Los Angeles Times

Water board taken over

State ousts Compton district’s leadership, taps L.A. County to run it on interim basis.

- By Angel Jennings

State officials on Wednesday removed the elected board and general manager of a water district that for years has been accused of serving brown, smelly water to its customers in Compton.

With a 22-page decree, the State Water Resources Control Board abolished Sativa Los Angeles County Water District’s five-member board of directors and ousted its manager. In their place, the state appointed the county’s Department of Public Works to temporaril­y run the district while officials seek to merge the small district, which delivers water to about 1,600 homes, with a larger provider.

The move marks the first time that the state has used its power to order the takeover of a water agency.

“For far too long, our residents have had to endure the unacceptab­le — they had no idea what would flow when they turned on their tap,” L.A. County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas said. “Enough is enough. Los Angeles County is ready to step in and step up … and immediatel­y begin to triage the situation.”

County officials will move into Sativa headquarte­rs Thursday, said Paul Novak, executive officer of the county’s Local Agency Formation Commission, which monitors Sativa.

Calls to Sativa were not immediatel­y returned.

Novak said the takeover

will not immediatel­y fix the problems that have plagued the water district, including manganese-coated pipes that discolor residents’ water. Officials estimated that $10 million to $15 million is needed to upgrade the 70year-old pipes.

But it will get rid of the administra­tion of a longcritic­ized agency accused of financial instabilit­y, nepotism, poor maintenanc­e and mismanagem­ent.

“These are the changes I think they will see: They will see staff that’s more accessible, that is more transparen­t, that is communicat­ing with the ratepayers on a regular basis,” Novak said. “Instead of encounteri­ng a board and staff that are hostile to the ratepayers, they will have people they can come in and communicat­e with.”

Department of Public Works Director Mark Pestrella said the county will meet staff Thursday to take control of Sativa’s facilities and assets, then come up with a plan to deliver clean, safe water to residents.

In September, Gov. Jerry Brown signed AB 1577, a bill introduced by Assemblyma­n Mike Gipson (D-Carson), that would allow for the dismantlin­g of the Sativa board.

Two years ago, the state water board was granted the authority to install an administra­tor at a failing water system. However, the role has to be paid for by the state, and the law did not provide funding.

The governor signed legislatio­n Sept. 17 that appropriat­es $200,000 for a stateappoi­nted administra­tor to helm Sativa. The L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s and the Local Agency Formation Commission had asked the state to appoint the county’s Department of Public Works as the interim administra­tor.

After customers began posting videos online of teacolored water coming from their faucets, the Local Agency Formation Commission voted in July to dissolve Sativa — a lengthy and rare process separate from statedirec­ted takeover. The commission has scheduled a February hearing to continue the dissolutio­n so that Sativa will no longer exist.

 ?? Robert Gourley Los Angeles Times ?? COMPTON residents stand outside a meeting of the Sativa Los Angeles County Water District board in June. The agency has been accused of serving dirty water.
Robert Gourley Los Angeles Times COMPTON residents stand outside a meeting of the Sativa Los Angeles County Water District board in June. The agency has been accused of serving dirty water.

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