Caltrans project to filter highway runoff
Andrew Edwards
Caltrans crews are heading into the final stages of a highway project
near Crystal Cove that was undertaken to prevent polluted runoff from
spilling into protected waters.
The bulk of the work is scheduled to be completed in mid-May,
agency spokeswoman Sandra Friedman said.
“It’s just the bioswales that need to be dug -- dug and seeded --
and they should be doing that this week,” Friedman said.
Swales are like shallow ditches that are planted with various
types of vegetation. They are designed so water that flows into them
are naturally filtered by the plants before being diverted around
Crystal Cove.
“This will help mitigate the freeway runoff,” Friedman said. “The
way it’s set is that there are two pipes that take whatever results
after [runoff] goes through the bioswales like a filter. And then it
takes whatever remains to the ocean, but that is not in the cove. It
takes it out on the sides, and by then, there’s nothing wrong with it
anyway. But it bypasses the cove.”
The ocean around Crystal Cove is listed by the state as an area of
special biological significance, a designation that prohibits
wastewater from being discharged into that part of the ocean.
In 2000, the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board issued
a cease-and-desist order against Caltrans to prevent the
transportation agency from allowing runoff to flow into Crystal
Cove’s waters. The board also ordered the Irvine Co. and state
Department of Parks and Recreation to keep wastewater out of the
cove. The cease-and-desist order was issued after water-quality
watchdog Orange County Coastkeeper sued the Irvine Co. over runoff
issues related to housing construction at Crystal Cove.
Caltrans started the highway project last September, and work was
originally slated to be finished in February.
“That was before the rains came and changed everything,” Friedman
said.
Though the project has not met its original deadline, officials
with the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board believe the
project has effectively addressed the runoff issue and accepted the
weather-related setbacks, agency spokesman Kurt Berchtold said.
“We were satisfied that the delays were caused by problems that
were out of Caltrans’ control,” Berchtold 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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