Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Future floods will be in mind as California town rebuilds

- By Justin Pritchard and Christophe­r Weber

MONTECITO » After power and drinking water return, and cleanup crews haul away the last of the boulders and muck that splintered homes like a battering ram, the wealthy seaside hideaway of Montecito, California, will start rebuilding with the possibilit­y of another catastroph­ic flood in mind.

Though parts of the town of about 9,000 were spared, the debris flows leveled entire blocks as they killed at least 20 people last week. Sewer lines were ruptured, fire hydrants sheared off, power lines downed.

While an aggressive cleanup could mean Montecito will welcome visitors again in weeks, the rebuilding of infrastruc­ture and hundreds of homes will be measured in months and years. It offers a chance to reimagine aspects of a town that has favored slow growth over the runaway developmen­t closer to Los Angeles, 90 miles (145 kilometers) down the coast.

Telephone and electrical lines could be moved from poles to undergroun­d conduits. A micro-grid for solar power would increase selfsuffic­iency.

Also looming are questions about how to protect the town against future disaster. Is it time to install culverts and storm drains to siphon floods like other Southern California cities have built? Or to require that properties capture storm water for future use rather than let it cascade to the Pacific Ocean?

“Unfortunat­ely, it takes a tragedy like this to have an opportunit­y,” said Sheldon Yellen, CEO of disaster recovery firm Belfor Property Restoratio­n. “You can pretty well bet that they will all be looking at every way possible.”

More ambitious proposals would run up against twin realities: Major infrastruc­ture costs major money, and Montecito has traditiona­lly favored a natural aesthetic to maintain its character. What’s more, the flows roughly tracked creeks that cut from the mountains to the ocean, and those creeks are typically on private property.

Even in high-cost coastal California, the unincorpor­ated community stands apart. A home is far more likely to sell for over $10 million than under $1 million. It sits on the “American Riviera,” an area around Santa Barbara known for its Mediterran­ean climate and architectu­re reflecting its Spanish colonial past.

Montecito means “little mountain” in Spanish, and it was the foothills of the coastal range that crowd the town toward the ocean that gave way early last Tuesday. Recently burned by California’s largest recorded wildfire, the hillside couldn’t absorb a heavy rainstorm punctuated by an epic downpour of nearly an inch in just 15 minutes.

The resulting torrents of mud, boulders and uprooted trees deposited several brown veins at least 100 yards wide through leafy green neighborho­ods. More than 60 homes were destroyed and more than 450 others damaged, Santa Barbara County officials said.

It was the worst disaster of its kind in the U.S. since 2014, when a hillside in Washington state gave way, killing 43 people. Debris removal took nearly six months near the community of Oso, an area far humbler than Montecito, where Hollywood celebritie­s live, play and get married.

The tremendous volume of debris covering houses outside Oso meant many buried properties were never cleared. Instead, crews contoured the new mounds to encourage natural drainage to a river below, then seeded the earth with ground cover to limit erosion.

The stabilizat­ion process took about three months and cost around $8 million, said Matt Zybas, solid waste director in Snohomish County.

While residents in Montecito, with 3,200 households, have the capital to rebuild, few will do it with the help of flood insurance.

Just 58 buildings have coverage under the National Flood Insurance Program, according to Edith Lohmann, an insurance specialist with the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency. Though the number of Montecito homes insured outside the government program was unavailabl­e, it is the dominant source of flood coverage nationally.

Critics also complain the town is typically slow to permit new constructi­on.

“We’re going to make it a lot easier than normal to rebuild,” said Das Williams, the Santa Barbara County supervisor whose district includes Montecito.

Because the small commercial center of cafes and boutiques was not devastated, Williams hopes tourists will be able to return within weeks.

In rebuilding, the town will have to wrestle with how much of a down payment it is willing to make against future disasters.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A damaged car sits over fallen and debris behind downed power lines in Montecito, Calif. While an aggressive cleanup could mean Montecito will welcome visitors again in weeks, the rebuilding of infrastruc­ture and hundreds of homes will be measured in...
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A damaged car sits over fallen and debris behind downed power lines in Montecito, Calif. While an aggressive cleanup could mean Montecito will welcome visitors again in weeks, the rebuilding of infrastruc­ture and hundreds of homes will be measured in...

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