Plan is to block natural gas
The city will construct an underground barrier to block the natural
gas emissions that are killing grass and trees in two private
Huntington Beach yards.
It is the latest solution to a decades-old problem in the area.
Carl Wysacki has never been able to grow anything in the front
yard of his Huntington Beach home in the 40 years he has lived there.
His yard smells like rotten eggs, and in one spot, a lighted match
will flame up when held over the ground.
When residents along Christine Drive began complaining of sulfuric
odors in the 1980s, it was discovered that in certain areas,
naturally occurring methane and hydrogen sulfide was escaping through
the soil. In 1991, the city had trenches built to trap the gas
underground.
Now, outside of two homes, gas is again escaping through the
uppermost layer of clay.
Bob Dutton, an associate civil engineer with the city, said that
overall, the trench system is working “just fine” but there are some
problem spots that city needs to patch up.
“We know why the grass was dying,” Dutton said. “We did not have
enough of a clay barrier to block the gas from coming up.”
To fix the problem, city officials will dig up the trench, install
a membrane and reinforce the layer of clay that has disintegrated
over the years.
The clay will seal the gas underground and the membrane will
provide an added safety feature, Dutton said.
“Without the clay barrier, the gas is allowed to come up to the
surface,” Project Manager Chuck Burney said. “Because of the membrane
and the clay, gas will no longer reach the surface and into their
yards.”
City engineers were not able to detect any gas above the ground
that could present a safety risk for residents living nearby, Dutton
said.
“We walked all throughout the site from different spots for two
days, and we couldn’t get any reading of hydrogen sulfide or methane
at a human level,” Dutton said.
Wysacki is worried that the problem is more widespread than the
city is letting on.
“It may be possible that what is happening has spread out and is
affecting other houses,” Wysacki said. “When they plug it up, we’ll
see what happens.”
Dutton is confident that the dead patches of land in Wysacki’s
yard will start spouting grass soon after the reconstruction is
complete.
Wysacki is skeptical.
“They presented their solution to our dead grass problem,” Wysacki
said. “We agreed to go along with it and are going to proceed that
way.”
City officials are acquiring permits and working on final design
plans and could start work as soon as mid-November. Reconstruction
will only take one or two days, Dutton said.
“We’re trying to get this thing done by the end of the year,”
Dutton said. “We want to get it all done for them, and we don’t want
anybody to feel like we’re taking any shortcuts.”
Water district moves pumping inland
To prevent saltwater from seeping into the freshwater that runs
under Huntington Beach and other coastal cities, the Orange County
Water District has shifted groundwater pumping inland.
“Our basin’s a little more over-drafted than we would like it, and
we’re always fighting back ocean water from coming into the
groundwater basin,” said John Kennedy, assistant general manager at
the Orange County Water District. “Because of that situation, we
would like to reduce pumping along the coast to help the coastal
water levels rise.”
Saltwater intrusion is a perpetual threat in Huntington Beach and
other coastal cities, Kennedy said. The saltwater barrier, which
consists of 26 high-pressure injection wells along the coast in
Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, pushes saltwater back toward
the ocean and away from the city’s supply of fresh groundwater.
Plans are to install eight more injection wells that will allow
the water district to increase the amount of water that can be
injected from 5 million gallons a day to 40 million gallons a day.
In the interim, Orange County Water District officials are
shifting pumping farther inland to keep water levels high along the
coast.
Huntington Beach, along with Newport Beach and the Irvine Ranch
Water District, will pump less groundwater and rely more on imported
water. Inland cities such as Anaheim, Fullerton, Santa Ana, Buena
Park, Orange and Westminster will pump more water and rely less on
imported water.
“By reducing how much coastal agencies are pumping, groundwater
levels will come up along the coastline and will help head off ocean
water that’s always coming in,” Kennedy said.
No flights will be added at Long Beach in 2004
No new commercial flights will be added to the Long Beach Airport
flight schedule next year since the airport exceeded its noise cap
for 2003.
The number of daily commercial flights allowed will remain at 41.
“We’re over our noise budget and no more flights can be added for
the year 2004,” airport spokeswoman Sharon Diggs Jackson said.
All flights are forced to comply with a strict noise ordinance,
which was finalized in May 1995. The ordinance is based on a point
system in which varying noise levels are allowed at different hours.
Less noise is allowed at night, for example, than in the middle of
the day.
There are 18 noise monitors positioned around the perimeter of the
airport that are frequently checked to ensure that planes are
adhering to allowable noise levels. The noise level of every plane
that takes off from the airport is measured and presented in monthly,
quarterly and annual reports.
Airport officials boast a 99% identification rate of violators.
The Long Beach City Council filed and approved the airport’s
annual noise bucket analysis report at a meeting on Tuesday night.
Oak View celebrates broader range of services
The Oak View Family and Community Center will hold an open house
to raise awareness about its new programs and services.
More than 400 residents of Surf City’s Oak View area are expected
to attend the center’s Open House and Community Resource Fair.
Festivities will include games, resource booths and a raffle.
It is the first major event since the city handed control of the
community center to the Children’s Bureau, a nonprofit agency, on May
1. Now the community center and the Oak View Family Center have
combined to provide a wider range of programs for the Oak View
community.
The center provides a bevy of services for the community at large
including parenting classes, health services, literacy programs,
legal assistance and information on adoption and foster care. It also
offers recreational activities such as sewing, aerobics and arts and
crafts, and youth and teen support programs such as counseling,
college preparation and homework assistance.
Since the Oak View area is 99% Latino, most programs are
bilingual.
The celebration will be held from 10 a.m. to noon Oct 25. at the
center, which is at 17261 Oak Lane. For more information, call (714)
596-7062.
Merchants discuss Downtown business plans
Downtown merchants met last week to discuss forming a business
improvement district.
A business improvement district is a coalition of businesses that
take responsibility for raising funds for advertising, promotions,
special events and other activities within in a specific area -- in
this case, Downtown Huntington Beach.
All businesses participating in the district are responsible for
raising money for services such as publicity, better security,
centralized parking and a clean environment. Business improvement
districts allow businesses to pool their assets to fund common goals
such as creating directory maps for visitors and locals, collective
advertising and special events.
Most business representatives in attendance supported forming the
group. Discussions will continue at another meeting in November.
The city already has two business improvement districts; The
Huntington Beach Auto Dealers Business Improvement District was
formed in 1992 to give dealers the opportunity to implement programs
that serve the district. The Huntington Beach Hotel/Motel Business
Improvement District was formed last year at the request of the
Huntington Beach Conference and Visitors Bureau. Its purpose is to
fund activities that promote Huntington Beach as an overnight
destination.
Forming a district would require City Council approval.
Beachmont Plaza will
get a makeover
One of the city’s more rundown shopping centers will soon be
revitalized.
Beachmont Plaza, at the Northeast corner of Brookhurst Street and
Adams Avenue, was built in 1965. It has, at various times, housed a
Vons supermarket, a Wild West store, a Petland, a Clothworld and a
Sam Goody.
All of the stores were vacated years ago to make way for complete
renovation.
Last week, Albertsons Inc., which owns Sav-On Drugs, gave the
green light for a Sav-On Drug store to be built on the site. The new
store could be ready for business as soon as next summer.
-- Compiled by Jenny Marder
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