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The bids are in and Pascal & Ludwig Constructors will soon begin work
on area flood channels to divert urban runoff through the Orange County
Sanitation District before it goes into the ocean.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors awarded a bid of $2 million to
Pascal & Ludwig at its meeting last week for the company to begin
construction of pumps and inflatable rubber dams at three locations: the
Huntington Beach Pump Station, the Talbert Channel and the Santa Ana
River Channel.
Pumps will redirect 95% of the contaminated dry season runoff from the
Talbert and Lower Santa Ana River watersheds to the sanitation district’s
waste-water treatment facility in Fountain Valley before the water is
sent into the ocean.
The contaminated runoff comes from waste oils, animal waste and other
chemicals that are nutrients for bacteria.
The Talbert Channel will have an inflatable rubber dam that lies flat
across the bottom when rain is forecast allowing rainwater to flow over
the dam easily, but when no rain is forecast, it will inflate to three-
or four-feet high.
This dam will catch the urban runoff, which comes from people washing
their cars or watering their lawns, and redirect it to the sanitation
district.
Construction will begin as soon as all the materials are ready.
“I met with the contractor [a week ago] to develop delivery schedules
because there’s a lot of items involved for these inflatable dams, pumps
and valves,” said county engineer Dave Marshall, the construction
department manager for the Public Facilities and Resource Department.The
project is to be completed by May 20.
“We’re hoping to have it done and operational by that time so the
county avoids the necessity next year of installing temporary measures,”
Marshall said.
The project will be funded using state grant money from Propositions
12 and 13 the Clean Beaches Initiative said Bob Wilson, interim watershed
manager for the Public Facilities and Resource Department.
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