. (AR:1949.) One 1906 cottage remains at the southeast corner of the site; the others were

    removed in 1997. The property has thus been largely vacant for almost 20 years. (AR:896.)

    Project Approval Process. In 2013, real party in interest Jeremy Ricks proposed to

    construct a three-condominium residential building on the blind curve at 115 Telegraph Hill

    Boulevard and to demolish and renovate the exterior of the remaining 1906 cottage. (AR:1.)

    He proposed access to the cottage via a pedestrian walkway from the Filbert Steps and to

    locate the three new units in the front of the lot in a three-story-over-basement building with

    condominium sizes of about 4,000 sf. (AR:1.) A new curb cut along Telegraph Hill Boulevard

    would provide access to three parking spaces in an underground garage served by an elevator.

    The project would require replacement of a portion of the concrete sidewalk, steps, and

    retaining walls of Filbert Street and the Filbert Steps. (Ibid.) Local architect Stan Teng

    (AR:43.)

    offered that The projects faade resembles the set of Hollywood Squares and is overtly out

    of character and scale with the neighborhood. (AR:622.)

    In September 2014 the City Planning Department issued a categorical exemption from

    CEQA, determining that the project required no environmental review because it fit into

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    exempt classes for Existing Facilities and Small Structures. (AR:70; CEQA Guidelines

    [14 Cal. Code Regs] 15000 et seq., 15301(d), 15303(b).) Also in September 2014, by a split

    vote the Planning Commission approved a conditional use authorization for the project, with

    mitigation measures. (AR:4-16.) Planning Commissioner Kathrin Moore, an architect, detailed

    traffic and pedestrian safety impacts and the prospective loss of public views as a preface to

    voting no to the out-of-scale huge super luxury units. Planning Commission President

    Cindy Wu agreed and also voted no. (AR:885, italics added; 1006-07, 1012-13.)

    The Telegraph Hill Dwellers filed administrative appeals of the Planning Commissions

    CEQA categorical exemption and conditional use approvals, providing extensive

    documentation and letters and petitions from concerned City residents. (AR:1543-1648.)

    They offered a feasible alternate project design via the architectural firm EHDD to accomplish

    project objectives while avoiding significant environmental impacts. (AR:1910-1914, 1947.)

    The EHDD design proposed to reduce the project height by one floor, to eliminate off-street

    parking, and to provide an 18-foot view corridor at the top of the Filbert Steps. (AR:1962.)

    The Citys planning staff recommended denial of the Telegraph Hill Dwellers appeals of

    the categorical exemption and the conditional use authorizations. (AR:390, 761.) Staff told the

    Board of Supervisors that the 115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard project would not adversely affect

    any public parks or open spaces, including Pioneer Parks public vistas. (AR:385; 787-

    788.) Any obstruction of views from Pioneer Park was discounted because the subject parcel is

    outside of Pioneer Park and would be similar in height to surrounding developed parcels

    and the disputed view was partially blocked up until 1995 when the existing buildings were

    demolished. (AR:760.) Staff contended that the project would be consistent with Residential

    Design Guidelines and the Citys General Plan. (AR:385-388.)

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    Opening Brief in support of Petition for Writ of Mandamus 8

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    After a public hearing on the appeals, the Board of Supervisors disapproved the

    Planning Commissions approval of the conditional use authorization, upheld the categorical

    exemption, and approved the conditional use authorization with additional conditions and

    findings, on a split 7-3 vote in November 2014. (AR:51-61.3.)

    Statement of the Case

    Unfortunately, this project has become progressively taller and bulkier overtime. In past community meetings, the project sponsor presented buildings wellbelow the height limit, to preserve public view corridors from Pioneer Park forresidents and visitors alike!I am the founder and leader of the Pioneer ParkProject, which led to new stairways and the south terrace at Coit Tower!The

    south terrace and Filbert steps have timeless views that need to be protected foreveryone. The [project] design does not integrate the sites sloping topography,contributing to view obstructions! (AR:238 [Architect Howard Wong, AIA].)

    This action was filed by Protect Telegraph Hill, an unincorporated association formed in

    December 2014, shortly after approval of the 115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard project, to protect

    and maintain the outstanding and unique quality of Telegraph Hill and to preserve public

    enjoyment of its parks and open spaces, stairs and walkways, dramatic views, and intimate

    pedestrian scale (Petition, p.2.) Resident Gerry Crowley and the Telegraph Hill Dwellers are

    among the members of Protect Telegraph Hill and exhausted administrative remedies. (Ibid.)

