Environmental group, Irvine Co. work out pollution prevention plan
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Paul Clinton
CRYSTAL COVE -- The Irvine Co. and a Newport Beach environmental group
agreed Thursday to a plan they say will reduce harmful urban runoff into
Crystal Cove.
The deal was struck after months of talks between Orange County
CoastKeeper and the developer -- which is building a 635-home project on
the ridge above Coast Highway.
The Irvine Co. was one of several parties named in a cease-and-desist
order, aimed at reducing pollution into the cove, that was issued by the
Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board in November.
“I am very pleased that CoastKeeper and the Irvine Co. have been able
to work together to develop this plan,” CoastKeeper Executive Director
Garry Brown said in a statement. “It is cutting-edge for the building
industry and for coastal protection, and could serve as a model for other
coastal areas.”
During the 10-year term of the agreement, the Irvine Co. has agreed to
a four-point plan that would improve water quality. Some of the measures
are to:
* install expanded catch basins to capture and filter the first 0.75
inches of rainfall;
* build a system that would divert runoff not caused by storms into
public sewers for treatment;
* do specific grading to reduce the flow of sediment into storm
drains;
* use what’s called a “treatment train” that includes vacuum street
sweepers and storm-drain filters.
The improvements are expected to cost several million dollars.
The Irvine Co. assembled the plan in response to several factors --
threats from Brown to sue the developer, the water board’s order and
inquiries from the California Coastal Commission about the adequacy of
the company’s drainage plan.
“The preservation of environmental quality is one of the cornerstones
of a community’s quality of life,” company Vice President Monica Florian
said in a statement. “The extraordinary water-quality features integrated
in the Crystal Cove project will [help to protect] the unique coastal
area of Crystal Cove.”
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