City’s efforts bolstered by linking water campaigns
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June Casagrande
A public education campaign for water quality hopes to capitalize
on a $5-million regional campaign by piggybacking its message.
A meeting between local, state and federal officials on Monday
hatched an idea that could boost the city’s chances of meeting its
water-quality goals: tailor local education campaigns to a
state-funded regional campaign for water conservation.
The strategy also marks a turning point in local efforts to
control urban runoff. Until now, local officials have emphasized
keeping pollutants out of storm drains through things like street
sweeping and forbidding businesses to rinse detergent off their
sidewalks into storm drains. Now they plan to bolster that approach
by emphasizing conserving water too.
“If you’re conserving water, you’ve got less going into the storm
drains,” Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said.
Kiff, who heads up many of the city’s water-quality efforts, met
with members of the Orange County Council of Governments,
Environmental Protection Agency Region IX Director Wayne Nastri and
State Water Resources Control Board Chairman Art Baggett on Monday
morning to find ways to coordinate water-quality efforts.
The state board has allocated $5 million toward an education plan
in the Los Angeles and Orange County area. And because that plan will
emphasize conservation, the Newport Beach water-quality education
campaign will, too, even though runoff is more critical to local
waters.
In January, new rules for runoff went into effect. The rules are
so stringent that even Newport Beach -- the only city in the county
to enthusiastically embrace the rules -- is struggling to meet them.
Among other things, the rules state that merchants can’t hose off
their sidewalks unless they catch the water before it gets into the
storm drain.
Details of the state’s and the city’s public education campaign
have not yet been decided.
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