    No construction has occurred and the status quo remains in place on the site.

    (AR:107.)

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    Opening Brief in support of Petition for Writ of Mandamus 9

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    Discussion

    Telegraph Hill!is unique and magical to a degree Id never seen anywhereelse in America. Its these two qualities that !have been drawing visitors,one of the foundations of this citys economy!Pioneer Park with Coit Tower

    is one of the most beautiful spots in the city. This apartment project wouldsubstantially alter its character!This project has one purpose and onepurpose alone: to make one speculator a bundle of money. The rest of thecity loses. (AR:569 [40-year resident Mark Bittner].)

    A. The Categorical Exemption is Unlawful

    As a practical matter, many routine projects that require discretionary approvals have

    no significant impacts and so it is pointless to take the time for a negative declaration or an

    environmental impact report process. A public review process serves no purpose when project

    impacts are known at the outset to be insignificant, as there is no need for mitigation or

    consideration of project alternatives. Recognizing that, CEQA provides categorical exemptions

    to streamline agency approvals for run-of-the-mill projects that merit no study and require no

    mitigation. (Pub. Resources Code, 21084, subd.(a).) There are now 33 classes of minor

    projects that are presumed to be categorically exempt from CEQA because they normally have

    no significant environmental impacts. (Ibid; Guidelines, 15301-15333.)

    The City processed the 115 Telegraph Hill project as one such benign project, approving

    a discretionary conditional use authorization without conducting any environmental review.

    It invoked two categorical exemptions: Class 1 (Existing Facilities; Guidelines section 15301)

    for the existing cottage on the site, and Class 3 (New Construction or Conversion of Small

    Structures; Guidelines section 15303 (b)) for three large new super luxury condominiums and

    an underground 3-car garage accessed via elevator. (AR:1.)

    Petitioner Protect Telegraph Hill does not contestthe Citys finding that the subject

    115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard project is encompassed within the language of Class 1 (the

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    cottage) and Class 3 (the three condominiums/garage). However, the categorical exemptions

    are nonetheless insupportable for many reasons that compel this Courts peremptory writ.

    1. Mitigation Measures Preclude Categorical Exemption

    The first ground for this Courts issuance of a writ to set aside the categorical

    exemptions is blatant: the City adopted mitigation measures as part of the projects approval.

    An agency cannot rely on a categorical exemption from CEQAif it adopts mitigation measures.

    Case Law and Regulatory Authority. A project approved with a categorical

    exemption must stand alone, unconditionally. The adoption of mitigation allows the possibility

    that mitigation measures could be insufficient or could fail, and that environmental impacts

    could then result. That possibility is incompatible with the use of a categorical exemption.

    The First District Court of Appeal disallowed a categorical exemption for a single-family

    residence inSalmon Protection and Watershed Network v. County of Marin(Salmon) (2004)

    125 Cal.App.4th1098, when the County of Marin imposed mitigation to address impacts:

    Reliance upon mitigation measures (whether included in the application

    or later adopted) involves an evaluative process of assessing those mitigation

    measures and weighing them against potential environmental impacts, and

    that process must be conducted under established CEQA standards and

    procedures for EIRs or negative declarations.

    (Id., p. 1108.) As also explained inAzusa Land Reclamation Company v. Main San Gabriel

    Basin Watermaster(Azusa) (1997) 52 Cal.App.4th1165, eligibility for categorical exemption

    must be considered during preliminary review of the project (Guidelines 15060 & 15061),

    not in the second phase when mitigation measures are evaluated. (Id., pp. 1999-1200; City of

    Pasadena v. State of California(1993) 14 Cal.App.4th810, p. 820 [The determination of the

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    applicability of an exemption must be made before formal environmental evaluation...].)

    [T]he fundamental reason is substantive The Guidelines dealing with

    the second phase of the environmental review process contain elaborate

    standards as well as significant procedural requirements for

    determining whether proposed mitigation will adequately protect the

    environment and hence make an EIR unnecessary; in sharp contrast, the

    Guidelines governing preliminary review do not contain any requirements

    that expressly deal with the evaluation of mitigation measures. Thus, the

    standards for evaluating proposed mitigation measures are covered by

    the Guideline regarding a mitigated negative declaration.

    (Ibid., italics added, citing Guidelines, 15070, subd. (b)(1) and (2).)

