In state Supreme Court action, the court declined to review a landfill EIR, and, in an unrelated case, the court said it will not decide a San Francisco hotel conversion case that had already been briefed. In the landfill case, a Fourth District Court of Appeals decision to uphold an environmental impact report for the giant Eagle Mountain landfill in Riverside County will stand. Only two of the seven justices, Joyce Kennard and Ming Chin, voted to review the decision in National Parks & Conservation Association v. Kaiser Steel Resources, 71 Cal.App.4th 1341 (1999). The appellate court overturned the decision of San Diego County Superior Court Judge Judith McConnell, who said the EIR for the 2,200-acre landfill inadequately addressed impacts on the desert tortoise and on visitors to nearby Joshua Tree National Park. (See CP&DR Legal Digest, June 1999.) Although the Fourth District agreed with McConnell on the inadequacy of an earlier EIR for the same project, National Parks & Conservation Assn. v. County of Riverside, 42 Cal.App.4th 1505 (1996), the Fourth District this time said the study was acceptable. The project would turn a former Kaiser iron-ore mine into a landfill capable of accepting 20,000 tons of trash a day for a century. Project opponents are now trying to block a needed Bureau of Land Management land swap with the landfill developer. In the hotel conversion case, the state's high court decided it will not review a case in which a hotel owner contended San Francisco's hotel conversion law was an illegal taking of property. In late July, the seven justices decided it was a mistake to grant review in Lambert v. CCSF, S065446. The Supreme Court action means San Francisco wins the case, but the First District Court of Appeals opinion remains unpublished. The hotel owners, represented by the Pacific Legal Foundation, argued that the city's rejection of an application to convert a residential hotel into a tourist hotel was spurred by the owners refusal to pay a $600,000 mitigation fee. Such a condition of approval should be subject to heightened scrutiny, the PLF argued. The city said it denied the application because it wanted to preserve affordable housing provided by the Cornell Hotel, which is subject to the city's law preventing such conversions. Two of three justices on the First District, Division One, said that the mitigation fee issue was irrelevant and that the city had denied the landowner of nothing. (See CP&DR Legal Digest, October 1997.) The Supreme Court granted review in January 1998 and the case was fully briefed earlier this year. Even Attorney General Bill Lockyer filed an amicus brief on the city's side. A confident San Francisco Deputy City Attorney Andrew W. Schwartz expressed disappointment for the court not to review the case because he wanted to add a Supreme Court's opinion to a list of earlier defenses of the hotel conversion law in state appellate court and at the federal Ninth Circuit. He said the hotel conversion law has been "more litigated than any other local ordinance in the history of the world."