On Saturday, officials announced that Plains All American Pipeline agreed to pay $230 million as a result of class action lawsuit filed against the company for the 2015 Santa Barbara oil spill.
This settlement will go towards members of two classes in the lawsuit – the fishers, fish processors and shoreline property residents – for the damages caused seven years ago when a corroded pipeline spilled an estimated 15,000 barrels of crude oil into the Pacific Ocean.
The matter is now before Federal District Court Judge Philip S. Gutierrez for approval, according to the plaintiffs.
Officials said that if and when approval is obtained, class members will be notified and a court-approved plan of distribution will be created with $184 million distributed among the Fisher class and $46 million distributed among the Property class.
According to the plaintiffs, Plains operated 130 miles of pipeline used to transport crude oil from the Santa Barbara coast to inland refinery markets in California.
A. Barry Cappello, managing partner at Cappello & Noël, and lead trial counsel for the victims of the spill, said that the spill started on land above Refugio beach and above the freeway – that it pooled there, and then most of it ran into a culvert downhill to the ocean.
“Our expert used Uniform Command oil sampling up and down the coast, all the way to Orange County to validate his calculation of 451,000 gallons in the ocean,” said Cappello.
Plains was found criminally liable in 2018 for the oil spill due to failed maintenance and extensive pipeline corrosion, according to the plaintiffs.
Cappello said “It took seven years of extensive litigation, but with the hard work of Judge Gutierrez who kept tight reins on the litigation, the dedication of the plaintiffs’ team of law firms and determined mediators, a meaningful settlement was reached just short of a jury trial that was fully primed to be tried by the plaintiffs on June 2.”
The plaintiff law firms said that they also filed separate lawsuits on behalf of hundreds of workers and small businesses who were damaged when the oil spill decimated the local offshore oil industry that depended on the pipeline.
The plaintiffs’ team was headed by three law firms: Cappello & Noël with partners A. Barry Cappello, Leila Noël, Larry Conlan and David Cousineau; Robert Nelson of Lieff Cabraser with Wilson Dunleavey and Nimish Desai; and Lynn Sarko, Juli Farris and Matt Preusch of Keller Rohrback.
The three teams said they were assisted by William Audet and his firm Audet & Partners LLP.
News Channel 3-12 has reached out to Plains All American Pipeline media relations, and is currently awaiting a response.
–KEYT-TV – May 14, 2022