    CEQA requires study and mitigation of direct and indirect, short-term and long-term

    effects, including the temporary impacts of project construction. (E.g., Friends of B Street v.

    City of Hayward(1980) 106 Cal.App.3d 988, p.1003.) It can be confusing to distinguish

    between project conditions and mitigation measures. But while a condition can be a project

    element, mitigationhas its own CEQA definition: avoiding, minimizing, rectifying, reducing,

    eliminating, or compensating for a significant environmental impact. (Guidelines, 15370.)

    Some agencies attempt to discount the import of adoption of mitigation by relying on

    Wollmer v. City of Berkeley(2011) 193 Cal.App.4th 1329. In Wollmer, mitigation that was

    claimed to preclude a categorical exemption involved dedication of land for a left turn lane on

    Ashby Avenue. The First District held that the facilitation of a left turn lane was not a CEQA

    mitigation measure for project impacts, but a component of the project that assisted the City

    with an existing traffic issue [it] did become part of the project design, improving an existing

    traffic concern. (Id.,pp. 1352-1353.)

    As recently held inLotus v. Department of Transportation(2014) 223 Cal.App.4th 645,

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    p.656, n.8, [t]he distinction between elements of a project and measures designed to mitigate

    impacts of the project may not always be clear. Some project elements may simply be part of

    the project description. In theLotus case, however, most of the avoidance, minimization

    and/or mitigation measures including use of an arborist and of specialized equipment ...

    are plainly mitigation measures and not part of the project itself. (Ibid.) So it is here.

    The City Adopted Mitigation Measures. The adopted mitigations for the 115

    Telegraph Hill Boulevard project relate directly to the environmental harm that would be

    generated. The Telegraph Hill Dwellers pointed out to the Board of Supervisors that the

    project requires mitigation, currently noted on the project plans as general notes. These

    mitigations address access of construction equipment, removal of excavated rocks and soil, and

    a pedestrian tunnel to be erected over the Filbert Steps. (AR:1882.) This was confirmed by

    City staffs report to the Board of Supervisors before the appeals were heard, which referenced

    project conditions 13-16 (AR:20) and the General Notes Section of the cover page of the

    approved plans, Exhibit B of motion no. 19232. (AR:389; 20, 27.)

    City staff also referenced the requirement of a pedestrian tunnel to maintain public

    access of the Filbert stairs during construction and the employment of a flag person at the

    intersection of Filbert Street and Telegraph Hill Boulevard for the duration of construction

    activities. (AR:390.) Further, as is typical with all challenging sitesin the city, the sponsor

    will also be required to work with other permitting agencies to determine the best construction

    management approach for the project. (AR:789, italics added.) And in response to concerns

    about the location of the project driveway, staff pointed out that the applicant would post

    permanent signs alerting pedestrians to vehicles exiting the garage and would install a

    parabolic mirror at the site exit to enhance visibility for exiting drivers. (AR:788.)

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    At the appeal hearing before the Board of Supervisors, Garfield Elementary School

    Principal Jason Owens asked the Board to require CEQA review:

    Garfield Elementary School [is] located on a really steep slope. Itsso steep that normal school buses cannot make it to our school The

    developer intends to pump concrete from this location up to the project

    site further up the Filbert Steps. This will take several months, entail

    countless truck trips, [and] will have significant noise, pollution, safety,

    and accessibility issues to the entire Garfield School community The

    project should not have been exempted from environmental review I

    respectfully urge you to require environmental analysis

    (AR):1044-1045, italics added; ante,p.1.) Principal Owens explained further that the top of

    Filbert Street and the narrow steep section of Kearny Street are, as I constantly observe,

    already extremely constrained and congested The project should not have been exempted

    from environmental review. (AR:1045.)

    Principal Owens concerns were echoed by David Golden, the Chief Facility Officer for

    the San Francisco Unified School District (AR:1041-1042) and by San Francisco Board of

    Education Commissioner Sandra Lee Fewer, who stated that she was concerned about traffic

    safety, noise, air quality, and dust, and on behalf of the San Francisco Board of Education

    was appearing before the Board of Supervisors to request an environmental review to be

    conducted on the proposed development at 115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard due to the staging

    location of their cement trucks at the Garfield School campus. (AR:1042-1043, italics added.)

