Category Archives: Notices

2024-11-01 GWSD Sewage Spill Press Release

April 24, 2026

The Regional Water Quality Control Board determined that the spill of approximately 1.07 million gallons of untreated wastewater impacted beach recreation and posed a potential risk of harm to human and aquatic health.

The cause of the spill was external corrosion on a section of underground pipe that may have been damaged during installation and not readily detectable and the District did not delay maintenance or cause the spill through negligence.

Once it learned of the spill, Goleta West Sanitary District took action to stop and contain the spill, and provided timely, required notification to Santa Barbara County Public Health and appropriate regulatory agencies.

Steps taken since the spill have proactively addressed unforeseen issues that originally led to the spill (see Action Plan below aimed to provide a long-term solution to corrosive soils where the existing pipe runs). Even before the spill, Goleta West had been assessing the condition of its entire collections system to identify potential vulnerabilities and implement proactive maintenance.

The Regional Water Quality Control Board regulates and enforces wastewater spills through a progressive enforcement framework and applies an Administrative Civil Liability for violations based on a multi-step penalty calculation. This Settlement Agreement is formal administrative enforcement that the Goleta West Sanitary District and the RWQCB Prosecution Team have stipulated to after the agency’s investigations and the parties’ negotiations.

To determine civil penalty amounts, RWQCB considers a number of factors: potential harm from the spill to the beneficial uses of impacted waterways; degree of toxicity of spilled wastewater; degree of discharger’s culpability; discharger’s voluntary cleanup and post-spill cooperation with the Regional Board; length of spill and volume; and additional factors.

RWQCB’s Prosecution Team recommends a civil penalty of $1.55 million with a Supplemental Environmental Project that will offset this penalty; Goleta West will use the penalty to fund the Santa Barbara County Point of Entry and Point of Use Pilot Project, which will provide well water sampling for drinking water quality with a priority to provide access to safe drinking water in underrepresented and disadvantaged communities within Santa Barbara County.

The project was considered after Goleta West had proposed several other potential environmental restoration ideas that were ineligible. This project is eligible and aligns with the agency’s core value and top priority of “the human right to water,” which prioritizes safe, clean, affordable and accessible water for human consumption, cooking and sanitation.

Since the February 2024 spill, Goleta West Sanitary District has taken significant steps to reduce risk of future incidents in coordination with numerous agencies and stakeholders.

Prior to the spill, in November 2022, the District had proactively engaged an engineering firm to complete an assessment of the District’s force mains as part of its routine infrastructure maintenance efforts. The engineering firm was drafting the final condition assessment report when the February Spill occurred. The condition assessment tentatively concluded the pipe was in “good condition” and the pipe was in its 46th year of an 80-year lifespan. With the failure, Goleta West expanded the scope of the condition assessment, implemented several more assessments, numerous actions have been taken to further findings in light of the spill and deployment of pipe-assessment technologies, and the expanded assessment report has since been adopted.

Since the spill, many more proactive steps have been taken to upgrade and rehabilitate the collections system to reduce the risk of future spills. Additionally, upgraded systems have been put in place to better detect spills and enhance spill readiness in the areas of response and communication. These actions are voluntary and go above and beyond regulatory requirements to respond to the spill.

Voluntary actions since the spill

  • Performed updated pressure testing to confirm integrity of repaired force main
  • Completed Compliance Evaluation Inspection guiding post-spill best practices
  • Upgraded flowmetering and improved alarm systems for spill detection
  • Replaced all removed air release valve adapters along force main
  • Completed expanded force main condition assessments to inform action plan
  • Engaged engineers for recommended force main rehabilitation
  • Updated force main maintenance plan to inspect integrity more frequently with state-of-the-art technology
  • Identified capital improvement funds to support rehabilitation program
  • Improved coordination of mutual aid assistance for spill mitigation among agency partners
  • Updated and extended collaborative communication plan with community partners
  • Engaged industry experts for above standard compliance initiatives and organization support, including climate resiliency

GWSD 2024 Spill Disclosure

April 24, 2026

Summary

In February 2024, Goleta West Sanitary District experienced a sewage spill from its force main that reached a tributary of the Goleta Slough and eventually the Pacific Ocean. The force main, a 24-inch pipe used to convey wastewater from homes and businesses to the nearby Regional Treatment Plant, experienced a failure on the night of February 16, when a small, corroded section of the pipe ruptured. The spill was discovered early in the morning of February 17 and the District diverted flow from to the 24-inch force main, which was in-service at the time of the failure, to the backup 18-inch force main.

