Pollution data muddies water
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The numbers are eye-popping. Pollution in the water along Huntington
and Newport beaches costs people as much as $3.3 million in medical
treatments each year -- anywhere from $37 to $77 per illness. That is
an expensive dip in the ocean.
Right?
Well, maybe not. As much as the numbers--which come from a study
released this month by a group led by a UC Irvine doctoral student --
seem to be yet more fodder in the battle to increase water-quality
standards, they are, sadly, not nearly as shocking as they appear.
It’s even possible the study could hurt the clean-water cause.
The trouble is the methods behind this latest look into our
oceans. The study pulled together data from a United Kingdom study
with one on estimated illnesses along Huntington and Newport. The
author suggested this essentially created a third set of data; but
the looseness of the connection even bothered a water-quality
activist as respected as Newport’s Jack Skinner. He noted that the
foreign study tested beaches near sewage discharge, while in
Huntington and Newport sewage is discharged 4 1/2 miles offshore.
“You worry about runoff, right, but that’s not as hazardous as
sewage contamination,” Skinner said. He also guessed that the $3.3
million in medical expenses was too high a figure. Other local
activists echoed Skinner’s thoughts, though there was anything but
unanimity from environmentalists.
That disagreement may say as much as anything about the potential
effects of this study. Rather than being a report environmentalists
and even casual supporters of increased pollution control can rally
around, it produces questionable findings. It makes an interesting,
and potentially valuable, link between pollution and economic costs,
but it fails to do so in a way that can become a rallying cry for
much-needed control of urban runoff in beach cities and those farther
upstream that clearly play a part in our pollution troubles.
And what if, instead, skeptics point to it as an example of the
overblown rhetoric used to try to enforce tough rules? That could
prove a truly eye-popping argument.
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