Droves of local residents are speaking up in fear of the past repeating itself, in opposition to a present danger, and in defense of the future. Theyāre speaking out at local government meetings, making demands and expressing concerns.
Their public comments and protests are not falling on deaf ears, but local leadersā hands are tied.Ā
On Feb. 18, hundreds of students from Santa Maria and Orcutt junior high and high schools and Allan Hancock College walked out of class, exercising their rights to participate in civic or political events. Their quest: get the city to create a 2-mile buffer around schools, churches, parks, and hospitals where Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers canāt make arrestsāan idea that the walkout organizer, 17-year-old Cesar Vasquez, got from proposed state legislation.Ā
After more than 300 students marched to City Hall, about 30 stayed for the Santa Maria City Council meeting, where Mayor Alice Patino addressed their request.Ā
āWe want people to feel safe interacting with all city employees, especially police officers without fear,ā Patino read from a statement. But, she continued, the protestersā requests were outside the cityās powers, as the council lacks the ālegal authority to prohibit the federal government from conducting law enforcement actions.ā
Even so, participants in the well-organized walkout deserve props for marching to ādefend their future,ā as Vasquez said. Perhaps it will indeed inspire the City Council to draft a letter supporting the state legislation, as Councilmember Gloria Soto proposed.
Meanwhile, the county is hampered in its efforts to prevent a repeat of not-so-distant history. But that didnāt stop 122 members of the public from taking their three minutes each to comment on Sable Offshore Corporationās steps toward restarting its pipeline. During the Feb. 25 Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors meeting, the supervisors and other county officials used their one tool to scrutinize Sableās ability to make good on its safety promises.Ā
Ordinance 25B in the local petroleum code enables the county to take part in the permit-transfer processāwhich is happening now as Sable seeks to take over from Exxon-Mobil, which took over pipeline assets from Plains All-American in 2023.
āThis is really the countyās kind of one and only opportunity to hold a public hearing and take public comment,ā county Energy, Minerals, and Compliance Division Director Errin Briggs said.Ā
So the county dove into the oil companyās financial condition and found āa sizeable cash balance,ā Briggs said.Ā
Not surprising. And neither was it reassuring to public commenters and environmental groups, who are determined to avoid another oil spill from that pipeline. The spill 10 years ago cost the operator $870 million to clean up.
Even so, Sable says it has the cash to clean up after itself. And the county canāt do jack to prevent the companyās plans from going forward. The state and the feds have final regulatory powers here, especially since the pipeline runs through two other counties, and especially since the pipelineās been permitted since the ā80s.
Nipomoās in a similar boat with its newly approved battery energy storage system facility. The January Moss Landing battery plant fire has communities and lawmakers scared yet stuck between a rock and a hard place. The state is the agency that makes the rules for such facilities, and the state has clean-energy goals to meet.Ā
Whatās a local to do? At the very least, donāt stop speaking up.
The Canary is walking out. Send posters to canary@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Feb 27 – Mar 9, 2025.


