Too much trash finding safe harbor, report says
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Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- Too much trash is flowing into Newport Harbor and other
Orange County harbors despite efforts to contain the problem, according
to a report released today by the Orange County Grand Jury.
The report, the result of six months of work by the grand jury’s
environmental and transportation committee, is an assessment of the way
strong rains sweep garbage through flood control channels, polluting
downstream areas like Newport, Huntington Beach and Dana Point.
Karen Evarts, a committee member and Newport Beach resident who
coauthored the report, said she thinks the findings of the study may be
“a wake-up call” for Orange County cities.
“Flood control channels don’t know any boundaries,” she said. “They don’t
know city boundaries, or county boundaries.”
The large scale of such flood channels, Evarts said, means that broad
thinking is required to deal with them.
“We came to feel that there’s really a need for a multi-jurisdictional
effort to come up with solutions,” she said.
The study focuses on the way “first flush” rains that come at the
beginning of the wet season bring waste into harbors. It lists several
findings and recommendations, including the following:
* There are too many inadequately filtered storm drains in coastal
cities.
* There is no “goal-driven” program, except in Dana Point, to retrofit
older storm drains to make them more effective at filtering waste.
* Trash makes up “most” of the large-scale pollution in county harbors.
Newport Beach is legally required to respond in writing within two to
three months to many of these points, Evarts said.
While some of the jury’s conclusions struck Deputy City Manager Dave Kiff
as quite reasonable, he said the report didn’t seem to give the city
enough credit in certain respects.
“I think we’re doing more than they think we are,” he said.
In particular, he noted that the city has a number of storm drain
filtration systems in areas like Cannery Village and near Fashion Island.
The city also uses filtration devices like the Boudreaux Boom that
strings across the mouth of the Delhi Channel to skim garbage from storm
flow before it enters the bay.
Local water quality advocate Jack Skinner said he was intrigued by the
emphasis on storm drains in the report.
“I thought their suggestions were very good suggestions, but the problem
is a daunting one,” he said.
While Skinner said he felt filtering systems would certainly be useful,
he noted that it is common practice for pedestrians in inland cities to
dump waste directly into storm channels.
“The drains themselves would not be as much as a help for that type of
trash,” he said. “[Waste] doesn’t have a chance to get caught in the
storm drains lining the streets.”
Evarts said these types of responses are acceptable, from the jury’s
point of view.
“[Cities] can say, ‘We don’t agree [with the report],’ ” she noted.
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