Sanitation district to test ocean water
Malik Tariq
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- The Orange County Sanitation District hopes to
conduct an extensive series of tests this summer to determine whether
partially treated waste water, dumped more than four miles offshore, is
making its way back to city beaches.
The district’s technical advisory committee, made up of sanitation
officials, microbiologists, oceanographers and environmentalists, drafted
up plans for seven studies of the ocean water surrounding its sewage
outfall pipe, with the first to start in May.
District spokeswoman Lisa Lawson said that copies of the draft survey
plan will be sent out to committee members on April 13, with a meeting
for further discussion set for April 20.
Committee members initially met last month to help test a theory put
forth by UC Irvine scientists stating that bacteria levels found in local
beach waters in 1999 may have been the result of partially treated sewage
creeping back to shore due to the powerhouse AES Huntington Beach LLC’s
cooling water system, which pumps about 88,000 gallons of heated seawater
into the ocean each minute. The district expels about 240-million gallons
of partially treated waste water per day.
“We’re working hand in hand with the sanitation district on this,”
said Han Tan, an engineer with AES who sits on the committee. “Like the
district, we’re deeply entrenched in this study, and will help provide
people, boats and other things needed during testing.”
The draft proposal calls for five surveys, one each month, between May
and September, with additional studies in June and September, committee
officials said.
Each study will be as extensive as the survey conducted on beach water
contamination in 1999. Beach water samples will be taken every hour for
48 hours in each study, with boats collecting sediment and ocean water at
various depths.
“We’ll also have in place a number of buoys to determine the direction
of ocean currents, their speed and temperature, which will be recorded in
small attached computers,” said Bob Ghirelli, committee chair and
director of technical services for the district.
“In essence we’re trying to connect the dots from offshore to the
beach,” Ghirelli said of the bacteria study. “If they connect, then we
have to see what we can do about it.”
District officials have budgeted about $1 million for the summer
surveys, though they expect to spend up to $2.5 million on the project.
Additional state and federal funds are being sought, and the district may
be able to make up any shortfall left over, they added.
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