In Ventura County The Harbor Boulevard bridge, the most westerly crossing, marks the upstream boundary of McGrath State Beach and the Ventura Water Reclamation Facility while the estuary continues a little farther upstream. In 1969 the river breached the north bank, flowed through an area that had historical been part of the estuary, flooded a new golf course and Harbor Boulevard, and deposited silt and debris into recently completed
Ventura Harbor just upcoast from the reclamation facility. Over the years, many communities have used the river banks as
dumps to create
levees that would keep the river from flooding adjacent lands during occasional years with heavy winter rains. Three dump sites about upstream from the mouth came under the control of the Ventura Regional Sanitation District by 1988. The district used the
landfill gases to produce electricity until 2001. As the landfill aged and its contents decomposed, the release of gas became intermittent and the gases from the recovery system are burned off in a
flare. The defunct power plant was built just upstream of the Victoria Avenue bridge, the second crossing upstream from the ocean. The riverbed was mined extensively for
sand and gravel throughout the
post–World War II building boom for the construction of homes and highways. Mining the riverbed for sand and gravel impacts the riparian zones by destroying habitat and changes sediment flow regimes. The mining decreased significantly in the 1990s due to increased costs needed to satisfy environmental concerns and concerns that the removal of material increased scouring and undermining of bridge foundations and pipelines that crossed the river. there were still 3 active gravel operations in the upstream area. There are also water diversions, most notably the Freeman Diversion Dam, located approximately from the ocean The United Water Conservation District, formed in 1950, battles groundwater overdraft through a combination of
aquifer recharge and providing alternative surface water supplies. The District owns
Lake Piru and key facilities along the Santa Clara River that are used to manage groundwater supplies. The district provides wholesale water delivery through three pipelines to various portions of the Oxnard Plain. The Vern Freeman Diversion Dam, built by United Water in 1991 on the Santa Clara river, channels water to shallow basins designed to replenish the aquifer. For decades before the structure was built, earthen dams were constructed in the river to divert water to farmers and replenished the aquifer. The berms would have to be rebuilt whenever winter rains created a flow that breached the berms.
Southern California Steelhead were declared endangered in 1997 and the
fish ladder on the structure was deemed insufficient. The
National Marine Fisheries Service determined in 2015 that fixing this was a high priority since it is the first structure the
steelhead encounter when attempting to migrate from the ocean. A judge determined in 2018 that the federal Endangered Species Act had been violated by United Water by failing to ensure that the structure provided an adequate water supply and migratory passageway for steelhead.
Treated Wastewater In Los Angeles County The main channel of the Santa Clara River through the city of
Santa Clarita remains largely natural, a variety of modifications have been made to the river and its major tributaries. The South Fork of the Santa Clara River features a system of 14
weirs that regulate the flow of the river through
Newhall,
Valencia, and
Saugus.
Bouquet Creek is channelized at the confluence of every minor creek that flows into it, most notably along a stretch of its riverbed near its confluence with the Santa Clara River. The
unincorporated community of
Valencia is an under-construction, large scale
master-planned community in
Los Angeles County along the river in the easterly portion of the Santa Clarita Valley adjacent to Ventura County. The required permits for the project describe how the work will fill in and alter more than of flood plain and tributaries. These include threatened and endangered fauna and flora, including the
California condor, the
California gnatcatcher, the
southwestern willow flycatcher, the
least Bell's vireo, the
arroyo toad, the
San Fernando Valley spineflower, and the
threespine stickleback. The area is included in Los Angeles County's Strategic Ecological Areas program, which designates areas of "irreplaceable biological resources". The water reclamation plant serving the development will be near the boundary with Ventura County. The plant will treat an estimated of water every day before releasing it into the river as it flows towards the ocean and into Ventura County. During the decades the project on the Newhall Ranch has been in planning, it has faced legal actions and environmental concerns. The downstream impact and other effects also drew Ventura County officials and citizens into opposition to the project. The landmark
California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) used to challenge the development, may have led to a better-designed project while saving crucial habitat. In 2014, the
California 2nd District Court of Appeal overturned a
Los Angeles County Superior Court ruling and found that the
environmental impact report adequately analyzed the project's potential impact on
endangered fauna and flora and Native American cultural artifacts. The ruling also supported the agency's determination that storm-drain runoff from the project's into the Santa Clara River would not harm
juvenile steelhead trout downstream in Ventura County. Subsequently, the California Supreme Court agreed to review a petition that stated the appellate court opinion exempting developers from protections for the unarmored threespine stickleback would apply to other protected species such as the California Condor. the state Supreme Court directed lower courts to toss out the EIRs mentioned above for two phases of construction. After the EIRs had been toss out by the state Supreme Court in May 2016, changes were made to address the concerns. The
California Department of Fish and Wildlife certified the environmental impact report in 2017. In July 2017, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors certified a revised environmental analysis and re-approved land-use permits for the Mission Village and Landmark Village communities. ==Restoration==