Beaches still closed after sewage spill
Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- The water from Orange Street to Talbert Channel in
Huntington Beach remained closed Wednesday in the wake of Tuesday’s
5,000-gallon sewage spill.
County officials will reopen the beaches when tests indicate it is safe
to do so, said Larry Honeybourne, program chief of the Orange County
Health Care Agency’s water quality division.
“We need a couple consecutive days of clean samples before we reopen the
beach,” he said.
The sewage flowed into the ocean early Tuesday morning after a pipe broke
at an Orange County Sanitation District pump house in Costa Mesa. The
smelly contents of the pipe gushed into storm drains and traveled to the
sea through the Greenville Banning Channel, which runs parallel to the
Santa Ana River.
Michelle Tuchman, a spokeswoman for the sanitation district, said the
district maintains a regular program of preventive maintenance to prevent
such ruptures.
The pipe that broke, she said, was about 30 years old.
“Those pipes were scheduled to be replaced within the next couple of
years,” she noted.
Though the sewage made for smelly area beaches, Honeybourne noted that
such spills are not considered to be the culprit in the kind of long-term
contamination that plagued Huntington Beach last year.
The source of that problem is suspected to be related to urban runoff:
the brew of pesticides, fertilizers, animal droppings and oil residue
that flows into the ocean daily via storm drains.
“There’s been some degree of mixing of apples and oranges” in the
discussion of Tuesday’s spill, because of confusion about the different
sources of contamination, Honeybourne said.
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