A rose by any other name might famously smell as sweet, but what about a wastewater treatment facility? The City of Santa Barbara is about to find out. The City Council voted to rebrand its El Estero Wastewater Treatment Plant a “water resource center.” Right now, El Estero releases six million gallons of treated wastewater into the ocean daily. If and when state water-quality regulators figure out safety thresholds for “potable reuse,” city water czar Joshua Haggmark estimates Santa Barbara could meet roughly half its water demand — 5,000 acre feet a year. “There is no new water on the planet,” Haggmark stressed. “We have no water to ‘waste.’” A significant shift in public perception is needed for potable reuse to succeed, he said : “For years, it’s been you flush and you don’t care where it goes,but these are valuable resources. You need to know where it goes.”
El Estero to Rebrand as Water Resource Center
Santa Barbara's wastewater treatment plant preps for "toilet to tap" rules.