EDITORIAL
By now, we hope, those Huntington Beach residents with a true passion
for protecting our waters and environment have turned in their comments
about proposed changes to the permit regulating what can be washed into
the city’s storm drains.
The permit, which the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board
is scheduled to discuss and vote on Jan. 18, will set the rules for what
can be sent into storm drains throughout north and cental Orange County
for the next five years. Among the regulations being proposed are ones
that would subject businesses to inspection, put tougher requirements on
new developments and increase protections along newly paved roads to
limit the amount of waste runoff that rolls from their surfaces.
Given Huntington Beach’s troubled history and its reliance on clean
beaches for tourist dollars and locals’ happiness alike, city officials
and residents should have their fingers crossed that the toughest
possible restrictions be made law. And while there are worries -- chiefly
from businesses and inland cities -- about the cost of additional
regulations, those additional dollars should be weighed against what
dirty water costs us all, both in straightforward dollars lost and in the
risk to our health.
It is crucial that our city leaders make this point clear to members
of the water quality board and to officials from inland cities. But they
should not have to be the lone voice in this debate. The water quality
board’s meeting is set for 9 a.m. at the Santa Ana City Council chambers,
20 Civic Center Plaza.
All those who have written to the board, and more importantly those
who missed the deadline but care deeply about the environment, should
make it a point to be there.
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