3 minute read

Editor’s Letter

Next Article
Nosh Town

Nosh Town

CEO and Executive Editor of the Montecito Journal Media Group

Will Desal Have its Day? W ater supply has historically been one of Montecito’s (and California’s) most critical and controversial issues, and Montecito’s current Water Board has boldly taken it on. In his multi-part dive into the complicated nature of Montecito’s proposed “Water Sharing Agreement” or WSA, MJ writer Nick Schou has attempted to demystify Montecito’s historical relationship to Santa Barbara’s desalination project and how the MWD has finally been able to reach a deal with the city.

If passed by MWD and Santa Barbara’s City Council, this 50-year binding agreement for desal water will represent an historic moment in the annals of California environmental policy. According to the final draft of the WSA, Santa Barbara will provide Montecito with 1,430 acre-feet per year for the next 50 years at a price of about $4 million per year, which represents a total cost to MWD’s rate payers of about $200 million over the course of the agreement.

Eventually, desal water from Santa Barbara will get cheaper, according to the terms of the contract. Currently, MWD’s agreement with Santa Barbara provides that Montecito will help the city pay off the desal plant’s initial price as well as its ongoing costs. However, Santa Barbara’s low-interest state loan only needs to be serviced for another 17 years, so once the debt is paid, Montecito will pay a much lower price for desalinated water for the roughly 30 years left on the contract.

As reported by Nick Schou, according to the Montecito Water District’s latest available figures, should its deal with Santa Barbara go forward, MWD’s customers will be divided into three new categories, or tiers, depending on the volume of water they use. Tier 1 consumers, who use up to 6,750 gallons per month, represent nearly half of MWD’s customer base. They will see a reduction in their monthly bill, Water Board Chair Floyd Wicks said, adding that the total bill will amount to $105.90 including service fees, which works out to just $3.50 per day, or 1.5 cents per gallon.

Heavier users of water will be charged more, depending on how much they consume each month, a cost-spreading system that has been held over from the previous Water Board’s emergency conservation measures. As Schou points out, even Tom Mosby, the MWD general manager who left the water district as a result of the agency’s drastic response to the last drought, supports the board’s new proposed rates.

“I have to give credit to this board,” Mosby said. “Their new rates represent a big change in how we bill for water. Most users are going to pay less or the same as they used to, but larger consumers will be charged more, as they should be. It’s a reasonable solution.”

On June 25, Montecito’s water customers and the general public will have a final opportunity to voice their opinions about the proposed water supply deal with Santa Barbara. That’s when the agency will host an online public hearing about the water rate changes and the desalination proposal. As a member of the public, this will be your last opportunity to weigh in on the proposal. So speak now or forever hold your peace.

MWD Special Board Meeting / Public Hearing:

• When: June 25, 9:30am – 12:30pm • Where: https://global.gotomeeting.com/ join/213580133 • PHONE: (571) 317-3112 • ACCESS CODE: 213-580-133

In the Category of “The Right to be Imperfect…”

The Montecito Journal awarded 1 st Prize in its Haiku Creative Writing Contest to an imperfect Haiku. A Haiku is a three-line descriptive form of poetry, intended to be read in one breath leading to a sense of sudden illumination. A traditional haiku would have five syllables, or sounds, in the first line, seven in the second, and five in the last. Though these rules are sometimes broken, our intention was to stick to the traditional form. But alas, our counting was off and our winning Haiku was 5-8-5, not 5-7-5. Rather than be stripped of his title, local poet Arno Jaffe has generously opted to write an apology Haiku – not once but twice… One humble and true, one wry. Thank you, Arno!

3,000 PROJECTS • 600 CLIENTS • 30 YEARS •

ONE BUILDER

Building Peace of Mind.

BUILD WITH US

| (805) 966-6401

| GIFFINANDCRANE.COM

LICENSE 611341

Santa Barbara Did I forget how to count An honest mistake

This article is from: