The area of present-day Goleta was populated for thousands of years by theChumash people. Locally, they became known, by the Spanish, asCanaliños as they lived along the coast, adjacent to theChannel Islands. One of the largest villages,S'axpilil, was north of theGoleta Slough, not far from the present-daySanta Barbara Airport.[13]
The first known European visitor to the Goleta area was Spanish marinerJuan Rodríguez Cabrillo, who spent time around the Channel Islands in 1542, and died there the following year. During the 1980s, the discovery of a 16th-century]cannon on the beach led to theadvancement of a theory thatSir Francis Drake sailed into the Goleta Slough in 1579. Goleta is one of many alternative locations (and the one farthest south) proposed for Drake's "New Albion", generally believed to be today'sDrake's Bay, north ofSan Francisco.
In 1602, another sailing expedition, led bySebastian Vizcaino, visited theCalifornia Coast. Vizcaino named the channel Santa Barbara. Spanish ships, associated with theManila galleon trade, probably stopped in the area, intermittently, over the following 167 years; no permanent settlements were established.
The first landexpedition to California, led byGaspar de Portolà, spent several days in the area in 1769, on its way toMonterey Bay, and also spent the night ofAugust 20 near a creek (possiblySan Pedro Creek) to the north of the Goletaestuary. At that time, the estuary was a very large, open-water lagoon that covered most of (what is now) the city of Goleta, stretching as far north as Lake Los Carneros (adjacent toStow House).[14] There were at least five native towns in the area, the largest being on an island in the middle of the lagoon. For that reason, expedition engineer Miguel Costanso called the group of towns Pueblos de la Isla, or "towns of the island".[15] Some of the soldiers called the island townMescaltitlan, after a similarly insularAztec settlement inNayarit, Mexico. Franciscan missionaryJuan Crespi, who accompanied the expedition, gave the towns the name Santa Margarita de Cortona.[16]
The island retained the nameMescalitan Island (dropping the extra 'T' of the Aztec spelling), until it was bulldozed and flattened in 1941 to provide fill for the military airfield that is now Santa Barbara Airport (SBA). The wastewater treatment plant of the Goleta Sanitary District is located on what used to be the island.[17]
Cabrillo Business Park in Goleta
Portola returned to San Diego via the same route in January 1770, where he mounted a second expedition to Monterey that year. A second Spanish expedition came to the Santa Barbara area ofAlta California in 1774, led byJuan Bautista de Anza. De Anza returned the following year, and the road along the coast of Santa Barbara County (today'sHighway 1) soon becameEl Camino Real, connecting the string of Spanish missions.
An expedition in 1782, led by military governorFelipe de Neve, founded thePresidio of Santa Barbara, and soon thereafter, theSanta Barbara Mission. The Goleta area, along with most of the coastal areas of today's Santa Barbara County, was placed in the jurisdiction of the presidio and mission.
Sometime after the De Anza expeditions, a sailing ship (goleta) was wrecked at the mouth of the lagoon, and remained visible for many years, giving the area its current name. After Mexico became independent of Spain in 1821, most of the former mission ranch lands were divided up into large grants. The Goleta area became part of two adjacentranchos. To the east of today's Fairview Avenue wasRancho La Goleta, named for the shipwreck and granted toDaniel A. Hill, the first American resident of Santa Barbara. An 1840s diseño (claim map) of the ranchoshows the wrecked ship.[18]
The parts of Goleta to the west of Fairview Avenue were inRancho Dos Pueblos, granted in 1842 to Irish immigrant Nicholas Den, son-in-law of Daniel Hill. Rancho Dos Pueblos included the lagoon, airport, UCSB, andIsla Vista, extending to the west as far as the eastern boundary of today'sEl Capitan State Beach.
The Goleta Valley was a prominent lemon-growing region during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and was largely agricultural. Several areas, especially the Ellwood Mesa, were developed foroil andnatural gas extraction. In the 1920s, aviation pioneers started using portions of theGoleta Slough that had silted in due to agriculture to land and takeoff. As formertidelands, the title to these lands was unclear. Starting in 1940, boosters from the city of Santa Barbara lobbied and obtained federal funding and passed a bond measure to formally develop an airport on the Goleta Slough. The necessity for an airport, or at least a military airfield, became more apparent after a Japanese submarine shelled theEllwood Oil Field in 1942. This was one of the few direct-fireattacks on the U.S. continent during WWII. The Marine Corps undertook completion of the airport and establishedMarine Corps Air Station Santa Barbara on the site of the current airport andUniversity of California, Santa Barbara, campus.[19]
After the war, Goleta Valley residents supported the construction ofLake Cachuma, which provided water, enabling a housing boom and the establishment of research and aerospace firms in the area. In 1954, the University of California, Santa Barbara, moved to part of the former Marine base. Along with the boom in aerospace, the character changed from rural-agricultural to high tech. Goleta remains a center for high-tech firms, and abedroom community for neighboring Santa Barbara.