    Attorney Daniel Frattin, speaking for the project applicant, acknowledged some

    concerns from the school board regarding concrete staging at Filbert and Kearny Street, and

    admitted this was a new project component designed to get concrete trucks off of Telegraph

    Hill Boulevard and improve the situation there. (AR:1091.) When asked for a commitment to

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    modify your plans so that safety of the children will be taken into consideration, Mr. Frattin

    responded, yes, absolutely, and assured the Board that the project applicant would meet with

    the school officials to make changes to the plan to accommodate their concerns. (AR:1095.)

    Supervisor Norman Yee then asked Planning staff : Lets say the worst scenario is they

    dont do anything to help mitigate that situation. Is there something we could put in there to

    make sure that happens? (AR:1095.) The response was: Yes, the whole conditional use

    authorization is before you, and you can modify the conditions of approval or add additional

    conditions to your liking. If you have specific things that you think are important for the

    staging, you could add those into the conditions of approval. So anything thats within the

    realm of what the Planning Commission does this Board could now do. (AR:1096.)

    The undersigned counsel then testified in rebuttal, stating in relevant part that

    [t]heres been a lot of talk about mitigations needed for Garfield School. Mitigations defeat a

    categorical exemption. (AR:1110.)

    Following the close of the public hearing, Board of Supervisors President David Chiu

    stated: So, with regards to the categorical exemption, I ask that we affirm the cat ex for this

    project. And if we do affirm it, I do have some additional conditions that I would like to add to

    the CU authorization. (AR:1114.) The affirmation of the categorical exemption was approved

    on a vote of 7-3. (AR:1115.) The Board then voted to add additional mitigation measures to the

    project, referred to as additional conditions of approval, referenced at AR:1117-1121 and later

    formally documented at AR:61.2 and 61.3, attached to this brief for the Courts convenient

    review. The eleven mitigation measures include a requirement toconsultwith Garfield

    Elementary School and the San Francisco Unified School District before finalizing the

    construction staging, traffic and truck route plans. (AR:61.3, italics added.)

    Deputy City Attorney Marlena Byrne advised the Board of Supervisors that it was

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    imposing additional conditions on the conditional use authorization appeal which are not to

    address significant impacts of the project under CEQA. (AR:1121.)

    Saying so does not change the facts. The Planning Commission adopted mitigation

    measures. (Ante, pp.12-13.) The Board of Supervisors adopted additional mitigation measures.

    All of the mitigations were designed to address concerns about project-generated

    environmental impacts. This is not a bad thing, but it requires CEQA review. The Board and

    the concerned public, including but not limited to the administrators, faculty, parents, and

    children at Garfield Elementary School, have no way of knowing whether the still-to-be-

    adopted mitigation measures will be appropriate or adequate, or will have their own impacts,

    and whether environmental impacts will remain significant or will be reduced to insignificance

    Again, those questions require analysis in a CEQA process. This precise issue was addresed and

    resolved in theSalmon andAzusa cases, ante,pp.10-11.

    Mitigations cannot be part of a project approved via categorical exemption, but

    require vetting within a prescribed public negative declaration or EIR process. The Citys

    approval of mitigations in tandem with a categorical exemption violates the mandates of

    CEQA. The City surely knows better, or should.

    Protect Telegraph Hill respectfully requests the Courts peremptory writ to order the

    City to set aside the categorical exemption and all project-related approvals and require the

    preparation of an Initial Study and appropriate environmental document before further

    consideration of the 115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard project, all as mandated by CEQA.

    Should the writ issue a writ on this basis, the Court need not reach petitioners other

    arguments; the exemption will be set aside and need not be voided on alternate bases.

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    2. The Project Description is Incomplete

    Logically, to assess whether a project meets the requirements of CEQA, it is important

    that the City address all project components. In the context of an EIR, an accurate and stable

    project description is known as the sine qua non of a legally-sufficient document. (E.g.,

    County of Inyo v. City of Los Angeles(1977) 71 Cal.App.3d 185, pp. 193, 199.) Even outside of

    the EIR process, any project must be adequately defined so that its impact-producing elements

    can be addressed and considered in compliance with CEQA.

    The Citys consideration of the 115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard project was incomplete, as

    it failed to address specifics impacts of the project, including:

    Improvements to the Filbert Steps to meet requirements of the Department of

    Public Works, including a landing at the top of the Steps.

    Replacement and relocation of the Filbert Steps, triggering planning department

    review of General Plan consistency and a major encroachment permit.

    Construction of a platform for an on-site construction staging area and a

    construction staging area at Garfield Elementary School.

