Not again!
- Share via
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Another nasty wave of contamination fouled the ocean
this week, renewing concerns about Surf City’s reputation for fun in the
sun.
“I think everybody’s worried,” said Joyce Riddell, president of the
Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce. “Everybody wants to have a safe and
clean beach.”
Recent water-quality tests have been disappointing.
For only six days since April has the entire 8 1/2-mile stretch of the
local shore been considered safe for swimming. The rest of the time,
health officials have either closed parts of the ocean waters or posted
warnings recommending that swimmers stay away because of high levels of
disease-causing bacteria, said Monica Mazur, a biologist for the Orange
County Health Care Agency.
The latest mess came Tuesday from a broken pipeline in Costa Mesa that
dumped between 3,000 and 5,000 gallons of raw sewage off the coast.
The spill affects a 1,000-foot stretch of Huntington State Beach, from
the Talbert flood control channel to the Santa Ana River, and it will be
closed to swimming until at least this afternoon, Mazur said.
Aside from the sewage contamination, another 5,500-foot stretch of water
farther north along the state beach is plagued with enough pollution that
officials suggest avoiding the area up to Magnolia Street, she said.
To help determine what is causing this mysterious contamination,
researchers performed another dye test Wednesday. Similar to last week’s
experiment, they released 22 gallons of nontoxic coloring to help track
water currents flowing into the state beach from the flood control
channel and the Santa Ana River.
The state beach was where alarmingly high levels of bacteria were first
detected in July. The bacteria then spread up the coast. At its worst,
the pollution forced health officials to block off four miles of
shoreline during the peak tourist season.
The precise cause -- or causes -- of the contamination remains a mystery,
but experts suspect a factor may be urban runoff, untreated waste water
that flows from lawns and streets into storm drains before being dumped
into the ocean.
The city has spent more than $1 million so far trying to pinpoint the
source of the problem.
With summer beginning next month, merchants are losing patience.
“If I don’t get the tourists, I might as well close up and go home,” said
Michael Ali, who owns the concession store Zack’s Pier Plaza.
Eldon Bagstad, owner of the popular El Don liquor store, said he lost 50%
of his business during last summer’s closures. He recalled how bleak the
shoreline looked.
“You could shoot a cannon across the beach and not hit anybody,” Bagstad
said.
If the problem isn’t solved quickly, he expects tourists to again go
elsewhere.
“They’ll avoid Huntington Beach like the plague,” Bagstad said.
Resident Phil Carrillo, 33, enjoys surfing by the pier, but if he is not
allowed to throw spray here, he’ll go to Newport Beach, he said.
“You just go somewhere else, you know?” he said. “The ocean’s pretty
big.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.