Goleta wasincorporated as a city in 2002 after several unsuccessful attempts. A significant urbanized area remainsunincorporated between the cities of Goleta andSanta Barbara, largely consisting of the area that polled against incorporation prior to the 2002 election (this area was excluded from the city boundaries to facilitate approval of incorporation). Some discussion of annexation of this area (sometimes dubbed "Noleta") by the city of Santa Barbara had arisen.
In addition, the student community ofIsla Vista directly to the south was excluded from the new city of Goleta. Whether or not to include Isla Vista was a subject of debate during incorporation planning, including Goleta residents concerned about impacts on tax revenue and the voting patterns of students.[20] ALocal Agency Formation Commission report supported excluding Isla Vista because of differences in "community identity", but considered both including and excluding Isla Vista to be viable choices.[21][22]
On January 30, 2006, Jennifer San Marcoshot and killed six postal workers,before fatally shooting herself at the postal processing facility where she had previously been employed. This incident is believed to be the deadliest workplace shooting ever carried out in the United States by a woman.[23][24]
Goleta is about 8 miles (13 km) west of the city of Santa Barbara, along the coast (the coast runs east to west in this portion of Southern California). Nearby is the Santa Barbara campus of theUniversity of California and the student community of Isla Vista.
According to theUnited States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 7.9 square miles (20 km2), of which 0.07 sq mi (0.18 km2) (0.91%) is covered by water.[9]
The Goleta Valley is acoastal plain, about 3 mi (4.8 km) across, between theSanta Ynez Mountains, the principal mountain range of southern Santa Barbara County, and thePacific Ocean.[25] It consists of Holocene and Pleistocenealluvium,colluvium, andestuarine deposits, as well asmarine terraces created during interglacial high-sea-level episodes. The area has been subject to rapid geologic uplift, as evidenced by its coastal bluffs and narrow beaches.[25] Between the flattest part of the Goleta Valley and the ocean, an area of uplift parallels the shore, which includes, from west to east, Isla Vista, Mescalitan Island, More Mesa, and the Hope Ranch Hills. The elevation of this block of land relative to Goleta Valley increases from 40 to 300 ft along this length.[26][27] The uplift was caused by motion along the More Ranch Fault, one of the most geologicallyactive faults in the area. The More Ranch Fault roughly follows a line along El Colegio Road, through the southern part of the airport, along Atascadero Creek, and then continues east into Santa Barbara as the Mission Ridge Fault Zone.[28] Soils in Goleta are mostly well-drained, brown, fine, sandy loam of the Milpitas series.[29]
Underneath the alluvial units of the coastal plain are three prominent bedrock units:Monterey Formation,Sisquoc Formation, andSanta Barbara Formation. This last unit is the principal groundwater aquifer for the region, and its freshwater wells are protected from seawater intrusion by the uplift along the More Ranch Fault, which has placed relatively impermeable rock units between the ocean and it.[30]
Some of the underlying sedimentary units contain economically recoverable quantities of oil and gas. The Ellwood Oil Field was worked beginning in the 1920s, with its onshore portions only being dismantled in the 1970s. TheLa Goleta Gas Field was formerly productive on the bluffs west of More Mesa, and is now used for gas storage by the Southern California Gas Company.[31]
The Santa Ynez Mountains form a scenic backdrop to Goleta. They consist of multiple layers of sandstone andconglomerate units dating from theJurassic age to the present, uplifted rapidly since thePliocene. Rapid uplift has given them their craggy, scenic character, and numerous landslides and debris flows, which form some of the urban and suburban lowland area, are testament to their geologically active nature.[27][28] Covered bychaparral, the range exceeds 4,000 feet (1,200 m) in height to the northwest of Goleta, at Broadcast and Santa Ynez Peaks.Sundowner winds occur in both Goleta and Santa Barbara.
Bobcats can also be seen in the area.[32]Coyotes sometimes prey on small domestic pets.[33]Skunks sometimes spray, and often fall prey to cars, owls, dogs, and coyotes.[34]Raccoons can become neighborhood pests.[35]Opossums commonly inhabit neighborhoods.[36] Dogs and cats sometimes kill small animals.Monarch butterflies spend the winter in several eucalyptus groves on the Ellwood Mesa.[37]Bears andmountain lions live in the foothills and mountains around the town, but are rarely seen by residents.[38]
Goleta has amediterranean climate influenced by maritime winds from the Pacific Ocean with moderate average temperatures. Due to brief spells of winds from the interior, the warmest temperature on record is 109 °F (43 °C) and the coldest is 20 °F (−7 °C),[39] a relatively large thermal range for a shoreline town.