    Removal of a portion of the historic stone wall separating Telegraph HillBoulevard and the Filbert Steps in order to build the project driveway.

    Reconfiguration of the sidewalk to relocate the stop sign and bus stop.

    Renovation and restoration of the 1906 cottage.

    (AR:336, 903.)

    A peremptory writ should require the City to describe, analyze, and mitigate the whole

    of the proposed CEQA project.

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    3. The Unusual Circumstances Exception Applies

    Construction of structures like this contribute to the fragile hillsideproblems and affects the surrounding areas. Seriously! Dig 30 feetfor a new parking garage in this area on a fragile hillside? (AR:237

    [Resident Susan Wintersteen].)

    Procedure for Applying the Exception. Unlike statutory exemptions from CEQA,

    categorical exemptions are not absolute and are rebuttable. The CEQA Guidelines provide

    exceptions to the 33 classes of exemptions. The exception for unusual circumstances is

    relevant here: A categorical exemption shall not be used for an activity where there is a

    reasonable possibility that the activity will have a significant effect on the environment due

    to unusual circumstances. (Guidelines, 15300.2, subd. (c).)

    Following years of conflicting appellate rulings, the California Supreme Court recently

    provided guidance on the procedure to apply the exception. (Berkeley Hillside Preservation

    v. City of Berkeley(Berkeley Hillside) (2015) 60 Cal.4th1086.) In a split opinion, the Court

    held that an agencys consideration of the unusual circumstance exception requires two steps.

    First, the agency must determine whether a projects circumstances are unusual. If so, it then

    applies CEQAs low-threshold fair argument standard to see whether the record provides any

    substantial evidence that the project may have a significant environmental impact.Berkeley

    Hillsidedirects that if the unusual circumstances exception is invoked, an agency must

    consider evidence in its own files of potentially significant effects, regardless of whether that

    evidence comes from its own investigation, the proponents submissions, a project opponent,

    or some other source. (Berkeley Hillside, supra, 60 Cal.4th1086, p. 1103.) Further,

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    to establish the unusual circumstances exception, it is not enough for

    a challenger merely to provide substantial evidence that the projectmay

    have a significant effect on the environment On the other hand, evidence

    that the project willhave a significant effect does tend to prove that some

    circumstance of the project is unusual. An agency presented with such

    evidence must determine, based on the entire record before it including

    contrary evidence regarding significant environmental effects whether

    there is an unusual circumstance

    (Id., p. 1105 [This key language was cited last week inSave Our Schools v. Barstow Unified

    School District Board of Education(September 2, 2015) __Cal.App.4th__.].)

    A party may also establish an unusual circumstance

    without evidence of an environmental effect, by showing that the project

    has some feature that distinguishes it from others in the exempt class, such

    as its size or location. In such a case a party need only show a reasonable

    possibility of a significant effect due to that unusual circumstance.

    Alternatively a party may establish an unusual circumstance by evidencethat a project will have a significant environmental effect. That evidence, if

    convincing, necessarily also establishes that an activity will have a significant

    effect on the environment due to unusual circumstances.

    (Berkeley Hillside, supra, 60 Cal.4th1086, p. 1103, italics added.) The Supreme Court

    distinguishes between evidence that a project will have a significant effect, which makes it

    unusual, and evidence that it mayhave a significant effect, which may not be unusual. (Id.,

    pp. 1105-1110.) The latter scenario requires additional evidence that a circumstance is unusual,

    such as size or location. (Id., p. 1103.) The Court also directed that a finding of unusual

    circumstances is reviewed under the substantial evidence prong of Public Resource Code

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    section 21168.5. (Id., p. 1114.) Agencies must weigh the evidence and determine which way

    the scales tip and reviewing courts must affirm that finding if there is any substantial

    evidence to support it. (Ibid.)

    Finally, theBerkeley Hillsidemajority indicated that its approach is consistent with the

    concurring opinions statement of its central proposition:When it is shown that a project will

    have a significant environmental effect, it necessarily follows that the project presents

    unusual circumstances. (Id., p. 1105, italics added.) The concurring opinion by Liu and

    Werdegar, JJ, consistently pointed out that [e]ven under the cumbersome rules set forth

    today, it is hard to imagine that any court, upon finding a reasonable possibility of significant

    effects under the fair argument standard, will ever be compelled to find no unusual

    circumstances and uphold the applicability of a categorical exemption. (Id., p. 1134.)

