They have been the focus of increased scrutiny for their role in a 2010 sewage spill at the Oceano treatment plant, but as of November, the Wallace Group will no longer be the Oceano Community Services Districtās engineer.
On Oct. 15, John Wallace sent a letter to the Oceano Community Services District Board of Directors announcing his resignation.
Ā āWe truly appreciate the opportunity that you have given the Wallace Group over the past five years to act as District Engineer for the Districtās day to day engineering needs as well as provide consulting engineering and permitting services for various capital projects,ā Wallace wrote.
Wallace noted that the primary engineer assigned to those duties in Oceano recently left his firm to āpursue a new career opportunity.ā
āWe take our responsibility to the District very seriously and to that end we have temporarily assigned another engineer, Steve Tanaka, to assist me in handling day to day engineering needs of the District,ā he added. āGiven my very active role within our organization and Steveās existing workload, it will be increasingly more difficult for us to personally provide the time needed to provide the high level of service that the District deserves.ā
The Wallace Groupās resignation is effective Oct. 31.
Oceano CSD President Matthew Guerrero confirmed Wallaceās resignation to New Times on Oct. 30. The next district board of directors meeting is not scheduled until Nov. 14, and it was not immediately clear how the resignation would effect district operations, nor what the districtās next step would be.
Wallace did, however, offer his services in assisting in the districtās transition while the board and the general manager secure a replacement district engineer.
Though Wallace said his company must āregrettably resignā from the position as district engineer, some people familiar with the situation told New Times on condition of anonymity that the timing of the move was beyond coincidental, considering recent questions over the 2010 spill and allegations of conflicts of interest.
In early October, water quality officials levied a $1.1 million fine against the company for ānegligent behaviorā and a lack of proper maintenance leading up to the devastating raw sewage spill at the Oceano treatment plant in 2010.
Also that year, the San Luis Obispo County grand jury took Wallace to task for a perceived conflict of interest regarding his dual roles as district administrator for the South County Sanitation District, which collects and treats sewage from residences and businesses in Arroyo Grande, Grover Beach, and Oceano. The Wallace Group provides most of the districtās engineering services.
Wallace could not be reached for comment as of this posting.
āI have very much enjoyed our tenure with the district since 2007 and commend the leadership the Board and your management have shown in leading the district to achieve new goals, with well-deserved recognition from the community and the county,ā Wallace wrote to the Oceano CSD.
āI personally wish you, the board, and your staff the best and know that OCSD is well on its way to even greater success.ā
This article appears in Oct 26 – Nov 2, 2012.

