Swimmers warned of high bacteria level
Deepa Bharath
The Orange County Healthcare Agency posted warning signs at an
unprecedented number of local beaches on Sunday to caution the public
about high levels of bacteria in the water possibly caused by tide
patterns, officials said.
Health officials instructed Huntington and Newport lifeguards to
post the signs along the coast late Sunday morning after they got
back results of the water quality tests, said Monica Mazur,
environmental health supervising specialist with the Orange County
Healthcare Agency.
“We don’t know exactly what caused the increase in the bacteria
levels in the ocean,” she said.
But the recent extremes in high and low tides could have possibly
caused the pollution, Mazur said.
“The low tides in particular pull out waste matter from the
Talbert Channel or the Santa Ana River,” she said.
The signs have been posted all the way from 500 feet north of
Magnolia Street in Huntington Beach through the mouth of the Santa
Ana River to 500 feet south of the Balboa Pier.
The Orange County Sanitation District will continue to draw water
samples from the beaches five days week for testing, as they normally
do, Mazur said.
“Till the level of bacteria goes down to an acceptable level, the
signs will remain on the beaches,” she said.
The signs warn the public that there could be bacteria in the
ocean that could cause gastrointestinal or respiratory diseases or
other infections, Mazur said. Acceptable levels of bacteria are
determined by state standards.
“We don’t know how dangerous these high levels could be,” she
said. “We provide the public with the information. People can make
their own decisions.”
As of Wednesday, signs were still posted at Huntington State
Beach.
Newport Beach Lifeguard Lt. Boyd Mickley said he does not believe
the water is “dangerously polluted.”
“Before the change in laws that required these signs to be posted,
I grew up swimming in water which was probably worse,” he said.
Lifeguards made and put up close to 200 signs along the beach on
Sunday, Mickley said.
Such postings are quite common, Mazur said.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts for Times
Community News. She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at
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