Keeping the harbor clean not an easy task
Concerned people periodically raise the issue with Newport Beach
officials that Avalon Harbor has successfully implemented a dye
tablet program, where dye is placed into the waste holding tanks of
boats entering the harbor. This program has been in place for more
than a decade and is, by all accounts successful in curbing discharge
of waste into Avalon waters.
So, why not implement a dye tablet program for the holding tanks
of vessels docked in Newport Harbor? It seems like an effective tool
to curtail illegal dumping of sewage into our harbors. But is this
program a magic bullet or a placebo?
It is important to first understand the city of Avalon’s dye
tablet program. Avalon Harbor has a total of 280 offshore moorings in
a small cove that is similar in size to the entrance channel of
Newport Harbor. Each boat that enters Avalon, whether resident or
guest boat, must check in with a harbor patrol boat stationed at the
entrance, 24 hours a day.
After a boat ties up on its respective mooring, the owner must
stay on board until a second harbor patrol officer stops by the boat,
collects mooring fees and places several dye tablets in each of the
heads (toilets) on board. The boat owner is then instructed to flush
the dye tablets into the vessel’s holding tank.
If there are any leaks or discharges into the harbor after the
harbor patrol officer departs, the offending vessel operator is
issued a citation. A violation will result in a fine for the boat
owner and the boat will be banned from Avalon harbor for one year.
There is an appeals process to the Avalon City Council.
Interestingly enough, no one has ever successfully won an appeal.
Part of what makes the Avalon dye tablet program a success is the
tight control exercised over the harbor entrance, but most of the
credit is attributed to the geography and topography of Avalon
Harbor.
Homes perched high above the harbor provide a great vantage point
for pinpointing violators. Other boaters are always present in the
vicinity of a discharge, and harbor patrol boats and water taxis are
constantly weaving through the mooring area. Additionally, Avalon
Harbor has a naturally high level of water clarity due to the lack of
water flow generated during tidal changes.
In contrast, the tidal flow in Newport Harbor can raise and lower
by as much as 8 feet, twice a day. During the tidal changes, millions
of gallons of seawater flow from the Upper Newport Bay and the harbor
through a 1,000-foot wide entrance channel. The result is a healthy
and significant exchange of water in most areas of the harbor.
The disadvantage of this tidal influence is that a great deal of
silt (turbidity) is stirred up and suspended in the water. Many
homeowners, visitors and boaters mistake this turbidity for some type
of water pollution when it is in fact, a natural process.
Turbidity severely limits underwater visibility and in turn, the
effectiveness of dye tablets. Tests conducted by the Harbor Patrol
here in Newport Harbor indicate that when dye is released from a
boat’s holding tank, it is visible for about five minutes under
normal conditions to a maximum of 15 minutes under optimum
conditions. If the tide is ebbing or flowing, it is nearly impossible
to pinpoint a violator unless the violation is actually witnessed.
It is also important to note that the dye is not visible during
hours of darkness, so anyone determined to flush a holding tank can
do so at night with little or no chance of being discovered.
Consider that Newport Harbor has approximately 9,000 boats docked
or moored throughout the harbor. Of these vessels, I would estimate
that about 7,000 are of significant size to have some form of head
and holding tank system. Ride through the harbor on a weekday and one
boat out of 50 may have someone on board.
On the busiest holiday weekend, maybe one in four boats is
occupied. Try to imagine attempting to contact each of these boat
owners at their residences or in the marinas, gaining permission to
board their vessel and placing dye tablets in the holding tanks. This
process would have to be repeated weekly for an effective program.
Stopping each boat when it is “moving” in the harbor is certainly
not an option, nor is setting up some form of blockade at the harbor
entrance. What we would be left with is an extremely labor intensive
program that serves only as a deterrent or reminder to the vast
majority of responsible boaters who would never consider
intentionally dumping their waste holding tanks inside of any harbor.
Are boats’ holding tanks dumped in Newport Harbor? We don’t need a
scientific study to determine this. The answer, unfortunately, is
yes. A handful of boaters are irresponsible, too lazy to visit a pump
out station or too cheap to subscribe to a mobile pump out service.
These are not the visiting boats to Newport Harbor, as many residents
might like to believe.
It is easy to assume “outsiders” cause boat pollution. The city of
Santa Barbara has recently begun a somewhat misguided dye-tablet
program aimed at visitors to that harbor, with the local boats being
exempted. Instead, I would suggest that concerned people in Newport
Harbor look for the boat that never moves from its slip or mooring
but is often occupied. The waste is going somewhere.
A handful of irresponsible boaters may never be caught polluting
our harbor, but each pollution case is aggressively investigated and
the Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol seeks prosecution. The restitution and
fines levied upon conviction by the district attorney’s office, the
U.S. Coast Guard and the Dept. of Fish and Game can run into tens of
thousands of dollars for each violation.
A new law recently signed by Gov. Gray Davis will allow Harbor
Patrol personnel to board vessels and place dye tablets into holding
tanks when there is probable cause to believe that a vessel may be
polluting. This will go a long way to solve the problem of habitual
violators.
The other issue of boat pollution in Newport Harbor originates
from responsible boat owners who are unaware that there is a problem
with their waste holding tanks. These boat owners care about clean
water and the health of our harbor. They would never dream of
intentionally polluting this magnificent harbor and bay.
Boat plumbing systems are a complicated series of valves and
twisting and turning hoses usually packed into the most inaccessible
and least desirable area of a boat. With one valve turned in the
wrong direction, or not completely closed, waste seeps into the bay.
This pollution activity could go on for months or even years on a
vessel that in all other ways is well cared for. Maybe your boat?
This is where dye tablets can be effective. In Avalon Harbor,
there are between two and 12 pollution events documented each month
depending on the level of boating activity. Almost none of these
incidents involve boaters who would intentionally pollute Avalon or
any other harbor.
The city of Newport Beach and Sheriff Carona’s Harbor Patrol work
in partnership and are committed to reducing and eliminating bay
pollution.
So what steps can we take to reduce the overall boat pollution in
Newport Harbor? Boat owner education is certainly a good start, but
the overall impact is limited. The Harbor Patrol has stepped up
efforts to identify and curtail illegal live-aboards within the
harbor. Waste pump-out stations must be both convenient and in good
working order.
To encourage pump-out station usage, it may be time to think
outside the box and explore the idea of some form of valet pump-out
service. During certain hours, an attendant might assist the boat
owner in securing his boat to a pump out station dock, pump out the
holding tank and send the boater quickly on his way. No muss, no
fuss.
How can we identify the accidental holding tank polluter?
As a pilot program, each of the Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol boats now
carries dye tablets on board. Boat owners within Newport Harbor are
encouraged to wave a deputy over to their boat, and the deputy will
supply a few dye tablets and instructions as to how to check the
boat’s waste holding tank. More than a few responsible boat owners
may be surprised at the result.
There will be no enforcement action or legal repercussions if a
boat fails this initial voluntary dye tablet test, although a follow
up inspection will be required to ensure that the problem has been
corrected.
I would strongly encourage the harbor’s yacht club officers,
marina managers and yacht brokers to adopt similar programs. Each
boat owner can make a difference in improving Newport Harbor’s water
quality.
* MARTY KASULES is captain of the Orange County Sheriff’s Harbor
Patrol stationed in Newport Harbor.
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