In October 2024, an unrelated, smaller spill occurred. This spill flowed to an isolated retention basin where the Santa Barbara Airport drains runway stormwater runoff. As a result of this spill’s location, none of the wastewater reached a tributary or the ocean and GWSD quickly cleaned up the spill.

These incidents are a major disappointment for the District but have evolved into an opportunity to work with oversight agencies, environmental groups, and third-party engineers to investigate and address any issues with its force mains. It is a priority for the District to demonstrate that we safely handle wastewater and protect the environment on behalf of not only District customers, but the community at large.

October 16, 2025, the District and the Central Coast Regional Water Board Assistant Executive Officer agreed to settle the Notice of Violations (NOV) related to the February spill. Public comment is now open until November 17th.More information is available here: Enforcement Program | Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board.Click here to view the communication from the Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board that includes the Draft Settlement Agreement and Stipulation for Entry of Administrative Civil Liability Order from the Central Coast regional Water Quality Control Board and how you can submit public comment.

 

The Regional Water Quality Control Board determined that the spill of approximately 1.07 million gallons of untreated wastewater impacted beach recreation and posed a potential risk of harm to human and aquatic health.

The cause of the spill was external corrosion on a section of underground pipe that may have been damaged during installation and not readily detectable and the District did not delay maintenance or cause the spill through negligence.

Once it learned of the spill, Goleta West Sanitary District took action to stop and contain the spill, and provided timely, required notification to Santa Barbara County Public Health and appropriate regulatory agencies.

Steps taken since the spill have proactively addressed unforeseen issues that originally led to the spill (see Action Plan below aimed to provide a long-term solution to corrosive soils where the existing pipe runs). Even before the spill, Goleta West had been assessing the condition of its entire collections system to identify potential vulnerabilities and implement proactive maintenance.

The Regional Water Quality Control Board regulates and enforces wastewater spills through a progressive enforcement framework and applies an Administrative Civil Liability for violations based on a multi-step penalty calculation. This Settlement Agreement is formal administrative enforcement that the Goleta West Sanitary District and the RWQCB Prosecution Team have stipulated to after the agency’s investigations and the parties’ negotiations.

To determine civil penalty amounts, RWQCB considers a number of factors: potential harm from the spill to the beneficial uses of impacted waterways; degree of toxicity of spilled wastewater; degree of discharger’s culpability; discharger’s voluntary cleanup and post-spill cooperation with the Regional Board; length of spill and volume; and additional factors.

RWQCB’s Prosecution Team recommends a civil penalty of $1.55 million with a Supplemental Environmental Project that will offset this penalty; Goleta West will use the penalty to fund the Santa Barbara County Point of Entry and Point of Use Pilot Project, which will provide well water sampling for drinking water quality with a priority to provide access to safe drinking water in underrepresented and disadvantaged communities within Santa Barbara County.

The project was considered after Goleta West had proposed several other potential environmental restoration ideas that were ineligible. This project is eligible and aligns with the agency’s core value and top priority of “the human right to water,” which prioritizes safe, clean, affordable and accessible water for human consumption, cooking and sanitation.

Since the February 2024 spill, Goleta West Sanitary District has taken significant steps to reduce risk of future incidents in coordination with numerous agencies and stakeholders.

Prior to the spill, in November 2022, the District had proactively engaged an engineering firm to complete an assessment of the District’s force mains as part of its routine infrastructure maintenance efforts. The engineering firm was drafting the final condition assessment report when the February Spill occurred. The condition assessment tentatively concluded the pipe was in “good condition” and the pipe was in its 46th year of an 80-year lifespan. With the failure, Goleta West expanded the scope of the condition assessment, implemented several more assessments, numerous actions have been taken to further findings in light of the spill and deployment of pipe-assessment technologies, and the expanded assessment report has since been adopted.

Since the spill, many more proactive steps have been taken to upgrade and rehabilitate the collections system to reduce the risk of future spills. Additionally, upgraded systems have been put in place to better detect spills and enhance spill readiness in the areas of response and communication. These actions are voluntary and go above and beyond regulatory requirements to respond to the spill.

