Pace of Urbanization
The pace of urbanization in Santa Barbara County from 1998-2000 increased compared to 1996-98, and a significant amount of new cultivated land – primarily vineyards but also some row crops – was created, according to a map released today by the California Department of Conservation.
The county reports that 1,062 acres – including 775 acres of farmland – have been committed to non-agricultural use in the future. Often, this is land earmarked for development. In some cases infrastructure development, such as sewer installation, may be underway.
There are 4,536 more acres of urbanized land in Santa Barbara County now than there were in 1990. However, there are also 8,321 more cultivated acres. Most of that has come from the conversion of grazing land. During the 1998-2000 mapping cycle, 5,404 new acres of cultivated land were created.
Of the 1,039,816 acres in Santa Barbara County, 13 percent are farmland, 56 percent are grazing land, 6 percent are urban land and 24 percent are “other” land – a category that includes wetlands, low-density “ranchettes” and brush or timberlands unsuitable for grazing from 1998-2000. The remainder is water area.
Transportation
Transportation Santa Barbara is bisected by U.S.Route 101, a primary transportation corridor that links the city to the rest of the Central Coast region. The Santa Barbara Airport offers commercial air service. Amtrak offers rail service through the Coast Starlight and Pacific Surfliner trains at the train station on State Street. The Santa Barbara Metropolitan Transit District (MTD) provides local bus service across the city, and Greyhound bus stations are located downtown and in nearby Goleta. Electric shuttles operated by MTD ferry tourists and shoppers up and down lower State Street and to the wharf.