District faces a penalty for spill
Alicia Robinson
The Orange County Sanitation District faces a $160,000 penalty for
spilling nearly 1.6-million gallons of treated wastewater from a
Huntington Beach pump station into the Santa Ana River on Labor Day
weekend.
Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board staff members
recommended the penalty Monday, but board members have the option of
reducing or eliminating the penalty if the sanitation district
requests a hearing.
“In this case, although this is probably a unique incident [and]
not something we have seen before ... we believe that it could have
been prevented or minimized had the district taken better precautions
and more effectively responded to the incident that occurred,”
regional water board spokesman Kurt Berchtold said.
The sanitation district is reviewing the complaint and has not yet
decided whether to request a hearing on the issue or simply pay the
penalty, said Bob Ghirelli, the district’s director of technical
services.
A report from the water board found that the Sept. 4 spill
occurred when a brief power failure in the Southern California Edison
power grid was followed by problems with backup generators at the
Huntington Beach station. Partially treated and disinfected
wastewater backed up at the plant and flowed into the Santa Ana
River, which led the Orange County Health Care Agency to close
beaches from 52nd Street in Newport Beach to Magnolia Street in
Huntington Beach.
The penalty includes $100,000 of civil liability, and the
remaining $60,000 can be devoted to an environmental project.
Following the spill, the sanitation district began looking at its
procedures to prevent future spills, and it’s likely the water board
took that into account when setting the penalty, Ghirelli said. The
maximum penalty allowed would have been $16 million, he said.
“We’ve done a lot of internal reviews and have come up with a
number of recommendations for improvements in our in-plant
communications among staff, modifications that we will make to
equipment, improvements to our emergency procedures and training,” he
said. “I think they saw that we are trying to take action to improve
the situation for the future.”
The sanitation district is not a chronic violator, Ghirelli said,
pointing out that the last spill from one of its treatment plants
into the Santa Ana River was 30 years ago.
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