If the state gets its wish, five years from now, Santa Barbara will have a brand-spanking-new criminal courthouse just a short walk away from where court employees currently do their business. With $152 million worth of funding already in place to help make the magic happen, members of California’s Public Works Board approved last week what they are calling the “preferred alternative” in the planning process for a new and vastly improved Santa Barbara courthouse.
Though there is a fair bit of red tape still in the way, come late 2015, the Hayward property at 1025 Santa Barbara Street — in conjunction with two adjacent county-owned properties — would become home to a 97,000-square-foot criminal court facility, essentially housing all the activities currently split between the Figueroa Division, the Jury Services building on Santa Barbara Street, and the two criminal courtrooms still in use at the historic Anacapa Street County Courthouse. “There is still a lot of work to be done before it is official,” explained Teresa Ruano from the state’s Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC). “But the Hayward site is what we hope to move forward with.”
After 2008’s State Senate Bill 1407 earmarked some $5 billion in state dough for court upgrades and reconstruction via court fees and penalties, the AOC began formulating a court-by-court master plan. Part of this process was compiling a short list of facilities that were most in need of an overhaul. Of the 41 identified in the state, Santa Barbara, according to Ruano, “floated to the top by virtue of urgency.” Chief among the reasons cited for our “need” is the anything-but-ideal current situation of transporting prisoners across the street from the holding cells in the Figueroa building to the Anacapa courts, the lack of industry-standard security measures in both the Anacapa and Figueroa buildings, nonsecure judges chambers, substandard holding cells, and several building- and safety-code violations in the Figueroa location.