City gets $200,000 for beach cleanup
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- Gov. Gray Davis handed the city $200,000 in grant
money Tuesday to help clean up its beaches.
The funding is part of a $32-million slice of the budget Davis set
aside for coastal cleanup projects across the state to reduce the rising
number of postings and closures caused by urban runoff.
The funds come from Proposition 13, a bond issue approved by votes in
March 2000.
Davis’ effort is known as the Clean Beaches Initiative.
City officials said they welcomed the news, adding that the money
would be put to good work.
“We’re happy we got funded today because it took a long time to get to
this point,” said Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff.
The city will use the money to install an aeration device in the
Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort’s swimming lagoon, which is a constant
trouble spot for beach warnings.
The device, known as an InStreem unit, will move across the top of the
water and, like a jet in a Jacuzzi, circulate the water.
The city also has plans to cap three or four other storm-water
diversions that empty into the lagoon.
Diversions heading into the ocean off West Newport would also be
included in the project.
The allocation is part of about $500,000 that Davis set aside for
Newport Beach last summer when he unveiled the program.
Kiff said he is working with the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality
Control Board to tailor projects that would be eligible for the remaining
$300,000 money.
Newport Beach led the county in beach closures in 2001, a dubious
distinction city officials have said they hope to shed.
The money, Davis said in a release, will help keep all of the state’s
beaches open for business.
“The public health and economic threat to our beaches by polluted
runoff is real,” Davis said. “These grants help state and local agencies
address contamination.”
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