Lompoc voters came up short at the polls for a special road repair tax

Lompoc Tax Measure Falls Short Despite Critical Infrastructure Needs
Lompoc voters decisively rejected a special half-cent sales tax measure designed to generate $3.75 million annually for street and sidewalk repairs, with only 46.87% voting in favor when the measure needed two-thirds approval to pass.
The failure of Measure B2026 leaves the city without additional revenue to address what officials estimate is a $70 million backlog in deferred street maintenance, highlighting the challenge small Central Coast cities face in funding basic infrastructure.
The Tax Would Have Raised Sales Tax to State Maximum
The defeated measure would have increased Lompoc's sales tax from 8.75% to 9.25% — California's current maximum rate. The tax was designed to last 15 years and fund only street, road, alley, and sidewalk maintenance.
The Santa Maria Sun reported that the city spent roughly $60,000 to place the measure on the June primary ballot, money that cannot be recovered despite the measure's failure.
The tax would have generated revenue exclusively for Lompoc, with funds staying local rather than being distributed county-wide based on population — a key selling point for supporters who worried about losing control to Santa Barbara County.
Council Member Warned of High Threshold
City Councilmember Jeremy Ball, who opposed the special tax from the beginning, had advocated for a general tax that would only need 50% plus one vote to pass. Ball told the Santa Maria Sun he "wasn't surprised to see the measure failing" and worried about restricting funds to just one purpose.
"I thought it was going to be hard to pass, which it ultimately proved to be," Ball said. "I also was stressed about when we raise taxes, but we only allow it to be spent on one thing. If something else goes wrong, we're just out of luck."
After the measure's defeat, Ball attempted to get a general tax measure on the November ballot during the June 2 City Council meeting. However, his proposal failed in a 3-2 vote, with Mayor Jim Mosby and Councilmembers Victor Vega and Steve Bridge opposing it.
What This Means for Santa Maria and Regional Infrastructure
The failure highlights broader challenges facing Central Coast cities in maintaining aging infrastructure amid limited revenue sources. For Santa Maria residents, Lompoc's struggles mirror regional patterns where cities compete for limited tax capacity while addressing mounting infrastructure needs.
The defeat also removes potential pressure on Santa Barbara County to pursue its own sales tax increase. County officials had previously discussed a sales tax for unincorporated areas but took no action, leaving that half-cent of tax capacity still available.
Next Steps Uncertain as Needs Remain
With no November ballot measure approved and the June effort exhausted, Lompoc faces an uncertain path forward for addressing its deteriorating streets. The city's Pavement Condition Index continues declining while construction costs rise.
Ball expressed disappointment but warned that the county might eventually claim that remaining tax capacity. "I'm disappointed because I feel like Lompoc does need the revenue," he told the Sun. "Eventually the county will probably go and take that from us."
For now, Lompoc will continue operating with reduced street maintenance capacity, having cut its pothole crew by 50% in 2012 due to budget constraints. The city focuses remaining resources on major arterials like V Street and Central Avenue while residential streets continue deteriorating.
Reported by 805.life
Researched and written drawing on primary sources. Additional reporting: Santa Maria Sun.
City
Santa MariaAdditional Reporting
Santa Maria SunPublished
June 11, 2026
Reported and written by 805.life
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