Lawsuit filed against sanitation district
- Share via
Dave Brooks
Several Huntington Beach residents have filled a lawsuit against the
Orange County Sanitation District, alleging that a pipeline expansion
project has damaged their homes.
Construction teams have been working to replace the existing
pipeline that runs from the district’s treatment plant in Huntington
Beach along Brookhurst Street, west on Banning Street, north on
Bushard Street and all the way down Ellis Avenue.
The 50 year-old pipe has corroded over time, engineers say, and is
becoming severely degraded. The pipe is now being expanded from 4 1/2
feet to 9 feet in diameter to allow for increased flowing capacity of
sewage materials.
The retrofit has been bogged down with logistical problems,
including interference with public utilities and increasingly
complicated traffic revisions. Cracks in certain areas of the
pipeline have also been discovered, and the district’s subcontractors
are working to seal the problem off.
Now the district faces a lawsuit from residents living along the
pipeline corridor who say that the constant rattling, shaking and
pounding of concrete has damaged their property.
“We have allegations that the project is causing cracking to
homes, exteriors and retaining walls,” said attorney Patrick Catalano
who is representing homeowners in a class action lawsuit.
“The project has also caused severe dewatering in and around the
properties and has damaged some landscape,” he said.
There have also been complaints that the district didn’t do enough
to blanket noises and dust created by the project, he said.
Officials with the Orange County Sanitation District have been
working for months to placate nearby residents, holding resident
meetings and launching a special website with project updates.
Spokesperson Jennifer Cabal could not specifically comment on the
litigation, and would only issue a written statement on the matter.
“OCSD has not seen the lawsuit and is not aware of it being filed.
Therefore we cannot respond at this time,” she wrote.
David Ludwin, director of engineering for the Orange County
Sanitation District said the nature of the work causes vibrations.
“We have to fill in the bottom of the trench and compact the
dirt,” he said. “We are utilizing some heavy equipment in the area
and the potential for problems is there. We’re doing our best to work
with the community on this issue.”
* DAVE BROOKS covers City Hall. He can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.