Spanning 700 feet, standing 1,200 feet high, and sitting as green as the California oaks growing beneath it, the Cold Spring Canyon Bridge is an architectural sight to behold.
Ā Itās recognized as Californiaās longest steel arch bridge and is considered a Santa Barbara County and State Scenic Highway landmark.
But along with these accolades comes a much darker notoriety: Since its construction in 1964, almost 50 people have committed suicide by jumping off the bridge, according to Sheriffās Department records. Six of those deaths occurred in 2009.
To reduce the number of suicides at the bridgeāand improve the safety of law enforcement officials responding to emergency callsāthe California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) has proposed building an 8-foot-high suicide barrier along the bridgeās railings.
A barrier will greatly improve the publicās safety and decrease the amount of risks taken by emergency responders, said Cmdr. Dominick Palera of the Santa Barbara County Sheriffās Department.
[image-4]To better illustrate his point, Palera recalled an incident several years ago that was caught on a dashboard recorder: A female officer attempted to rescue a man on the bridge by leaning over to grab him, but the differences in weight caused her to lose her footing and slide up onto the railing.
āIf it werenāt for [other officers] present, we could have had two people die that day,ā Palera said.
For more than five years, officials from Caltrans, the Sheriffās Department, and the California Highway Patrol have been working with suicide prevention specialists, engineers, and other members of the community to design an effective barrier. And now that goal could be realized.
In a recent interview with the Sun, Caltrans representative Colin Jones said the department plans to open the bidding process on Feb. 24, with the intention to begin construction by April.
āWe hope to get a lot of local contractors interested in the project,ā Jones said. āWe want to create jobs and build a barrier that will save lives.ā
However, an ongoing lawsuit filed against Caltrans by a citizens group called Friends of the Cold Spring Canyon Bridge is threatening to scrap the entire project.
āIf weāre successful, the project will be stopped in its tracks,ā said Marc Chytilo, the lawyer representing Friends of the Bridge. āOur plan is to expedite the litigation and have the project stopped before any substantive work can be done.ā
In a petition filed in California Superior Court, Friends of the Bridge alleges Caltrans failed to follow guidelines under the California Environmental Quality Act when developing the projectās Environmental Impact Report. Additionally, the group claims Caltrans failed to include appropriate mitigation measures in its draft EIR and didnāt allow sufficient opportunities for the public to review the project.
[image-3] āCaltrans admitted in the EIR the barrier would create significant negative impacts to the esthetics of the bridge and surrounding area,ā Chytilo said, adding that his clients believe Caltrans isnāt putting forth enough alternative options to the barrier or properly addressing mitigations.
āWeāre not saying that the bridge isnāt a place where [suicides] happen,ā he said. āWeāre just saying we believe there are some substantial alternatives that were ignored in the planning process.ā
Chytilo said one of those options is an intervention program, such as placing call boxes on the bridge that connect to a national suicide hotline.
If someone really wants to commit suicide, he said, an 8-foot barrier isnāt going to stop the attempt.
āIf itās not going to happen [at the bridge], itās going to happen somewhere else,ā Chytilo reasoned.
And Friends of the Bridge isnāt the only party dissatisfied with the Caltrans proposal. During one of two public meetings held in 2008 to discuss the project, Gary Spielmann, former director of suicide prevention for the New York State Office of Mental Health, commented that a āhuman barrier,ā such as a suicide hotline, is more likely to save lives than a physical barrier.
But in the EIR, Caltrans said, āIt is well documented that physical barriers have been effective in helping to reduce suicides at bridges and buildings around the world.ā
The report also cited research from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that found limiting access to lethal methods of self-harm is an effective way to prevent self-destructive behaviors, such as suicide, in certain individuals.
In addition to questioning the validity of the projectās EIR, Friends of the Bridge has filed a complaint with the federal government alleging fraudulent use of American Recovery and Reinvestment Act money to pay for the barrierās construction.
The group claims Caltrans asked the Santa Barbara County Association of Governments to find federal stimulus dollars for the project even though the California Transportation Commission questioned strongly whether the bridge was a legitimate transportation project.
Gregg Hart, a representative for the association, said the Cold Spring Canyon Bridge project is an ideal project for federal stimulus money because āitās shovel ready.ā

Originally, Hart explained, Caltrans and SBCAG applied for federal funds for the widening of U.S. Highway 101 because of the āthreat that funding would be cut off by the state right in the middle of construction.ā
But when it became apparent that the stateās budget was going to pass, Caltrans decided it needed to do something with the stimulus package money.
āBecause of the ARRA deadlines, we had to move quickly. If we didnāt spend the money, it would no longer be available to us, so we were very careful to put forward projects that would be approved,ā Hart said.
As a result, Caltrans and SBCAG opted to use the state funds set aside for the suicide barrier project to fund other projects, such as improvements made to the Hollister-Ellwood Bridge in Goleta.
āAnd every single decision was made in public meetings, and were made available to the public through proper notice,ā Hart said.
Caltrans representative Jones substantiated Hartās explanation for the transfer of funds and agreed that the decision-making process was ācompletely transparent.ā
Contact News Editor Amy Asman at aasman@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Feb 18-25, 2010.


