Abandoned oil wells regulations adopted
The
intriguing story of Yorba Linda's 76-year history of oil production
added a new chapter recently with a unanimous City Council adopting
an ordinance with regulations for building on properties with
active or abandoned oil wells.
The new
ordinance applies to both developers of vacant properties and owners
who want to make certain additions or alterations to parcels with
homes and businesses already in place.
The
regulations aren't new hurdles to land development, since they
replicate rules previously overseen by a state agency--the Department
of Gas, Oil and Geothermal Resources--that no longer provides
construction site plan reviews and “well status” review letters.
According
to agency statistics, properties in what is historically called the
Yorba Linda Field have 1,218 “well types,” with 653 wells “having
production,” but most are labeled “plugged.” The agency's
listing noted 37 leases and 14 operators.
One
Vista Del Verde development, Foxfield, with 94 single-family homes,
has 55 abandoned wells that required venting before construction, and
the 3.2 acre Bastanchury Road land once planned for Friends
Christian High School has some 21 wells that needed attention.
A report
prepared by city building official Bob Silva notes the ordinance
establishes rules that address “major areas of concern,” and
enforcement will provide “a high level of public safety” when
building on land with active and abandoned wells.
Developers
must provide site development maps “indicating the location of all
wells and st-ructures with dimensions between each other as well as
to the property lines,” Silva noted.
No new
structures on vacant or previously developed parcels “shall be
constructed within 10 feet of the center of the well on three
sides with the fourth side to be maintained open” but city staff
“may approve alternative mitigation measures that maintain access
to wells.”
And
importantly, the ordinance calls for leak testing of abandoned wells,
including a sniff test for gas leakage and a visual inspection for
oil leakage processed through the Orange County Fire Authority within
12 months before issuing a building permit.
One
recommendation from city staff requiring a permanent marker at the
center of each identified well was dropped from the final ordinance
and replaced by voluntary language.
But if a
marker is installed, the device “may be relied on for the exact
location of the abandoned well for any future development,” thus
saving the property owner from a significant cost involved in another
survey pinpointing the exact location of a well.
Yorba
Linda lagged in local oil discovery, with the first commercially
successful well completed in 1937, 40 years after
the first Brea-Olinda well drilled in 1897.
This
city's new oil well ordinance draws attention to Yorba Linda's
drilling history, and next week's column will delve into how oil
changed Yorba Linda history and examine a strange story told about an
imagined “black gold” discovery on the Richard Nixon birthplace
property.
<< Home