Oil production began in 1886 with drilling in Summerland. Enormous oil fields such as the
Orcutt,
Lompoc, Santa Maria Valley, and
Cat Canyon fields provided jobs and a steady supply of oil, gas, and asphalt since the first oil discovery in the Solomon Hills in 1901.
Protests have marked periodic resistance to the impact of oil drilling over the years. A protest in 1929 in Santa Barbara expressed the frustration of the wealthy who came here to get away from it all. The
largest spill in California waters, credited as a spark for the modern environmental movement, coated the beaches and Santa Barbara Harbor with a thick crude in 1969. In recent years, major oil companies have left the area, turning over their oil leases to small independents, and decommissioning some leases areas that were no longer profitable. Concerns about the economy were foremost when, in 2014, Measure P was placed on the county ballot. If approve by the voters the measure would ban "high-intensity petroleum operations" in the county. In 2022, cauliflower was number two due to the weather and popularity of
cauliflower rice. County farmers began growing
hemp after it was
removed from a list of controlled substances along with other provisions of the
Hemp Farming Act of 2018. These provisions were included in the
2018 Farm Bill which made hemp legal for agricultural uses. Cannabis and hemp plants have a similar look and smell making it hard to tell the difference.
Wine country The first wine grapes in
Santa Barbara county were planted by the missionaries associated with
Mission Santa Barbara late in the 18th century. Since commercial viticulture rebounded in the 1960s, Santa Barbara County has become a prominent
viticultural region. The 2004
Alexander Payne film,
Sideways, set in the
Santa Ynez Valley, brought additional attention to the county as a wine region, especially for its
Pinot noir wines. The region, also noted for its
Chardonnay wines, is gaining a reputation for
Rhone varietals including
Syrah and
Viognier. The areas planted with wine grapes are mixed in with the rolling hills, ancient oak trees, oil fields, cattle ranches, and natural areas in the central part of the county. The county has more than 115 wineries cultivating with the vast majority of the vineyards in the
Central Coast American Viticultural Areas:
Santa Maria Valley AVA,
Santa Ynez Valley AVA,
Sta. Rita Hills AVA,
Happy Canyon AVA,
Los Olivos District AVA and
Ballard Canyon AVA. The county continues to gain AVA recognition with
Alisos Canyon AVA being the recent established AVA in 2020. The
Foxen Canyon Wine Trail features many wineries including
Andrew Murray Vineyards,
Fess Parker Winery and
Firestone Vineyard. The
Cambria Estate Winery, was featured in the 3rd episode of
The Bachelor, an American reality television series, Season 15, on January 17, 2011. Pinot Noir and Chardonnay are common all long the trail while the southern part also has many Rhone style wines due to the warmer climate. In the North,
Burgundy styles tend to predominate more due to the cooler
maritime weather.
Cannabis The county limited retail sales to eight establishments that will be distributed so they don't become clustered in any of the unincorporated communities. Under the legalization of recreational cannabis in California, companies must be licensed by the local agency and the state to grow, test, or sell cannabis and the county may authorize none or only some of these activities. Local governments may not prohibit adults, who are in compliance with state laws, from growing, using, or transporting marijuana for personal use. In the first four months of the legalization of growing cannabis for recreational purposes in California, the county issued almost 800 permits for cultivators, the most of any county in the state. Taxes are based on the value of the crop sold whereas all other counties in California use the acreage of the farm. The Carpinteria Valley became the densest concentration of cannabis farms in the United States in 2019. Farmers combined small permits for neighboring plots of land though as licenses for over 1 acre of land were not allowed until 2023. Most of these growing operations are in greenhouses. The owners of many greenhouses in the Carpinteria Valley, that were built as nurseries for flowers and other plants, have converted them to growing cannabis. While the grow operations are outside the city limits of Carpinteria, city residents have complained about the smell of odor-intense
terpenes given off by cannabis plants. The county contracts with a private
industrial hygienist to ensure odor pollution is not occurring. The Sheriff's Department has a Cannabis Compliance Team that conducts background checks on cannabis growers and their employees and carries out raids on illegal operations. A report in 2022 to the Board of Supervisors had 79 cannabis operations operating in the county. The county has a on outdoor cannabis. ==Education==