Testing the waters
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT BEACH - She didn’t want to believe that the waters she swam in
were polluted. The beaches would, after all, be closed if they were
polluted, Miranda Young thought.
So for her sixth-grade science project for the Pegasus School in
Huntington Beach, 12-year-old Miranda set out to prove her hypothesis --
that the beaches in Newport Beach are not polluted.
But when the Newport Beach resident tested the water in four different
spots, she found that one popular area was in fact contaminated.
“[Tests] told me that Little Corona was polluted and I tested the
water right here where it runs into the ocean and the tide pools,”
Miranda said as she crouched down by water running into the tidal area.
“So it could be killing the creatures or animals in the tide pools.”
In order to conduct her science project Miranda needed to be able to
test the water for pollution.
She and her mother, Jody, contacted the Surfrider Foundation and the
Idex laboratories, which makes water testing kits.
She used the kits to test the waters from one end of Newport to the
other, staring with the Santa Ana River Jetty, then the Newport Pier, The
Wedge and finally at Little Corona.
“I tested each site four times,” she said. “The first day it had just
rained and I took a sample of all four. The Santa Ana River Jetty was
polluted and Little Corona was polluted -- all the others were clean.”
When Miranda did her second, third and fourth tests, the River Jetty,
the pier and The Wedge tested clean of the water bacteria, coliform, and
all four sites tested clean of E-coli.
But each time when she added colisure powder to the water samples
taken from Little Corona, to test for coliform, it turned red, indicating
contamination.
“I wouldn’t want to swim here,” the young scientist said.
Miranda determined that the problem at Little Corona was urban runoff,
which trickles down to the beach.
Surface runoff is essentially the water that cascades from homes and
streets into tide pools, beachfronts and harbors. It contains anything
from animal waste, to spilled oil and fuel from cars, to litter from the
streets.
“It’s really sad that this is supposed to be the big marine center and
they have this going right into it,” said Jody Young, Miranda’s mother,
who also grew up in Newport Beach.
While Miranda’s findings disproved her hypothesis, the pollution at
Little Corona is not news to everyone.
Nancy Gardener, a member of the city’s harbor quality citizens
advisory committee who is active in the Newport Beach chapter of the
Surfrider Foundation, has been working with others to preserve the beach.
“If she had a big budget and could have tested for other things, she
might have found nitrates or heavy metals from brakes on cars,” Gardner
said. “What she found was an indication of a problem -- a problem we know
about. It must have been interesting to find firsthand.”
There are two possible solutions being considered right now, Gardner
said.
The first is a mobile filtration system that the city is testing,
which would suck the surface water up and pump it back as cleansed
drinking water.
The second option, since reclaimed water tends to be such a
controversial issue, she said, was the creation of ponds in the canyon
above Little Corona that would catch and naturally clean the runoff by
way of plant life.
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