Runoff study to find what sullies the gully
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Andrew Edwards
Just where does Buck Gully’s runoff come from?
The Newport Beach City Council is scheduled to consider a contract
tonight, which would put the city in business with an environmental
company, to investigate the source of runoff that has plagued Little
Corona Beach.
If the deal is approved, the city would pay slightly less than
$90,000 to Todd Engineers, an Emeryville company that specializes in
groundwater analysis.
The study would focus on water that ends up in Buck Gully as well
as nearby Morning Canyon and in three creeks near Pelican Point.
Results could be available by October, said Robert Stein of the
city’s Public Works Department.
The likely source of Buck Gully’s flows is homeowners who water
their yards too much, public works director Stephen Badum said.
However, the exact source of the water has not been pinpointed. The
water is believed to soak below the surface and take an underground
route to Buck Gully.
“Obviously, it’s water that soaks into the ground and migrates up
into the canyon and percolates up into a stream,” Badum said. “It’s
pretty much flowing pretty steadily.”
Flows at Buck Gully have previously been estimated to be as high
as 350 gallons per minute, even in dry weather. Stein said in
addition to finding the source of the water, the study would attempt
to quantify the amount of runoff.
The greatest problem posed by the runoff is the pesticides and
other pollutants the water carries into the tide pools at Little
Corona Beach, Stein said.
“We need to reduce the amount of dry-weather runoff -- it’s going
into the marine life areas,” he said.
Another potential problem at Buck Gully stems from plants watered
by the runoff, Badum said. The water spurs the growth of reeds and
shrubs, which can clog the runoff stream and send water spilling off
the bluffs above Little Corona, creating a potential erosion hazard.
“Anytime you erode the sides of the canyon long enough, you’re
going to get some landslides,” Badum said.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards
@latimes.com.
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