Chilly days and warm nights are rare. The coldest maximum temperature on record is 45 °F (7 °C) in 1949 with the annual average between 1991 and 2020 being 54 °F (12 °C).[39] The warmest night measured is a freak event of 81 °F (27 °C) during a heat snap in 1979, a full 10 °F (5.6 °C) warmer than the second-warmest night on record.[39] During a regular year, the warmest night is at a mild 65 °F (18 °C).[39]
Goleta first appeared as acensus designated place in the2000 U.S. census[54] and then as a city in 2001 after incorporation formed from part of deleted Goleta CDP, part of Isla Vista CDP, and additional area.[54]
The census reported that 99.3% of the population lived in households, 0.2% lived in noninstitutionalized group quarters, and 0.5% were institutionalized.[56]
Of its 12,029 households, 30.7% had children under 18, 47.5% were married-couple households, 7.2% werecohabiting-couple households, 25.1% had a female householder with no partner present, and 20.2% had a male householder with no partner present. About 24.0% of households were one person, and 10.2% were one person 65 or older. The average household size was 2.7.[56] There were 7,789families (64.8% of all households).[57]
The age distribution was 19.1% under 18, 11.1% from 18 to 24, 28.1% from 25 to 44, 25.1% fron 45 to 64, and 16.6% who were 65 or older. The median age was 38.2years. For every 100 females, there were 102.2 males.[56]
The 12,643 housing units had an average density of 1,610.0 units per square mile (621.6 units/km2), of which 12,029 (95.1%) were occupied. Of these, 51.4% were owner-occupied, and 48.6% were rented.[56]
In 2023, the US Census Bureau estimated that 22.5% of the population were foreign-born. Of all people 5 or older, 65.1% spoke only English at home, 22.3% spokeSpanish, 4.4% spoke otherIndo-European languages, 7.7% spoke Asian or Pacific Islander languages, and 0.4% spoke other languages. Of those 25 or older, 89.7% were high-school graduates and 48.3% had a bachelor's degree.[58]
The median household income was $118,039, and theper capita income was $52,610. About 5.4% of families and 10.6% of the population were below the poverty line.[59]
At the2010 census Goleta had a population of 29,888. The population density was 3,747.9 inhabitants per square mile (1,447.1/km2). The racial makeup of Goleta was 69.7% White, 1.6% African American, 0.9% Native American, 9.1% Asian, 0.1% Pacific Islander,14.0% from other races, and 4.6% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 32.9%.[60]
The census reported that 29,687 people (99.3% of the population) lived in households, 23 (0.1%) lived in noninstitutionalized group quarters, and 178 (0.6%) were institutionalized.
Of the 10,903 households, 31.3% had children under 18 living in them, 48.3% were opposite-sex married couples living together, 9.8% had a female householder with no husband present, 4.3% had a male householder with no wife present, 6.0% wereunmarried opposite-sex partnerships, and 0.8% weresame-sex married couples or partnerships. About 25.1% of the households were one person and 10.0% had someone living alone who was 65 or older. The average household size was 2.72. With 6,806 families (62.4%), the average family size was 3.23.
The age distribution was 21.2% under 18, 12.7% from 18 to 24, 26.7% from 25 to 44, 25.9% from 45 to 64, and 13.5% who were 65 or older. The median age was 36.5 years. For every 100 females, there were 101.3 males. For every 100 females 18 and over, there were 100.2 males.
The 11,473 housing units had an average density of 1,438.7 per square mile; of the occupied units, 53.6% were owner-occupied and 46.4% were rented. The homeowner vacancy rate was 1.2%; the rental vacancy rate was 4.5%. About 54.3% of the population lived in owner-occupied housing units and 45.1% lived in rental units.
The University of California, Santa Barbara, is the major center of economic activity in the area, both directly and through the numerous associatedservice industry activities that exist for the staff and students.[citation needed] Hispanic Business had its corporate headquarters in Goleta.[61]
Following the statewide passage of Proposition 64 in 2016, the city began accepting retail applications on a first-come, first-served basis in August 2018. The city limits the number of recreational retail cannabis businesses to six. In November 2018, the voters of Goleta passed Measure Z-2018, establishing a tax on cannabis business operations within the city.[63] Amedical marijuana dispensary was issued the first license for sales of recreational cannabis and began selling in January 2020.[64] Companies must be licensed by the local agency and the state to grow, test, or sell cannabis and the city 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 2017, the city established an ambitious goal of supplying 100% of the city's municipal facilities and community-wide electricity supply with renewable power by 2030. The city also resolved to have at least 50% of electricity use by municipal facilities come from renewable sources by 2025. In 2019, the city adopted a strategic energy plan as a roadmap on how to accomplish this, which includes switching toCentral Coast Community Energy as the default energy provider for its residences and businesses beginning in 2021.[65] The city is currently moving forward with a contract to install solar panels in the parking lot of City Hall in 2021 and exploring future opportunities for electric vehicle (EV) charging stations and a microgrid, which will provide increased resiliency in case of a power disruption.[66]
Goleta has several parks, including Stow Park, Girsh Park, Jonny D. Wallis Neighborhood Park, Lake Los Carneros and Coronado Butterfly preserve, the largest[67] overwintering grove of theMonarch butterfly,[68] providing street access to the Ellwood Mesa Open Space[69] on the bluffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean with beach access from UCSB.[70]Goleta Beach County Park is just outside of the city limits.[71] Historic sites include theStow House and theSouth Coast Railroad Museum.
