Briefly in the news
A half-mile stretch of Orange County coastline was reopened Monday to
swimmers and all ocean contact sports four days after it was closed due
to a sewage spill.
The Newport Slough in Newport Beach where the spill occurred remains
closed.
The Orange County Health Care Agency had to close the half-mile
stretch from Highland Street in Newport Beach north to the Talbert
Channel in Huntington State Beach and the slough Thursday after an Orange
County Sanitation District sewer pipe cracked, releasing 50,000 gallons
of raw sewage.
The sanitation district was able to contain about 40,000 gallons of
sewage in a dirt berm by the slough, but 5,000 to 10,000 gallons of
sewage flowed into the nearby Santa Ana River channel, and eventually
into the ocean, said district spokeswoman Lisa Murphy.
The spill occurred between 8 and 9 a.m. Thursday, when a 30-inch wide
pipe burst at the district’s Bitter Point Pump Station near Cappy’s
Restaurant in Newport Beach, Murphy said. The Health Care Agency closed
the stretch of beach within two or three hours of the pipe erupting.
The spill occurred at high tide, on the day of the lowest tide of the
month, said Larry Honeybourne with the Orange County Health Care Agency.
Thats meant a great deal of sewage was washed out into the ocean,
Honeybourne said.
“We’re concerned about the water flowing out of the slough and into
the Santa Ana River,” Honeybourne said. “The water was pulled by tidal
action through the Santa Ana River and coastal area, but we’re not sure
the amount of water exchanged. The information is not readily available.”
The slough is a finger of water that flows in and out of tidal gates
connecting to the Santa Ana River channel.
Honeybourne said the slough remains closed.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
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