Newport to use storm drains in pollution fight
June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- An experimental solution to West Newport’s
water-quality problems will try to use storm drains as holding basins,
instead of for their intended purpose as channels for moving water into
the bay.
City crews began work last week, closing valves in storm drains and
designing steel screens to be installed at storm drain inlets -- both in
the attempt to keep debris out of the water. Trash, plant matter and
other contaminants in street runoff contribute to West Newport’s
unusually high bacteria levels, though experts remain unsure why the area
is disproportionately prone to contamination.
Usually, changes in the tides cause ocean water to flow into and out
of the storm drains daily, dragging debris and bacteria into the bay.
With their valves closed, the storm drains will hold the debris instead
of letting it flow into the bay.
City crews will regularly pump the water out of the storm drain system
and into the sewer system.
The normal purpose of the valves is to keep ocean water from flooding
neighborhoods during unusually high tides. Customarily, the valves remain
open except a few times a year when the city closes them during heavy
storms.
“The thinking now is: Why not use them to catch freshwater runoff?”
Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said. “If it works, this is something
that we might look at doing in different areas of the city.”
Workers are also designing steel guards that will work like screens at
storm drain inlets. These guards are expected to be installed in about 80
storm drain inlets by the end of the month on Balboa Boulevard, River
Avenue, 43rd and 44th streets, and other streets in that area.
The project will cost between $40,000 and $50,000. The money will come
from $500,000 set aside from the state’s Clean Beaches Initiative, which
granted the money to Newport Beach to clean up the waters in West
Newport.
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