Back Bay will host county lab
Paul Clinton
Supervisors unanimously approved moving Orange County’s
water-quality lab from Santa Ana to Shellmaker Island on Tuesday.
Using a temporary office trailer, members of the county’s Health
Care Agency will now be able to process water testing samples closer
to areas they routinely monitor for bacterial outbreaks.
“It puts a facility right where problems happen,” said Supervisor
Chair Tom Wilson, who represents Newport Coast. Wilson and local
officials launched the effort to move the lab about two years ago.
The lab is part of the Marine Studies Center at Shellmaker that
performs education, testing, research and other functions oriented
toward the marine environment.
City officials who installed the trailers for the county lab in
the fall said Newport Beach is a much more appropriate location for
water-quality testing and research than Santa Ana.
The county maintains and uses 35 testing sites in Upper Newport
Bay alone, Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said. Samples are taken
from water areas in coastal Orange County and sent to the lab for
processing.
“It should allow for less transportation time for the water
quality sampler,” Kiff said. At a Tuesday meeting, supervisors
approved a three-year lease with the city that allows the Health Care
Agency to use it rent free beginning March 1. County officials are
scheduled to occupy the building Feb. 14.
The board approved the construction of the temporary water-quality
lab on Dec. 5, 2000.
The state’s Department of Fish and Game, which owns the land that
makes up the estuary, also approved the move.
The city picked up the tab for the installation of the
2,160-square-foot trailer and will also absorb the cost of sewer and
water service to the trailer.
County health care officials are expected to pay $19,539 per year
to run the lab at Shellmaker Island. That includes janitorial
services, maintenance and some utilities. For the current fiscal
year, the lab will cost the county $17,029 for initial set-up and
operational costs.
While the county water-quality lab uses the temporary facility,
officials are waiting for an additional $1.3 million in state revenue
to build a permanent marine center, which is still in the conceptual
stage. State budget problems have delayed that project for two to
three years, Kiff said.
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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