Surf City beaches make the grade
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Dave Brooks
Surf City’s beaches made the honor roll this year in Santa
Monica-based Heal the Bay’s annual summertime report card.
Eight of the nine local beaches tested by the environmental group
received A grades for water-quality during the peak summer tourism
season between Memorial Day and Labor Day.
Magnolia Street was the only beach within city limits to receive
lower than an A, earning a C grade. The grade is an improvement over
the past two years -- in 2002 it was given an F grade and a D in
2003.
The city’s municipal beaches have always faired well, but this
year’s report shows major improvements at three areas of Huntington
State Beach, on the south side of town, that have been struggling
with high bacterial levels for the past five years.
Officials with the Orange County Sanitation District and
Environmental Health agency attribute the high scores to ongoing
efforts to divert untreated urban runoff and educate the public about
what goes into the storm drain system.
“We’re seeing a major improvement in water quality from 1999 when
everyone was trying to figure out what the heck was going on,” said
Heal the Bay researcher James Alamillo, who compiled most of the data
for the report. “There’s been quite a lot of money spent trying to
figure this out.”
The sanitation district has contributed about $22.5 million to the
effort, investigating the cause of bacterial levels in the water,
issuing grants and disinfecting sewage that is discharged from its
ocean outfall pipe located about 4 1/2 miles offshore, General
Manager Blake Anderson said.
Blake attributed the improved quality to the ongoing diversion of
urban runoff into the sewer system for treatment. Prior to 1999, when
high bacteria levels closed much of Huntington’s beaches for the
summer, much of the contaminated water that had run through the
city’s streets and urban areas had flowed straight into the ocean.
“Now we’re able to divert about 2.5 million gallons of urban
runoff a day through our facility for treatment,” he said.
Huntington Beach’s Public Works Department has also been working
on a diversion program, restricting the amount of urban runoff that
flows into the Santa Ana River and the Talbert Marsh.
“In the end, you hope that all the components are contributing in
a way that localizes any one particular outbreak,” Alamillo said. “We
won’t see the extensity like we have seen in the past. If there is
going to be a problem, it’s likely to occur in a targeted area.”
Alamillo said the high bacterial level at Magnolia Street remains
a mystery, with theories ranging from the beaches proximity to the
sanitation district outfall pipe to large high tides that drag in
contaminants from onshore. Some even blame nearby bird populations,
he said.
“That’s really the $20-million question,” said Monica Mazur
spokeswoman for the Orange County’s department of Environmental
Health. “Twenty million in that we’ve spent that much trying to
figure it out.”
While the beaches are improving, Surf City’s image isn’t keeping
pace, said Huntington Beach Conference and Visitors Council President
Doug Traub.
Over Labor Day weekend, a massive sewage spill by the district
closed several beaches in the south side of town. Sanitation district
officials originally estimated the spill resulted in the release of
about 12,500 gallons of sewage, but officials now say the figure is
closer to 1.6 million gallons -- more than 100 times the original
estimate.
Traub said the spill flamed national headlines and created an
inaccurate perception that Huntington Beach is struggling with water
quality issues. He’s asking the sanitation district’s board of
directors to launch a $350,000 research and marketing campaign to
promote Surf City as a clean water tourist destination.
“We need to create a program to show just how good our coastal
waters are,” he said. “That kind of story really needs to be told.
I’m asking the sanitation district to step up to the plate on this
issue and I really think they will.”
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