    Evidence of Unusual Circumstances. The environmental constraints of the

    115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard site and project meet both tests of unusual circumstances

    provided by the Supreme Court inBerkeley Hillside. First, the location and site constraints are

    unequivocally rare.Is there any otherTelegraph Hill, Pioneer Park, Coit Tower, and Filbert

    Steps? In fact, the San Francisco General Plans Urban Design Element calls out Telegraph Hill

    firstamong the Outstanding and UniqueAreas that contribute in an extraordinary degree to

    San Franciscos visual form and character. (AR:1958, italics added.)

    Second, the evidence shows that the project not only mayhave significant

    environmental impacts, but that it will have such impacts, as explained below.

    a. Sensitive Intersection. The project site is at the top of the Filbert Steps, at the

    convergence of a blind curve on Telegraph Hill Boulevard, a Muni bus stop, a mid-block

    pedestrian crosswalk from the Filbert Steps to Pioneer Park, and a stop sign in the heart of a

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    public area frequented by thousands of tourists distracted from traffic hazards by the

    spectacular scenery and views. (AR:335.) Such a confluence of special factors dramatically

    removes the site from the run-of-the-mill.

    b. Public Views. The projects impacts on public views create unusual inconsistencies

    with mandates of the Citys adopted land use plans. Among the most blatant violations:

    Planning Code Section 101.1 (b) codifies the Priority Planning Policies in Proposition M

    adopted by San Francisco voters in 1986, which required eight policies to provide a basis for

    resolution of any inconsistencies in the General Plan. (AR:13, 1961.) Priority Planning Policy 8

    requires [t]hat our parks and open space and their access to sunlight and vistas be protected

    from development. (Ibid.)

    The Planning Commission purported to address the requirements of Policy 8 as follows,

    in relevant part, under Planning Code finding 9 H:

    The Project includes the in-fill development of three new dwelling-units

    on a largely vacant lot in a residential neighborhood. The Project will notaffect any public parks or open spaces. It is located below Coit Tower and

    Pioneer Park on Telegraph Hill, and will incorporate green rooftops to ensure

    that the Project blends with the hillside when viewed from above. It will not

    adversely affect Coit Towers access to sunlight or public vistas.

    (AR:14.) But the finding does not address, much less dispute, that the 115 Telegraph Hill

    Boulevard project will eliminate major public views of the downtown skyline from the stairway

    and landings in Pioneer Park.

    The fact that the current view was improved about 20 years ago when the small existing

    structures at 115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard were demolished does not remove the inconsistency

    the vista has been present and enjoyed for decades. Architect Howard Wong explained to the

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    City that when he was working on the design of the Pioneer Park stairways as part of the

    Pioneer Park Project, he found the original working drawings by Coit Tower architect Arthur

    Brown, Jr. and discovered that in 1931 his working drawings included a south stairway to

    Coit Tower. In other words, the view corridors of that southern part of the hill were always the

    intention of the design of Coit Tower and the surrounding site And that is also consistent

    with the citizens who donated the Pioneer Park in the 1860s. Each iteration of the general

    plan has successively enforced the public view corridors of the southern part. (AR:1057.)

    The project proposes 3 and 5-foot view corridors that do not preserve the southern

    public vistas from Pioneer Park. (AR:474-475 [Telegraph Hill Dwellers explain the ineffective

    3-foot slots].) A 3-foot gap is just a narrow tunnel Its clearly designed for access to the

    back cottage, not to provide a public view corridor. (AR:809.) Planning Commissioner Kathrin

    Moore agreed that the three-foot separation between the buildings is a way of differentiating

    residential buildings it doesnt really create any view corridors the three feet dont really

    do anything to provide views, particularly if you would go into Pioneer Park. There is no way

    being on the down slope to look through those slots anyway. Its basically a moot point that

    these slots should be responding to any public view objectives. They dont. (AR:987-988.)

    Consistently, the Citys adopted Residential Design Guidelines include requirements to

    Protect major public views from public spaces and Design building facades to enhance and

    compliment adjacent public spaces. (AR:1964.) In eliminating the current view from Pioneer

    Parks pedestrian stairway and landing, the proposed project does neither. (Ibid.; see 1979.)

