A community campaign for Santa Paula

Protecting Our Creek.
Protecting Our Community.

Santa Paula Creek is a vital part of our community, but worsening bank erosion threatens homes, farmland, infrastructure, habitat, and public resources. We are working together to support responsible, long-term solutions.

See the Community Action Plan

Why this matters

Creek erosion is a community-wide concern

Protecting Santa Paula means reducing worsening erosion, flood risk, infrastructure damage, agricultural loss, and preventable future costs.

Homes and property

Bank retreat can reduce the land protecting homes, outbuildings, and private access routes.

Agriculture and orchards

Erosion can remove productive soil, damage irrigation access, and affect citrus, avocado, and other agricultural operations.

Roads, bridges, and utilities

Channel migration and bank failure may threaten crossings, roads, pipelines, utility corridors, and flood-control infrastructure.

Public safety

Major storms can intensify erosion while complicating emergency access, warnings, and protective work.

Habitat and riparian areas

Rapid bank loss and damaged structures can alter vegetation, aquatic habitat, and the creek corridor.

Public costs

Delayed action can increase future repair, emergency-response, infrastructure, and recovery costs.

Our central request

A coordinated process and a funded long-term plan

We are asking the City of Santa Paula, Ventura County Watershed Protection District, and state and federal partners to establish a coordinated process to assess bank erosion along the affected reaches of Santa Paula Creek, identify immediate risk-reduction measures, and develop a funded long-term stabilization plan.

Read our full request

What coordination should deliver

  • Map affected creek reaches and identify the responsible agency or agencies for each area.
  • Include private-property bank erosion in relevant creek and watershed studies.
  • Conduct hydraulic, geotechnical, environmental, and geomorphic assessments.
  • Identify temporary risk-reduction measures for areas facing immediate danger.

Evidence summary

Building a credible public record

View the damage map

Reported erosion locations

Public baseline pending review

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Resident reports submitted

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Photographs collected

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Organizations supporting

No endorsements published yet

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Government meetings attended

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Current agency commitments

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Community support

A stronger voice includes the whole community

Residents, farms, businesses, civic groups, environmental organizations, schools, and technical experts all have a role in a constructive path forward.

  • Residents
  • Farmers and orchard owners
  • Local businesses
  • Civic and service organizations
  • Environmental groups
  • Schools and parent organizations
  • Engineers, hydrologists, geologists, and technical experts

Campaign updates

Latest updates

All news and meetings

Approved updates will appear here

Government meetings, study updates, storm damage, comment opportunities, events, and media coverage are published only after dates and sources are verified.

Government progress

Track requests, responses, and commitments

A neutral public tracker will show what was requested, which office is responsible, what response was received, and what follow-up is due.

View government progress
0verified public entries

No agency statement or commitment is published until it is supported by a Task Force record or public source.

Act before losses grow

Public action now can help prevent greater losses and higher costs later.

Public action matters

Get creek updates and meeting alerts.