Tougher stance on discharges applauded
- Share via
Alex Coolman
Environmentalists this week said they are encouraged by the tough
stance taken by a local water control board toward the Irvine Co. over
the subject of water discharges at Crystal Cove and contend it’s a shift
from an earlier, less-aggressive attitude.
The Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board reaffirmed in a
Monday letter to the developer that it may ask state water regulators to
issue a cease-and-desist order against the Irvine Co. to prevent further
dumping of runoff into Crystal Cove waters.
The order would require that the Irvine Co. “eliminate all existing
discharges of water” from a 635-home development into two drains that
empty at or near the beach at Crystal Cove. The board may consider
imposing the order at a Nov. 17 regional board meeting.
Garry Brown, director of the water quality advocacy group Orange
County CoastKeeper, said the unequivocal language of the letter -- and
its indication that the board is willing to act with or without
state-level input -- marked a real change in the regional board’s
attitude toward discharges at Crystal Cove.
“It’s not only a stronger stance, it’s the first time there’s been a
formal acknowledgment of what we’ve been saying for the last year” about
the types of water-dumping that occur at Crystal Cove, Brown said.
Discharges of water from the Irvine Co. have become a source of
heightened contention in the last week as the developer has argued that
it is not legally prohibited from dumping water at Crystal Cove. The
developer’s position flies in the face of environmentalists’ assumptions
that the area, because it is a state-designated area of special
environmental significance, is off-limits to all discharges.
The regional water board has asked state-level water officials for
advice on the legal questions in the case, but state officials said
Tuesday that they had yet to come up with an answer.
“We know what the issue is, but in terms of how we’re going to respond
to it, we’re going to have to think about it,” said Robert Miller, a
spokesperson for the State Water Resources Control Board. “The
[legislation] is unclear on this issue and it’s going to need some
clarification.”
Sat Tamaribuchi, vice president of environmental affairs for the
Irvine Co., said Tuesday that the regional board’s position in its letter
was nothing new.
“We’ve pretty much said that we’re going to comply with whatever the
state board says,” Tamaribuchi said.
But Kurt Berchtold, assistant executive officer of the regional board,
said the letter marked a new degree of specificity in the board’s manner
of dealing with the Crystal Cove situation.
The letter notes, for example, that discharges into Los Trancos Creek,
which the Irvine Co. says are not direct discharges into the ocean, occur
sufficiently close to the beach that “they must be considered discharges
to the ocean” and are consequently subject to legislative restriction.
“I don’t think our general position is any different from what we have
talked to them about in the past,” he said. “The one thing that is
different in the letter is that we, for the first time, specifically
state what our next step might be, and that’s the potential
cease-and-desist order and the Nov. 17 hearing date. We hadn’t discussed
that with them in the past.”
Kimberly Lewand, a attorney representing CoastKeeper, said the letter,
because it spells out in detail the nature of the discharges taking place
at Crystal Cove, could become the basis for future challenges to water
quality waivers that were granted the Irvine Co.’s development.
“We feel that this factual determination supports revocation of those
waivers,” she said.
If the regional board does pass a cease-and-desist order, it will
probably mean that the developer will be given a schedule for reducing
and eliminating discharges, Berchtold said.
“I think [the Irvine Co.] would probably have to construct some other
facilities to allow them to comply. I don’t right now know what would be
involved, but it’s probably not something they could comply with
instantaneously,” he said.
Rich Elbaum, a spokesperson for the developer, said the company could
not know what physical steps might be necessary to address board concerns
until the specific details of board decisions become available.
“It’s impossible to speculate because it’s a complex issue,” he said.
“We always will comply with the laws and regulations.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.