    As noted by Planning Commissioner Hisashi Sugaya, the view issue is from a public space

    because Pioneer Park is right across the street, and if you come down that stairway and turn

    around, theres definitely a view impact from a public space with this particular project, which

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    can be ameliorated with a different design. (AR:864.)1Commissioner Rich Hillis agreed

    that were eliminating the view from that staircase (AR:921.) The replacement view from

    the Pioneer Park stairs? oversized Hollywood Squares. (AR:622.)

    At the final project hearing before the Board of Supervisors, Board President David Chiu

    asked staff to respond to the substantial testimony about blocked views. Planner Elizabeth

    Watty conceded that the General Plan does protect the views from public vistas. (AR:1078,

    italics added.) She then summarily stated that its our opinion that both Pioneer Park and Coit

    Towers views of downtown are not being significantly obstructed by this project, and noted

    that the project is consistent with the heights of adjacent buildings. (AR:1079) In rebuttal,

    attorney Alice Barkley referred the Board to a drawing provided by the project architect

    depicting the view right now from Pioneer Park. (AR:1107.) It will be blocked by the project.

    (AR:1931.)

    The drawing proves the point: a spectacular public vista would be destroyed by the

    projects currently-approved mass and height. The view is beyond unusual, it is famous and

    1Commissioner Sugaya left the Commission shortly before this project was approved.

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    iconic. Its destruction would be directly inconsistent with the Citys General Plan and

    Residential Design Guidelines and would resultin significant environmental impact.

    c. Unusual Topography.As expressed by the Telegraph Hill Dwellers and many local

    residents, including Jim Yasso, project planning with respect to earth movement is of great

    concern, due to the big excavation to allow for the parking elevator Theyre talking about

    going down more than 30 feet right at the top of the Filbert Steps. So youre going to have a 30

    foot shear wall there until construction is complete. And the only separation between that and

    Telegraph Hill Boulevard is the width of the sidewalk. (AR:947.) There have not yet been

    borings down to the depth of the planned excavation to see what the ground structure: Im

    very concerned about earth movement during construction and vibration during construction

    that could cause something to slide down towards our property. (Ibid.)

    Concerned about the same geotechnical impacts, the Telegraph Hill Dwellers submitted

    expert reports and testimonyof eminent geotechnical engineer Lawrence Karp. (SeeAR:335-

    337, 372-375, 1035-1037, 1886-1878, 1885-1898, 2367-2374, 2396; credentials: 336, 1110,

    1888-1891.) Dr. Karp explained the unusual topography of the project site and the significant

    impacts of the 32-foot or greater excavation required for the underground garage, including:

    [t]he Project presents unusual circumstances as there has never before

    been a vertical excavation more than 10 feet deep in the proximity of the south

    side of Pioneer Park and Coit Tower. Although the risk of a deep open (not a

    shaft) excavation should be obvious the City failed to require the submittalof engineering information related to the stability of the surrounding hillside

    [T]he excavation has to be at least 32 feet deep the drawdown due to

    dewatering alone will significantly affect neighboring properties and leave a

    latent condition that irreparably relieves lateral and subjacent support along

    the southern flank of Pioneer Park. An open excavation 32 or 33 feet deep

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    along the only road to Coit Tower presents serious hazards The Project, due

    to the unusual circumstances of a wide 32 or 33 foot deep open vertical

    excavation, radically differs from the general circumstances

    (AR:2367-2369.) Dr. Karps opinion is that the project will(not just may) have a significant

    impact due to the unusual topography, meeting theBerkeley Hillsidetest. (Ibid.)

    In a report critiquing Dr. Karps opinions, the applicants experts Patrick

    Shires and John Wallace provided preliminary geologic and geotechnical review comments

    that disagreed in part with Dr. Karps conclusions but conceded that the project lacks detailed

    geologic and geotechnical investigation and will require appropriate shoring, foundation, and

    monitoring recommendations to assure there is a low risk to adjacent structures from

    excavation-related distress. (AR: 2213; see 2010-2218.) The further geologic exploration and

    geotechnical engineering analysis will be required to guide the design of shoring elements by

    an experienced structural engineer, which will then be reviewed by the Department of Building

    Inspection as part of the building permit application. (Ibid.)2

    2The Citys unlawful deferral of geotechnical environmental analysis to discretionary reviewand mitigation is closely related to the problems of adopting mitigation measures without aCEQA process, and to the inadequate project description. At the Planning Commission,Commissioner Antonini responded to public concerns about geotechnical issues by admittingthat the Department of Building Inspection [DBI] has all responsibility to resolve any potential

    for landslides. (AR:973.) Commissioner Dennis Richards agreed that we heard over and overagain about the water table issue, and we heard that DBI is responsible for that Imassuming thats all good and that the six feet plus that they drilled down was sufficient enough So Im going to assume I have to rely on the city to do that. (AR:998.) Similarly, at theBoard of Supervisors appeal hearing, Supervisors and staff repeatedly relied on Cityregulations to be interpreted by various departments, utilizing discretion outside of any publicprocess. (AR:763-776, 1080-82.) These environmental issues require CEQA review.

