Los Angeles Times

Judge sides with water district in legal dispute

Ruling deals a blow to TV producer’s fight to sell groundwate­r from his Goleta ranch.

- By Matt Stevens matt.stevens@latimes.com Twitter: @ByMattStev­ens

A Santa Barbara County Superior Court judge has dealt a blow to “Law & Order” creator Dick Wolf, tentativel­y siding with a local water supplier in a contentiou­s, closely watched battle over precious Central Coast groundwate­r.

Wolf’s 780-acre Slippery Rock Ranch is perched atop an aquifer in the foothills of the Santa Ynez Mountains, and Wolf had sought to extract water from the aquifer and sell it to cities parched by years of drought.

Attorneys for the ranch maintained that its water is derived from “confined and compartmen­talized” aquifers that are “materially isolated” from the nearby Goleta Groundwate­r Basin — and that they could do with it as they pleased.

Goleta Water District sued to stop any exports, claiming that the ranch’s aquifer is connected to the Goleta Groundwate­r Basin, which the district owns the rights to. The water district’s attorneys argued that the water beneath the ranch seeps out of bedrock formations and f lows to the Goleta basin through surface streams and undergroun­d channels.

Over the course of a 15day trial that concluded in October, the two sides engaged in scientific debate about exactly how and where the ranch’s water flows.

In his tentative decision filed last month, Judge James Herman found that “material” amounts of ranch water contribute to the Goleta Groundwate­r Basin and help recharge it.

He dismissed the ranch’s claims that a fault completely cut off flow, calling the ranch’s contention­s “unpersuasi­ve,” and “not supported by credible evidence.” One of the ranch’s consultant­s conducted an investigat­ion that was “not thorough,” the judge wrote, later adding that the expert had made “analysis errors.”

But Herman also ruled that the ranch has surplus water available for export. A separate, second phase of the trial will commence over the next several months to determine whether and how the ranch can export that extra water while still mitigating effects on the basin and the water district.

The judge deferred his decision on whether to issue the water district the injunction it had sought until after the trial’s second phase has been litigated.

“We are pleased in the recognitio­n of Slippery Rock Ranch’s right to private property and the acknowledg­ement of the surplus water beneath the ranch,” ranch spokesman Cory Black said in a statement. “We will continue to defend the Ranch’s water rights as well as work with the court so we can ensure the water resources remain plentiful for generation­s to come.”

Goleta Water District officials issued their own statement, saying they had “resounding­ly prevailed.”

“Especially here on the Central Coast, we are well aware that water is a limited resource that needs to be managed carefully,” said Goleta Water District board President Rick Merrifield. “We are delighted that the court recognized that the bedrock water is a public resource supplying the district’s customers, and not a commodity to be exploited for private gain.”

The court is expected to finalize its decision in the coming weeks, the water district said.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? WATER district attorneys argued that Slippery Rock Ranch’s aquifer contribute­s to a groundwate­r basin.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times WATER district attorneys argued that Slippery Rock Ranch’s aquifer contribute­s to a groundwate­r basin.

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