Until 2018, the five city council members took turns as mayor. In November 2018, Paula Perotte was elected to a two-year term as mayor, defeating fellow council member Michael Bennett. This was the first election in city history where residents voted for mayor as opposed to the mayor being selected by city council for a one-year term. The city council also serves as the planning agency. City council, planning commission, and design review board meetings are televised on the localgovernment-access television channel and available on the city's website.
Goleta's cityhood was established through Measure H-2001 in the November 2001 election. At this time, the first five members of the city council were also elected, and they officially began their terms on February 1, 2002. Thereafter, the city has held elections during the November general election in even years. Terms of the city council are four years. Until 2018, the mayor was selected by the members of the city council to serve a one-year term. In November 2016, voters approved Measure C-2016, which called for a directly elected mayor with a term of two years, beginning in the next general election (2018). In November 2020, voters approved Measure O-2020, which changed the term of the mayor from two to four years.[72]
Election year
Name
Position
Term
Votes received
2001
Margaret Connell
City Council (beginning February 1, 2002)
5 years
3,479
2001
Jack Hawxhurst
City Council (beginning February 1, 2002)
5 years
3,443
2001
Cynthia Brock
City Council (beginning February 1, 2002)
5 years
3,279
2001
Jean Blois
City Council (beginning February 1, 2002)
3 years
3,158
2001
Jonny Wallis
City Council (beginning February 1, 2002)
3 years
3,017
2004
Jean Blois
City Council
4 years
7,954
2004
Jonny Wallis
City Council
4 years
5,908
2006
Michael Bennett
City Council
4 years
4,770
2006
Eric Onnen
City Council
4 years
4,714
2006
Roger Aceves
City Council
4 years
4,225
2008
Margaret Connell
City Council
4 years
6,344
2008
Ed Easton
City Council
4 years
5,965
2010
Roger Aceves
City Council
4 years
5,969
2010
Michael Bennett
City Council
4 years
5,515
2010
Paula Perotte
City Council
4 years
4,834
2012
Ed Easton
City Council
4 years (*)
7,138
2012
Jim Farr
City Council
4 years
7,074
2014
Roger Aceves
City Council
4 years
(appointed in lieu of election)
2014
Michael Bennett
City Council
4 years
(appointed in lieu of election)
2014
Paula Perotte
City Council
4 years
(appointed in lieu of election)
2016
Stuart Kasdin
City Council
4 years
6,767
2016
Kyle Richards
City Council
4 years
6,524
2018
Paula Perotte
Mayor
2 years
7,590
2018
James Kyriaco
City Council
4 years
7,729
2018
Roger Aceves
City Council
4 years
6,734
2020
Paula Perotte
Mayor
4 years
9,994
2020
Kyle Richards
City Council
4 years
8,965
2020
Stuart Kasdin
City Council
4 years
8,311
(*) Ed Easton stepped down in 2014, and Tony Vallejo was appointed to fill the remainder of his term.[73]
SeveralSanta Barbara Metropolitan Transit District bus lines run through the city.[78] The main artery of the city is U.S. 101, with the major streets being Hollister Avenue and Cathedral Oaks Road. Other significant streets include Calle Real (which is broken into sections), Storke Road/Glen Annie Road, Los Carneros Road, Fairview Avenue, and Patterson Avenue.[79]
Santa Barbara Airport is adjacent to the City of Goleta, near the intersection of Hollister and South Fairview avenues. The airport serves the greater Santa Barbara area with five airlines connecting to larger hubs.
Jean Louise Hodgkins (1914–1987) andVera B. Skubic (1921–1998) built two houses in Del Playa Drive that, with a third one, were historic evidence of the mid-20th century international style presented by architect Richard B. Taylor.
Kent McClard, owner and operator of Ebullition Records (a hardcore-punk record label) and former publisher ofHeartattaCk, an internationally distributed punk zine
^abNorris, Robert M. (2003).The geology and landscape of Santa Barbara County, California. Santa Barbara, California: Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. p. 33.ISBN978-0-936494-35-7.