Two toxic tanks found at Ascon
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State environmental officials are hoping to have two potentially
hazardous tanks removed from the Ascon dump site by next week.
Workers from the state Department of Oil And Gas found the
petroleum-based substance while cleaning up after an oil well that
ruptured March 17, gushing 40 feet in the air and spraying 360
Huntington Beach homes. The idle well, which workers are in the
process of abandoning, sits on the former Ascon landfill at Hamilton
Avenue and Magnolia Street.
The two 500-gallon oil tanks, estimated to be 40 to 50 years old,
were found sitting next to the pump head of the oil rig during the
abandonment process, Environmental Protection Agency spokesman Robert
Wise said.
Wise wouldn’t comment on the substance in the tanks, but said it
was worrisome enough that officials are having them removed as soon
as possible.
It’s possibly a mixture of diesel motor oil and gasoline
constituents, he said.
The tanks are being investigated for liquids inside, Huntington
Beach Fire Chief Duane Olson said.
“We’re going to pump all that material out and the tanks will be
decontaminated and disposed of,” Wise said. “In a month, you’ll look
at that well site, and there will be nothing there.”
Officials don’t know who deposited the sludge at the well site.
State agency OKs restoration project
The California State Lands Commission voted Monday to grant the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service a four-year lease of the Bolsa Chica
Wetlands for the long-awaited 550-acre restoration project.
The action, which gives the Fish and Wildlife Service authority as
the project’s lead agency, was one of the final steps required before
the project can begin, said Shirley Dettloff, a former mayor and
coastal commissioner, who’s been pushing for the project for decades.
“Every step is a step in the direction we’ve been going toward for
30 years,” Dettloff said. “Everything’s in order and the process has
been completed.”
This vote comes only two weeks after the California Coastal
Conservancy last month OKd the final $10 million needed to move
forward with the restoration of the degraded marshland.
Funded largely by the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach,
restoration calls for 370 acres of full tidal and 180 acres of muted
tidal habitat.
Restoration is set to begin this fall and will include
construction of a new ocean channel, tidal basins, island habitats
and pedestrian bridges that connect the wetlands to the beach via
Pacific Coast Highway. Construction is expected to take three years
to complete.
Housing will replace Harbour Bay Club
Developers hoping to transform an old sports club into 36
condominiums were sent back to the drawing board Monday to redesign
plans to meet city standards.
In the late 1970s and ‘80s, the Huntington Harbour Bay Club
reverberated with the sound of music, bouncing tennis balls and
neighborhood chatter. But the club, which now serves as a banquet
hall, is no longer self-supporting and owners said they have no
choice but to sell.
“As a banquet facility, we had so many problems with noise in the
neighborhood that we continually had police come to the door because
of neighbors complaining,” bay club owner Doris Ahadpour said.
But the development proposal for the site contained so many
deviations from city development standards that existing plans were
shot down by the City Council Monday night.
“Small lot development standards have pretty much been decimated
by this proposal,” City Councilwoman Connie Boardman said. “There are
a dozen deviations. I think what that points to is that the land just
isn’t appropriate for this type of development.”
The City Council narrowly approved the housing project 4 to 3 on
the condition that plans be altered to comply with the city’s small
lot standards.
Residents at the meeting complained that the project would be a
blight on the area, block harbor views and cause a decline in
property values.
“You only have one harbor and once it’s destroyed it’s forever
gone,” Huntington Harbour resident Robert Sniffen said. “Views of the
harbor make Huntington Beach special Please don’t destroy it.”
In the past, the site was the hub of the Huntington Harbour
community. Councilman Dave Sullivan, who used to be a member, recalls
frequenting the bay club for community meetings, tennis matches and
meals. A beach that fronted the club would draw hundreds of visitors
on a typical weekend day, he said.
“I often felt that it was a very important open space area for the
community, but that has all changed now,” he said.
Celebrating an early Easter
An Easter egg hunt, sponsored by the Huntington Beach Kiwanis Club
and the Community Services Department will be held Saturday at
Huntington Beach Central Park, off Edwards Street between Inlet and
Central Park drives.
The first hunt will begin at 9:30 a.m. for children with special
needs, followed by one at 10 a.m. for toddlers 2 and under, 10:30
a.m. for 3- and 4-year-olds, 11 a.m. for 5- and 6-year olds and 11:30
a.m. for 7-, 8- and 9-year-olds.
It will mark the city’s 14th annual Easter egg hunt.
Children are encouraged to bring their own bags for collecting
candy.
The hunts will feature a band, games, clown and face painting, hot
dogs and photos with the Easter Bunny.
The event is free. For more information, call (714) 374-1626.
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