Infrastructure & Public Works: The Cost of Deferred Maintenance
How 52 counties documented aging roads, water systems, and crumbling public facilities
Generated 2026-07-05 from grand jury data through that date.
Key Findings at a Glance
California's infrastructure is aging, underfunded, and falling behind. Grand juries across 52 counties have produced 1,629 infrastructure findings and 3,533 recommendations from 954 reports. An additional 2,315 findings address water and sewer systems, and 1,369 findings document road and bridge conditions. Together, they reveal a state where deferred maintenance has become the default.
The Deferred Maintenance Crisis
Infrastructure findings have grown steadily as California's built environment ages. 232 findings specifically cite deferred maintenance or aging infrastructure as a concern.
Rates based on digitized reports; coverage incomplete before 2005.
Findings by Era
| Era | Findings | Rate/100 | Counties | Avg/Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000-2010 | 369 | 4.5 | 35 | 34 |
| 2011-2017 | 368 | 4.7 | 35 | 53 |
| 2018-present | 878 | 12.3 | 41 | 110 |
The post-2008 economic collapse created a structural break: counties deferred maintenance during the recession and have never caught up. The result is a growing backlog that becomes more expensive to address with each passing year.
What Grand Juries Are Finding
The 1,629 infrastructure findings reveal consistent themes across 52 counties:
- Deferred maintenance compounding: 232 findings document how deferring routine maintenance accelerates deterioration and multiplies eventual repair costs. A $10,000 fix becomes a $100,000 replacement when deferred a decade.
- Revenue-need mismatch: Flat property tax revenues and declining gas tax receipts cannot keep pace with the cost of maintaining aging systems. Infrastructure designed for the 1960s-1970s population is serving a state that has more than doubled.
- No capital planning: Many agencies lack long-term capital improvement plans, responding to failures reactively rather than maintaining proactively.
- Climate adaptation lag: Sea level rise, drought, and extreme heat are creating new infrastructure demands that existing systems were not designed for, and adaptation projects take a decade or more to plan and build.
- Outdated records: Some agencies lack current maps or inventories of their own infrastructure, making damage assessment and maintenance planning impossible.
Water & Sewer Systems
2,315 findings address water systems, sewer infrastructure, and wastewater treatment. These are among the most consequential infrastructure findings because they directly affect public health:
- Water quality failures: Small water districts serving rural communities cannot meet state drinking water standards, exposing residents to contamination risk
- Aging pipes: Water and sewer mains installed in the mid-20th century are reaching or exceeding their design life, leading to breaks, leaks, and infiltration
- Grant dependency: Smaller systems can only fund upgrades through competitive grants, creating a cycle of deferred maintenance punctuated by occasional windfalls
- Governance transitions: Deferred maintenance in small districts sometimes forces absorption by larger providers, eliminating local control
Roads & Bridges
1,369 findings document road conditions, bridge safety, and transportation infrastructure maintenance:
- Pavement condition: Counties with PCI (Pavement Condition Index) scores below 40 face roads so degraded that rehabilitation costs far exceed what routine maintenance would have required
- Reactive maintenance: Some agencies spend 85% of their road maintenance budget on reactive repairs (potholes, emergency fixes) and only 15% on preventive maintenance, guaranteeing continued deterioration
- Equity gaps: Road quality varies dramatically between districts within the same county, creating unequal service for taxpayers paying the same rates
Top Counties by Finding Volume
| County | Findings | |
|---|---|---|
| Santa Cruz | 186 | |
| Orange | 139 | |
| Contra Costa | 125 | |
| Marin | 113 | |
| Los Angeles | 87 | |
| Sacramento | 68 | |
| San Francisco | 61 | |
| Riverside | 60 | |
| Ventura | 60 | |
| Sonoma | 59 |
What Grand Juries Recommend
The 3,533 infrastructure recommendations focus on planning, funding, and accountability:
- Capital improvement plans: Develop and maintain long-term infrastructure plans with prioritized projects, cost estimates, and funding sources
- Deferred maintenance funding: Establish dedicated funds for deferred maintenance, not dependent on general fund surpluses
- Performance metrics: Track and publicly report infrastructure condition scores, response times, and repair backlogs
- Asset management: Create and maintain current inventories and maps of all infrastructure assets
- Right-sizing: When full replacement is unaffordable, consider downsizing project scope to match available funding
Then and Now: A Familiar Pattern
Infrastructure concerns are among the oldest in the grand jury record. Early findings show the same themes that dominate today:
San Diego's 2007 finding about housing developments built without supporting transportation infrastructure remains one of the most consequential patterns in California governance: growth generates revenue but creates infrastructure obligations that outlast the political tenure of those who approved it.
