Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
August 8, 2008
4. Water Quality –
DeSal Plant to get Re-re-examination: Tuesday’s Santa Barbara City Council Vote Is Not Enough to Prompt Study
The Santa Barbara Independent- 8/7/08
By Nick Welsh
It turns out the 3-to-2 council majority was not sufficient to authorize a $122,000 study of what’s required to fire up the City of Santa Barbara’s 18-year-old desalination plant. Because a four-vote majority is required for such a study, this week’s council “authorization” lacks legal authority, and the councilmembers will re-examine the issue this coming Tuesday. This past week, councilmembers Iya Falcone and Grant House were not present, so only five members of the seven-member body were on hand to vote.
Water is one of those quintessentially Southern California topics that can’t be discussed without someone getting their hackles up, and the dealination plant — built in response to the sustained drought that afflicted the South Coast in the late 1980s and early ‘90s — is no exception. Tuesday’s discussion was about whether to even study what would be required to get the plant — initially designed to provide water for the City of
Councilmember Das Williams worried that a new water supply — the original desal plant was designed to produce 7,500 acre-feet of water a year, more than half the city’s total water demand — would prove growth-inducing. He argued City Hall should spend its money studying water conservation, the long term effects of climate change, and how City Hall could further its water recycling efforts. And because desalination plants are require an inordinate amount of energy, he fretted that the operation of the plant could wipe out substantial energy conservation gains City Hall has recently made. Finally, he contended that the ratepayers of
Russell Ruiz, now with the City of
Mayor Marty Blum argued that the cost of desalinated water was 25 times the price of its existing water and hence too expensive to fuel further growth. She said it would be “irresponsible” for the city not to find out what’s involved in re-activating the desal plant.
Councilmember Dale Francisco said such an emergency water supply could prove essential if the tunnels connecting city water customers with
Aside from the desalination plant study, city water planners are preparing to go out for bid for studies on the reliability of State Water, the long term consequences of climate change on local water supplies, and the opportunities of further conservation and water recycling.
For the time being, the City of
On top of all this, the council heard how last year’s Zaca Fire is still causing water quality issues for the city’s water supplies at Cachuma and
http://www.independent.com/news/2008/aug/07/desal-plant-get-re-re-examination/
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