An ambitious and controversial project to install steel “ring nets” in canyons above Montecito was permitted today by the Santa Barbara County Planning and Development department. “The project consists of a temporary debris flow prevention and mitigation system that will be located in … Cold Spring Canyon, San Ysidro Canyon, and Buena Vista Canyon,” according to the emergency permit issued to The Partnership for Resilient Communities, a nonprofit underwritten mostly by wealthy Montecito residents. “The [permit] involves installation, one year of maintenance, and removal of 11 Geobrugg flexible debris-control nets. Two additional nets located in Romero Canyon are proposed outside of [county government] jurisdiction, and as such, are not included as part of this emergency permit.”
The heavily anchored net systems are designed to stop or slow debris-laden floods and mudflows triggered by intense rainstorms this winter. The partnership was created in the aftermath of the 1/9 Debris Flow, which killed 23 Montecito residents and destroyed more than 100 homes.
Retired Santa Barbara City Fire Chief Pat McElroy, who serves as the partnership’s executive director, said the permit allows for two nets each in Cold Spring and San Ysidro canyons and seven nets in Buena Vista Canyon. McElroy added, “We are continuing to pursue [the installation of] nets on federal [U.S. Forest Service] land” in Romero Canyon and in the upper reaches of Hot Springs Canyon. In Hot Springs, the partnership initially sought to install nets down-canyon of Forest Service property but was unable to obtain permission from the Land Trust for Santa Barbara County, which owns the land where the nets were proposed.