Voluntary actions since the spill

  • Performed updated pressure testing to confirm integrity of repaired force main
  • Completed Compliance Evaluation Inspection guiding post-spill best practices
  • Upgraded flowmetering and improved alarm systems for spill detection
  • Replaced all removed air release valve adapters along force main
  • Completed expanded force main condition assessments to inform action plan
  • Engaged engineers for recommended force main rehabilitation
  • Updated force main maintenance plan to inspect integrity more frequently with state-of-the-art technology
  • Identified capital improvement funds to support rehabilitation program
  • Improved coordination of mutual aid assistance for spill mitigation among agency partners
  • Updated and extended collaborative communication plan with community partners
  • Engaged industry experts for above standard compliance initiatives and organization support, including climate resiliency

February 2024 Spill Updates

April 24, 2026

At approximately 8:24 a.m. on the morning of February 17, 2024, District staff discovered a significant wastewater spill coming from our force main. District staff were able to shut down the pump station to stop the flow in the pipe by approximately 8:40 a.m and immediately launched an emergency response and cleanup effort. Our response is ongoing and we will keep this webpage updated to keep the public informed on our efforts.

To be placed on an email list to receive future updates, agendas and press releases, please send a blank email to info@goletawest.org with Spill Updates in the subject.

The Regional Water Quality Control Board determined that the spill of approximately 1.07 million gallons of untreated wastewater impacted beach recreation and posed a potential risk of harm to human and aquatic health.

The cause of the spill was external corrosion on a section of underground pipe that may have been damaged during installation and not readily detectable and the District did not delay maintenance or cause the spill through negligence.

Once it learned of the spill, Goleta West Sanitary District took action to stop and contain the spill, and provided timely, required notification to Santa Barbara County Public Health and appropriate regulatory agencies.

Steps taken since the spill have proactively addressed unforeseen issues that originally led to the spill (see Action Plan below aimed to provide a long-term solution to corrosive soils where the existing pipe runs). Even before the spill, Goleta West had been assessing the condition of its entire collections system to identify potential vulnerabilities and implement proactive maintenance.

The Regional Water Quality Control Board regulates and enforces wastewater spills through a progressive enforcement framework and applies an Administrative Civil Liability for violations based on a multi-step penalty calculation. This Settlement Agreement is formal administrative enforcement that the Goleta West Sanitary District and the RWQCB Prosecution Team have stipulated to after the agency’s investigations and the parties’ negotiations.

To determine civil penalty amounts, RWQCB considers a number of factors: potential harm from the spill to the beneficial uses of impacted waterways; degree of toxicity of spilled wastewater; degree of discharger’s culpability; discharger’s voluntary cleanup and post-spill cooperation with the Regional Board; length of spill and volume; and additional factors.

RWQCB’s Prosecution Team recommends a civil penalty of $1.55 million with a Supplemental Environmental Project that will offset this penalty; Goleta West will use the penalty to fund the Santa Barbara County Point of Entry and Point of Use Pilot Project, which will provide well water sampling for drinking water quality with a priority to provide access to safe drinking water in underrepresented and disadvantaged communities within Santa Barbara County.

The project was considered after Goleta West had proposed several other potential environmental restoration ideas that were ineligible. This project is eligible and aligns with the agency’s core value and top priority of “the human right to water,” which prioritizes safe, clean, affordable and accessible water for human consumption, cooking and sanitation.

Since the February 2024 spill, Goleta West Sanitary District has taken significant steps to reduce risk of future incidents in coordination with numerous agencies and stakeholders.

Prior to the spill, in November 2022, the District had proactively engaged an engineering firm to complete an assessment of the District’s force mains as part of its routine infrastructure maintenance efforts. The engineering firm was drafting the final condition assessment report when the February Spill occurred. The condition assessment tentatively concluded the pipe was in “good condition” and the pipe was in its 46th year of an 80-year lifespan. With the failure, Goleta West expanded the scope of the condition assessment, implemented several more assessments, numerous actions have been taken to further findings in light of the spill and deployment of pipe-assessment technologies, and the expanded assessment report has since been adopted.

Since the spill, many more proactive steps have been taken to upgrade and rehabilitate the collections system to reduce the risk of future spills. Additionally, upgraded systems have been put in place to better detect spills and enhance spill readiness in the areas of response and communication. These actions are voluntary and go above and beyond regulatory requirements to respond to the spill.

Voluntary actions since the spill

  • Performed updated pressure testing to confirm integrity of repaired force main
  • Completed Compliance Evaluation Inspection guiding post-spill best practices
  • Upgraded flowmetering and improved alarm systems for spill detection
  • Replaced all removed air release valve adapters along force main
  • Completed expanded force main condition assessments to inform action plan
  • Engaged engineers for recommended force main rehabilitation
  • Updated force main maintenance plan to inspect integrity more frequently with state-of-the-art technology
  • Identified capital improvement funds to support rehabilitation program
  • Improved coordination of mutual aid assistance for spill mitigation among agency partners
  • Updated and extended collaborative communication plan with community partners
  • Engaged industry experts for above standard compliance initiatives and organization support, including climate resiliency