New study may expose source of pollution
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Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- The results of an environmental study to be released
Tuesday should help the city address some of its runoff-related pollution
concerns, city officials said.
The study was conducted by the Southern California Coastal Water
Research Project, a public research group whose board members are drawn
from city, county, state and federal agencies. The group has been looking
at nine spots in Newport Beach where levels of bacteria are frequently
high.
And though Rachel Noble, a research scientist with the project, said
she could not yet reveal specific details of the report, she said the
results would likely provide an important key to the pollution-fighting
effort: hard data on whether the contamination in the city’s trouble
spots comes from human or animal sources.
“This is like a pilot study, a quick snapshot of what’s out there,”
Noble said.
But it’s a more detailed analysis of the nature of Newport Beach
pollution than has so far been available.
The study is the outgrowth of a project that originally had focused on
matching DNA samples from local waters against samples of DNA from human
and animal sources.
But after a meeting in May to discuss the study design, city and
county officials concluded that a different approach would be more likely
to provide useful information.
“This is what it’s morphed into,” said Newport Beach Deputy City
Manager Dave Kiff: a project that tests water samples for the presence of
human-specific viruses.
If those viruses show up, Noble said, researchers can be nearly
certain that human waste is contributing to contamination problems in a
given area.
Three sites in Newport Beach -- 43rd Street on the bay side of the
peninsula, the Harbor Marina area near The Arches and the 33rd Street
channel between 33rd and 37th streets -- sport long-term advisories about
bacteria levels. Spots at the north end of the Dunes resort, Bayshore
Beach and 38th Street have short-term postings about bacteria.
Some of these sites, such as 43rd Street, always receive the lowest
possible score on a weekly beach report card issued by the Santa
Monica-based environmental group Heal the Bay.
City officials believe urban runoff may be the culprit in some of
these spots, but it so far been impossible to tell whether the pollution
carries human waste or if it comes from other sources, such as animal
waste.
With the results of the new study in hand, Kiff said, the city may
come closer to solving that problem.
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