High hope for Mother Earth
Two weeks after Earth Day, two stories have surfaced that serve as
cautionary tales and hope for a healthier environment in the future.
The first involves a report released by UC Irvine based on a study
of two beaches, Newport and Huntington, just up the coast from
Laguna.
Researchers studied the cost of illness associated with swimming
in ocean waters, and came to the conclusion that recreational
swimmers and surfers are losing work days and spending money on
health treatments because they are exposed to bacteria in the water.
The researchers tallied a yearly number of 74,000 incidents of
stomach illness, respiratory disease and eye, ear and skin infections
they believe can be directly linked to exposure to ocean waters.
The results are striking: researchers crunched the numbers and
came up with a public cost of $3.3 million per year -- conservatively
-- in health-related expenses due to a polluted shoreline.
The worst of it is that, during the study period, these beaches
had logged “acceptable” bacteria count levels, the researchers
report.
But don’t go throwing away your boogie boards. While a
multimillion-dollar loss is nothing to sneeze at, the actual numbers
tell a story that is not quite so dire.
Although 74,000 incidents of illness is a lot of misery, there are
5 million visitors to those same beaches every year. That means one
in every 67 beachgoers got sick, about one-tenth of a percent.
The other story came the next day from Orange County Dist. Atty.
Tony Rackauckas, who wants us all to know that he’s making progress
in forcing three oil companies -- Shell, Thrifty and Atlantic
Richfield/ARCO/BP -- to clean up their acts.
The companies were found to have allowed their underground gas
tanks to leak, polluting ground water -- and ultimately, the ocean --
with chemicals including the notorious MTBE (methyl tertiary butyl
ether), which has shut down water wells in the Los Angeles area.
While the gas tanks themselves were not in Laguna -- the
investigations took place in Anaheim, Fullerton, Orange and Santa Ana
-- they are all in “upstream” cities whose runoff eventually reaches
the shoreline and ends up contaminating coastal waters.
Under a court judgment, the companies will have to pay $100
million in cleanup costs, and the county will get an immediate
“rebate” of $2 million.
Good job, Mr. Rackauckas.
They say eternal vigilance is the price of freedom, and it also
may be the price of environmental health.
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