Rhine Channel won’t be filled to fix pollution
Andrew Edwards
Scientists have ruled out the possibility of filling the polluted
Rhine Channel with clean sand as a cleanup measure, officials
involved with the project said.
Though covering contaminated sediments with clean sand would be
less costly than other cleanup methods, such a solution would
decrease the channel’s navigability.
“It will make it too shallow for big boats,” Orange County
CoastKeeper executive director Garry Brown said. “We wouldn’t
recommend something that would restrict use of the channel.”
Possible cleanup measures were laid out in the March edition of
Newport Beach’s monthly harbor report. Fixing the polluted channel
could be completed by a range of dredging alternatives and possible
treatment of the polluted sediments.
Harbor Resources manager Tom Rossmiller could not be reached to be
provide further information on cleanup options.
The Orange County CoastKeeper, a nonprofit watchdog organization
that focuses on water-quality issues, was asked by the Santa Ana
Regional Water Quality Control Board to manage a study of pollution
in the channel. The CoastKeeper hired Irvine-based Anchor
Environmental to collect samples of Rhine Channel mud. Testing of
channel sediments started in November.
Because the layering of clean sand is off the table, scientists
will forego plans for additional testing that would have evaluated
the effects of pollution on marine life living in the muck at the
bottom of the channel, Anchor Environmental partner Steve Cappellino
said.
That testing, which was planned for after the study started, is
not necessary because CoastKeeper’s report on the channel will
recommend cleanup options that would go beyond leaving contaminated
sediments in place and covering them up, Cappellino said.
The water quality control board will select the cleanup method
after receiving public input on the report, which is expected to be
finished around late March or early April.
“I’d be surprised if by the middle of April, something’s not on
the street,” Cappellino said.
Rhine Channel juts into the east side of the Balboa Peninsula and
is a former cannery site at the center of Newport Beach’s boatyards.
Pollutants discovered in the channel include heavy metals, pesticides
and PCBs, industrial chemicals that were used to prevent fires before
being banned by Congress in 1976.
Draft sediment data show that in areas of the channel where the
highest concentrations of some contaminants were recorded, pollutants
exceed levels that could harm marine life, CoastKeeper project
manager Ray Hiemstra said.
In areas of maximum concentrations, copper, lead, mercury,
pesticides, PCBs and other substances could pose dangers to sea life.
Scientists do not believe Rhine Channel pollution is a direct
threat to people, Hiemstra said. However, pollution could pose an
indirect risk via the food chain.
Hiemstra said sand bass is one game species believed to be
affected by Rhine Channel pollution. He did not have information
available on other fish species that could be affected and advised
anglers to rely on health notices provided by the state.
For the waters around Newport Pier, the state Office of
Environmental Health Hazard Assessment does not currently have any
warnings posted for sand bass, but advises that people eat corbina
only once every two weeks.
* 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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