Los Angeles Times

Pulling the plug on a troubled water district

L.A. County will assume full control over the tiny Sativa agency in Compton.

- By Angel Jennings

County will take over tiny Sativa agency in Compton, which for years has supplied a dirty product.

Authoritie­s voted Wednesday to disband a tiny water district in Compton that for years had been distributi­ng discolored, putrid drinking water to its customers.

L.A. County’s Local Agency Formation Commission, which oversees public water districts, unanimousl­y decided that Sativa Los Angeles County Water District should cease to exist because of mounting allegation­s of poor maintenanc­e, financial malfeasanc­e and lack of transparen­cy. The county’s Department of Public Works, which had been appointed to manage Sativa on an interim basis after the state took it over last year, will assume full control of the district.

The decision paves the way for the county to shift ownership and operations of the locally controlled public water district, possibly to a private, investor-owned utility company.

Daniel Lafferty, an engineer at the county’s Department of Public Works, said at Wednesday’s meeting that allowing a private owner to absorb the 1,600 homes Sativa serves might be the best way to repair the district’s aging pipes and infrastruc­ture without passing on millions of dollars in costs to its predominan­tly low-income customers, who currently pay a f lat rate of about $65 a month.

“The one benefit of having a private entity is a larger customer base,” Lafferty said. “The cost incurred can be spread across the rest of the customer base.”

It was long believed that Sativa’s ailing pipelines were responsibl­e for delivering manganese into the water supply and tinging the water brown. But after county officials performed a rapid assessment of the water district, they now believe the source actually might be the wells that supply groundwate­r to customers.

“All the testing we’ve done indicates the water is safe,” Lafferty testified to the commission. “It’s disgusting, but safe.”

The inferior water quality has raised questions of environmen­tal injustice and whether complaints go ignored in poorer communitie­s and communitie­s of color, such as the one served by Sativa. Sativa serves customers in largely black and Latino neighborho­ods, many of them elderly and living paycheck to paycheck.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said during his first State of the State address Tuesday that the number of communitie­s without clean drinking water is a “moral disgrace and a medical emergency” and added that “solving this crisis demands sustained funding.”

For years, Sativa customers reported brown, and at times smelly, water flowing from their faucets. The district’s five-member elected board responded by f lushing the system or ordering customers to run all their taps until the water flowed clean.

Eddie Mae Lamon, 88, said she has been experienci­ng brown water since she moved to Willowbroo­k in the 1950s, but it has gotten increasing­ly worse over the last decade.

Fed-up customers took their frustratio­ns to social media, which caught elected officials’ attention. Various government agencies banded together to craft a solution.

Last year, then-Gov. Jerry Brown signed into law Assembly Bill 1577, which allowed the state to remove elected board members and appoint L.A. County to take over Sativa. The governor’s action marked the first time that the State Water Resources Control Board had taken over a water district.

Two days after the county stepped in, the water district’s phones were disconnect­ed because the district had fallen behind on paying its phone bill and barely had enough money to cover other expenses. The county approved a $1.4-million line of credit to get the district on stable financial footing.

Additional­ly, the county found a lack of financial controls and failure to maintain financial records. As they comb through the bank statements, officials said, they are forwarding suspicious charges to be investigat­ed by the district attorney’s office.

“Anything that does not pass the smell taste or at all looks inappropri­ate is being referred to the D.A.,” said Paul Novak, the Local Agency Formation Commission’s executive officer.

Wednesday’s meeting lacked the large crowds and jubilation that was expressed last July when the commission was weighing the water district’s future. This time, three people spoke during the period for public comment.

Lamon, a Sativa customer, said she worries that customers would lose control and protection­s over their water if the district is sold to a private company. Tony Hicks, 66, expressed concerns about possible rate hikes. Both Lamon and Hicks sat on Sativa’s board in the 1990s.

After the vote, the commission­ers discussed possible options, such as legislatio­n to keep rates affordable.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States