NEWS ANALYSIS -- Will sewer debacle have trickle-down effect?
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Like all communities, Surf City has its share of
problems and its sewer system is one of them.
The Downtown and Old Town sewers are fixed, the city’s moving forward
with a sewer fee to fund the system’s maintenance and operation and
initial tests of ground water where sewage leaked from broken pipes in
the 1990s turned up no sign of contamination.
But some city officials are concerned that other communities facing
similar infrastructure challenges, like that of Huntington Beach, could
be affected by the city’s experience.
“If you do your job and go look for a problem, only to be charged with
some kind of crime, I think it has a chilling effect on encouraging
managers and employees who are responsible for these systems in other
cities,” said Rich Barnard, the city’s spokesman, referring to the recent
misdemeanor charges incurred by the city. “We bought a television truck
to find the problem and took action to correct it, though it may have
taken some time to get the money together.”
Michael Gold, assistant director for the Orange County division of the
League of California Cities disagreed.
“I think, if anything, it would have the opposite effect and encourage
cities to look into any possible sewer problems,” Gold said, adding that
it was a lack of funding that compacted Surf City’s difficulties.
“There’s a statewide deficit of about $14 billion for the regular repair
of sewers and roads in California cities and counties, and that’s a
result of inadequate funds.”
Woes over the Downtown and Old Town sewer lines began in 1996, when
city officials suspecting problems, used a video camera to detect breaks
in subterranean pipes. Since then, the city has spent more than $2
million on repairs.
Meanwhile, some residents said they weren’t aware of the scope of the
problem the city was faced with.
“I was surprised at the amount of leaks in the sewer pipes,” said Dean
Albright, who also sat on the Citizen’s Infrastructure Advisory Committee
and toured the ailing pipelines a few years ago. “There were places where
the clay pipes were gone altogether.”
The slip-lining process, Albright added, where material is run through
the pipes and heated to seal all leaks and essentially form a new, inner
pipe, was one of the cleverest things he’s seen the city do and probably
saved a lot of money.
“I think the city has been very above-board and proactive on this,”
said resident Dick Harlow, chairman of the citizen’s committee. “That’s
why it formed our committee in the first place, and the only crime I can
see is the waste of tax dollars on the behalf of the district attorney’s
office in bringing the city to court and making it defend itself.”
The committee unanimously supported a fee for the sewer system in
1996, and is behind the one currently under development, so long as the
money is only used for the waste water system.
Diane Baker, executive director of the Huntington Beach Conference &
Visitors Bureau, said the sewer debacle is unlikely to seriously affect
the city’s image.
“Visitors don’t read the day-to-day news, and are generally only
worried about the beaches,” she said. “But I think the message that this
city is working to keep itself safe and clean for its visitors and
residents is clear.”
There have been some misconceptions, such as the amount of sewage that
escaped from broken pipes and comments that the leaks were connected to
ocean pollution, that simply aren’t true, Barnard said.
City officials have said there is no way to tell exactly how much or
how little waste water flowed from the Downtown and Old Town pipes before
the leaks were sealed, and evidence from recent ground water tests for
contamination have come up empty, supporting past studies that the sewer
system is not a contributor to ocean pollution.
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