Counties Reporting
Infrastructure findings have been documented in 52 counties:
State Oversight Context
California's state-level oversight bodies — catalogued at caoversight.org — have also examined this topic. The 19 reports below, from Local Agency Formation Commission, Legislative Analyst's Office, Little Hoover Commission, and State Controller's Office, provide the broader policy context within which county grand juries operate.
Local Agency Formation Commission (5 reports)
- Orange County Water District (2021)
- CSA 9 Public Works (2020)
- Seeley County Water District Service Area Plan (2018) — SEELEY COUNTY WATER DISTRICT SERVICE AREA PLAN Prepared By: Seeley County Water District 1898 Main Street Seeley, CA.
- Winterhaven County Water District Service Area Plan (2016)
- Bard Water District Service Area Plan (2016)
Legislative Analyst's Office (7 reports)
- Building California’s Behavioral Health Infrastructure: Progress Update and Opportunities for the Proposition 1 Bond (2025)
- New Infrastructure Legislation: Summary and Issues for Legislative Oversight (2023) — New Infrastructure Legislation: Summary and Issues for Legislative Oversight Translate Our Website This Google ™ translation feature provided on the Legislative Analyst's Office (LAO) website is for informational purposes only.
- The Definition of Qualified Capital Outlay for the State Appropriations Limit (2022) — The Definition of Qualified Capital Outlay for the State Appropriations Limit Translate Our Website This Google ™ translation feature provided on the Legislative Analyst's Office (LAO) website is for informational purposes only.
- Debt Service on Infrastructure Bonds (2017) — Debt Service on Infrastructure Bonds Translate Our Website This Google ™ translation feature provided on the Legislative Analyst's Office (LAO) website is for informational purposes only.
- Capital Outlay Support Budget Request (2016) — May 15, 2016 L E G I S L A T I V E A N A L Y S T ’ S O F F I C E 2016-17 Capital Outlay Support Budget Request YEARS OF SERVICE May 15, 2016 Background Capital Outlay Support (COS) Is Required on Capital Projects.
- ... and 2 additional reports
Little Hoover Commission (3 reports)
- California Election Infrastructure: Making a Good System Better (Report #259, 2021)
- Building California: Infrastructure Choices and Strategy (Report #199, 2010)
- The California State Highway Commission and its Relationship to the State Transportation Agency, the Department of Public Works and Division of Highways (Report #11, 1966) — --- Page 1 --- STATE OF CALIFORNIA EDMUND G. BROWN, Governor COMMISSION ON CALIFORNIA STATE GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATION AND ECONOMY 11th & L Building, Suite 550 Sacramento 95814 Chairman HAROLD FURST Borkeley Vice Chairman MILTON MARKS Assemblyman, San Francisco December 28, 1966 GEORGE E.
State Controller's Office (4 reports)
- Santa Clara Valley Water District (2022) — SANTA CLARA VALLEY WATER DISTRICT Audit Report FLOOD CONTROL SUBVENTIONS PROGRAM Upper Guadalupe River and Upper Llagas Creek Watershed Projects July 1, 2014, through December 31, 2019 BETTY T.
- West Valley Water District Internal Accounting Controls (2020) — WEST VALLEY WATER DISTRICT Review Report INTERNAL CONTROL SYSTEM July 1, 2016, through June 30, 2018 BETTY T.
- Santa Clara Valley Water District (2016) — SANTA CLARA VALLEY WATER DISTRICT Audit Report FLOOD CONTROL SUBVENTIONS PROGRAM Upper Guadalupe River Flood Control Project July 1, 2011, through February 19, 2013 BETTY T.
- Santa Clara Valley Water District (2016) — SANTA CLARA VALLEY WATER DISTRICT Audit Report FLOOD CONTROL SUBVENTIONS PROGRAM Upper Guadalupe River, Guadalupe River, Upper Llagas Creek Watershed, and Lower Silver Creek Watershed Flood Control Projects December 6, 2012, through October 29, 2014 BETTY T.
These state oversight reports examine many of the same issues from a statewide policy perspective, complementing the county-level ground truth documented by civil grand juries.
Methodology
This report analyzes 1,629 findings and 3,533 recommendations from 954 reports across 52 counties. Findings were identified by matching on "infrastructure." Water/sewer findings (2,315) matched on water system, water district, wastewater, or sewer. Road findings (1,369) matched on road+maintenance, bridge, or pothole.
All data is sourced from publicly available grand jury final reports. Quotes were editorially curated for specificity and county diversity.
View source reports behind this analysis
This report was generated during our development preview. For a copy of a completed report, contact cgj@ungovr.org.