Santa Barbara County’s Historic Oil Drilling Reversal to Be Short-Lived
Santa Barbara County ’s Historic Oil Drilling Reversal to Be Short-Lived
Both 3rd District Candidates Oppose Last Week’s Board of Supervisors’ Vote
By Nick Welsh
In the ever roiling oil wars, the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors’ August 26 vote to ask Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to open up the coast to new oil exploration and development marked a dramatic turn-around of historic proportions, especially considering
But the facts suggest that whatever reversal the supervisors sought to undertake last week will prove exceptionally short-lived. Regardless of who wins the battle to be the next 3rd District Supervisor in November — Steve Pappas or Doreen Farr — a majority of the new board of supervisors will favor rescinding the letter just sent to Governor Schwarzenegger.
Pappas, a Santa Ynez activist backed by strong property rights interests, Chumash Casino critics, and neighborhood preservationists, stated, “If elected, I would retract the letter to the Governor and bring the issue back to the board to be vetted and re-addressed.” Pappas said there are circumstances that might justify lifting the moratorium on new offshore oil development, but said he’d consider doing so only under extreme circumstances and with ample environmental protections and safeguards. He said the supervisors’ action Tuesday failed on those two fronts, and also charged that the draft letter to the governor was sprung on supervisors Janet Wolf and Joe Centeno at the last minute, as well as members of the public.
Farr, who has been strongly endorsed by
Farr and Pappas are running to fill the seat being left vacant by supervisor Brooks Firestone, who announced he would not seek re-election. Since then, Firestone has gloried in his role as a proverbial “lame duck,” and it was he — more than any other supervisor — who lead the charge for the supervisors to go on record against the moratorium. Firestone has predicted that the federal government will declare an emergency in response to rising oil prices and effectively usurp any authority over offshore oil development now wielded by local governments. It would be better, Firestone, argued, for the locals to open up the coast to new drilling on their own — when the county might still be able to exert some environmental protection. By doing so, he said, the county might also be able to negotiate a slice of the federal oil royalties that to date it has never shared in and for which no legal authority currently exists.
