Be vigilant to be better than passing
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When Heal the Bay’s 14th biannual beach grades came out last week
there were no surprises, just the same old frustrations.
The Santa Monica-based ocean watchdog group tests the waters off
California from one end to the other twice a year, once in the rainy
season and once in the dry season, and reports its findings by
grading beaches.
And each year Surf City fares in much the same way. Bolsa Chica
State Beach and the city beaches score high, and Huntington State
Beach scores dismally.
Last year Huntington squeaked by without a single F. Not so this
year.
In the wet season, three beaches -- the three southern most --
earned failing grades. The beach at Newland Street earned a D and
Beach Boulevard a C.
The poor rainy season grades could be attributed to the high
amount of rainfall this year, according to Mitzy Taggert, a staff
scientist with Heal the Bay.
We can’t control the amount of rainfall, nor would we really want
to cut back on it as it is essential to us. But improving these
grades means an effort from everyone -- residents and all those
living upstream of Huntington Beach. Huntington has done a fairly
good job of educating its residents, but it may be time to actively
educate people in inland cities.
Perhaps the city could form an alliance to inform inland residents
of the damage caused by littering or washing toxins into the storm
drains that lead to our beaches. In the busy summer months when they
all trek to the beaches here, maybe that’s the time to hit them with
it. Let’s post the beach grades and make a display of trash collected
each day to demonstrate just what our city maintenance workers clean
off the beaches before the crowds arrive.
Tourists won’t be appalled, they’ll be impressed.
But one problem still remains. Most all of the beaches scored well
in the dry season. Except the beach at Magnolia Street, which got a C
even in the dry season.
It is an enigma that has baffled scientists for years. But we
can’t give up. The search for an answer must continue. It seems as if
many have thrown up their hands in defeat. That mustn’t happen. If we
are going to continue using the ocean, especially in the south end of
town where AES power plant uses the water and where the sanitation
district has its outfall pipe, we must remain vigilant.
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