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    The Record Contains a Fair Argument of Significant Impacts. UnderBerkeley

    Hillside, CEQAs unique fair argument standard applies to the question of whether a project

    proposed for a categorical exemption meets the unusual circumstances exception vis--vis

    evidence of significant environmental effects. The record discussed above documents a fair

    argument of environmental impacts relating to inconsistency with City plans adopted for

    environmental protection, vehicle and pedestrian traffic impacts, and geologic impacts.

    A categorical exemption exceptionapplies to the 115 Telegraph Hill Boulevard project.

    B. The Conditional Use Authorizations are Unsupported

    The Citys approval of the conditional use authorizations is reviewed for substantial

    evidence. Even under this deferential standard, the approval must be set aside. The Telegraph

    Hill Dwellers and others went into great detail regarding the mandatory findings that cannot

    be made. (E.g., AR:1947-1966.) Protect Telegraph Hill suggests that the most blatant,

    uncontrovertable violation of the mandates of the Citys conditional use authorization

    requirements is the finding That the use as proposed will comply with the applicable

    provisions of the Planning Code and will not adversely affect the General Plan. (AR:10.)

    The Planning Commission made a simple finding that the Project complies with all

    relevant requirements and standards of the Planning Code and is consistent with Objectives

    and Policies of the General Plan, as detailed below. (AR:10.) The Board of Supervisors adopted

    the same finding by reference. (AR:60.) Yet, as Protect Telegraph Hill has explained at length,

    the finding required by the Planning Code Section 101.1(b), among others, That our parks and

    open space and their access to sunlight and vistas be protected from development is

    unsupported. (Ante, pp. 2, 20-22.) That inadequate finding suffices to set aside the conditional

    use authorizations, and a peremptory writ is respectfully requested on that important basis.

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    ____________________________________________________________________________________________________

    Opening Brief in support of Petition for Writ of Mandamus 26

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    Conclusion

    The project is inappropriate in its present form a massive condominium

    project, hugely disruptive, that would be completely out-of-scale given

    its location, contiguous to Pioneer Park and Coit Tower. Is there a moreiconic location in San Francisco? Is there a more fragile neighborhood !?

    Is traffic not a serious concern along one of the most beloved streets and

    visitor/Muni routes to Coit Tower?! (AR:580 [Resident Tony Gantner].)

    Protect Telegraph Hill respectfully requests that a peremptory writ issue in the public

    interest to set aside the categorical exemption and the conditional use authorizations.

    September 9, 2015 Respectfully submitted,

    BRANDT-HAWLEY LAW GROUP

    By ______________________Susan Brandt-Hawley

    Attorney for Protect Telegraph Hill

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    Protect Telegraph Hill v. City of San Francisco, et al.San Francisco County Superior Court Case No. CPF-14-514060

    PROOF OF SERVICE

    I am a citizen of the United States and a resident of the County of Sonoma.I am over the age of eighteen years and not a party to this action. My businessaddress is P.O. Box 1659, Glen Ellen, California 95442.

    On September 10, 2015, I served one true copy of:

    Opening Brief in Support of Petition for Writ of Mandamus

    ! By e-service via File & Serve Xpress in accordance with San Francisco SuperiorCourt Local Rule 2.10.

    By placing a true copy thereof enclosed in a sealed envelope with prepaidpostage in the United States mail in Glen Ellen, California addressed to thepersons listed below.

    By emailing a copy to counsel as noted below.

    Andrea Ruiz Esquide Attorney for RespondentsOffice of the City Attorney1 Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett PlaceRoom 234San Francisco CA 94102-4682

    [email protected]

    Daniel Frattin Attorney for Real PartiesJames Reuben in InterestReuben & Junius LLP1 Bush Street6thFloorSan Francisco CA 94104

    [email protected]

    [email protected]

    I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct andis executed on September 10, 2015, at Glen Ellen, California.

    Susan Brandt-Hawley