ECOS in the News and Good News

January 9, 2026

Early this month, ECOS received a lot of well-deserved media coverage for standing up to developers in Sacramento County on three separate projects.

PROJECT UPDATES

Coyote Creek

In a nice start to the new year, SMUD backed away from the Coyote Creek agrivoltaic project in eastern Sacramento County. The developers could still build if they can find a buyer for the power, but ECOS and the California Native Plant Society are maintaining their lawsuit to void the special use permit approved by the County. The decision received considerable media attention and links are provided below. There are two other lawsuits as well, filed by the Wilton Rancheria, and the California 4 Wheel Drive Association (Cal4Wheel), American Sand Association, and BlueRibbon Coalition (OHV groups).

ECOS and its partners, Sierra Club, 350 Sacramento, California Native Plant Society, Sacramento Audubon Society, Defenders of Wildlife, Center for Biological Diversity, California Wildlife Foundation, Central Valley Bird Club, Third Act, and Sierra Access Coalition are grateful for the depth of opposition you brought to the Board of Supervisors.

Upper Westside Project

In December, the County sent out the Partially Recirculated Draft EIR. Public comment is due Jan 27, 2026. The document highlights two changes made to the Draft EIR. The Natomas Central Mutual Water District (NCMED) is introduced as a potential domestic water supply source. Its primary customers are agricultural. Change to the traffic circulation network is also proposed, including traffic calming on San Juan Rd to discourage through traffic on Garden Highway and El Centro Rd.

In opposing this project, ECOS is partnering with nearby neighbors and residents, including the Garden Highway Community Association. Links are provided below to a recent Bee article and to the Revised Draft EIR.

Airport South Industrial Project

The City Council voted 5 to 2 in December to approve this project. ECOS, Friends of the Swainson’s Hawk and Sierra Club filed lawsuits against the City. They had previously filed a lawsuit against LAFCO (Local Agency Formation Commission). The lawsuits are necessary because, instead of LAFCO and the City representing differing interests, they are designated as “co-lead agencies” of the project, a clear conflict of interest. LAFCO will vote on the project again this spring.

What Can You Do?

Help pay for the lawsuits. There is no magic donor waiting in the wings. The donations you give to ECOS are paying for this good work. Your contribution of $25 or $500 is much appreciated and needed. There can be no lawsuits without your donations. Donate here.
PS. If not you, who?

LINKS

This week, ECOS and your opposition to these projects, received a remarkable amount of media coverage. Please take a look. Google topics to get the latest as suggested below – as I write, we continue to give interviews.

Coyote Creek

Sacramento Bee, Jan 5, 2026: SMUD ends power deal for Coyote Creek solar project tied to environmental suit
Capital Public Radio, Jan 7, 2026: SMUD cancels agreement to purchase power from Coyote Creek solar project

Click here for more news on Coyote Creek.

If you google “Coyote Creek News” you will see reporting by ABC 10, Fox 40, The Business Journal, Abridged and CBS Sacramento, among others.

Upper Westside

Sacramento Bee, Dec 17, 2025: Sacramento County still lacks reliable water as Serna loves a bad project

The Revised Draft EIR (600 plus pages) is available here.

• Comments are due January 27, 2026
• Send them to Julie Newton, Environmental Coordinator Department of Community Development, Division of Planning and Environmental Review 7th Street, Room 225, Sacramento, 95814.
• Or via Email: CEQA[at]saccounty[dot]gov

Airport South Industrial

Both the Sacramento Business Journal and the Sacramento Bee wrote articles about the lawsuits against the City, LAFCO and Northpoint on January 6, 2026. ECOS posted them here but you may need to google “Airport South Industrial News” to avoid paywalls. CBS News, Hoodline and Fox 40 have also provided coverage.

Thank you for being part of ECOS and supporting us. If you are more comfortable paying for an ECOS membership, than donating to our legal funds, please, join ECOS here. Your membership helps pay our staff and other costs.

SMUD could have killed a bad solar project months ago, but didn’t. Why? January 6, 2026, The Sacramento Bee

By Tom Philp | January 6, 2026 | The Sacramento Bee

This feels like a complete breakdown in due diligence and transparency by SMUD. It was the utility’s job to vet this project with the public, not DESRI. This is a public power utility that is supposed to do the public’s business in public. Somewhere down the line, DESRI became SMUD’s client, not ratepayers, not the community at large, while board members who are supposed to be in charge sat on their hands.

Click here to read the article in full.

Environmental groups file lawsuits against 440-acre project near Sacramento airport, January 6, 2026, The Sacramento Bee

By Mathew Miranda | January 6, 2026 | The Sacramento Bee

The lawsuits, filed on Dec. 30 and Monday against the city and developer NorthPoint Development, allege that the Sacramento City Council unlawfully approved the project’s environmental impact report last month. The development, known as the Airport South Industrial, would build warehouses, hotels and restaurants in an unincorporated area of Sacramento County.

Click here to read the article in full.

SMUD cancels controversial Coyote Creek Project PPA that would remove 3500 trees, January 5, 2026, Daily Kos

By Dan Bacher | January 5, 2026

This is a partial victory for the environmental groups and Indian Tribes, including the Shingle Springs Band of Miwok Indians and the Wilton Rancheria, who opposed the project that would remove nearly 3500 trees from habitat draining a tributary of Deer Creek, in turn a tributary of the Cosumnes River, the last undammed Central Valley river.

Click here to read the article in full.