Mixed reviews on bay watershed meeting
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Noaki Schwartz
IRVINE -- The public meeting on the environmental health of Upper Newport
Bay and San Diego Creek held on Tuesday was said to be interesting -- by
those who were actually able to find the Irvine Ranch Water District and
slip a question into the agenda.
“It’s a very difficult place to find. I would say my issues are that the
meeting wasn’t long enough to cover the issue,” said Bob Caustin,
president of Defend the Bay, adding that the two-hour time frame was
unrealistic for the roughly 60 members of the public who wanted to speak.
The meeting was the first step in a two-year, $2.3 million study by
county representatives and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on the
environmental condition of Upper Newport Bay and the San Diego Creek.
Organizers hoped to gather information and suggestions from the public.
Part of the reason for the time crunch was that the county added a
related study into the meeting, thereby having two public meetings in
one. In addition to the watershed feasibility study, officials also
presented the study on the toxicity of the Newport Bay watershed.
“The whole topic didn’t belong at all on the agenda. It was too
technical,” Caustin said.
One of the major issues outlined in the first study to improving the
condition of Upper Newport Bay and San Diego Creek is the increasing
urbanization surrounding these areas. Undeveloped open space acts as a
natural filter for pollutants and sediment prior to reaching the creek
and the bay.
Another issue was the increase in erosion, which leads to algae in the
water and hinders the public’s recreational use of the bay.
The other study revolved around assessing the toxicity levels of the
Upper Newport Bay watershed. The study examined the toxicity of animal
life, the accumulation of pesticides, the toxicity of sediment, and so
on.
“I thought it went pretty smoothly -- people gave us other ideas,” said
U.S. Army Corps Civil Engineer Jack Shea, who presented the watershed
study. He said community members can write to him about organizing
another meeting.
FYI
For more information, write to:
Jack Shea, civil engineer/study manager
Planning Division, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
911 Wilshire Blvd., Room 1430
Los Angeles, CA 90017
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