At its Jan. 11 meeting, the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to move forward with a proposal to tighten regulations for noncompliant on-shore oil drilling companies.
If approved, the ordinance would amend the countyās Petroleum Code to change what constitutes a āhigh riskā facility, and clarify the offending facilityās clean-up requirements.
The ordinance calls for reducing the spill thresholds of high-risk facilities from 25 barrels to 15, and the number of unauthorized spills from three to two. County staffers are also recommending that there be overall audits of facility operations and clearer schedules for clean-up completion.
While discussing the proposal, 1st District Supervisor Salud Carbajal said he approved of many of the recommended changes but asked the staff to include language about cumulative spills.
āWhat happens if [a facility] is having a 14-barrel spill every day?ā he asked. āIf youāre having a 14-barrel spill every day, itās likely youāre going to have a really big spill.ā
Another matter Carbajal raised was the status of the countyās database for monitoring on-shore spills and other violations. The supervisor asked if the software in use had been abandoned because of budget shortfalls.
County staffers reported that the oil-
spill tracking software is currently working, but it needed to be updated, and possible future budget shortfalls could jeopardize the program.
Newly sworn-in 5th District Supervisor Steve Lavagnino asked why county staffers felt the need to exceed federal regulations for on-shore oil spill thresholds, to which a representative replied: āSpills of a lesser value can have significant impactsā to county health and the environment.
The only person to speak during the public comment period was COLAB director Andy Caldwell, who said the board āneeds to have a perspective [on on-shore oil production] instead of looking at industry as if itās evil and needs to be contained.ā
Oil, he said, is āan organic, naturally occurring chemical ⦠but we treat it like itās Kryptonite.
āWhat youāre trying to regulate is dwarfed compared to whatās happening off-shoreā through natural seepage, he said.
The board voted to continue the matter to its Feb. 1 meeting.
This article appears in Jan 13-20, 2011.

