City Council working to clean up Buck Gulley
Paul Clinton
CORONA DEL MAR -- The Newport Beach City Council has endorsed a plan
to divert urban runoff that would otherwise flow down Buck Gulley into
the ocean off Little Corona beach.
The council stamped its approval on the plan at its meeting Tuesday
evening.
The council agreed to support a diversion plan being implemented by
the Orange County CoastKeeper until Oct. 15. The plan is to pump runoff
back up the canyon, filter it and sell it back to businesses to water
their grass.
If it cannot be sold, the runoff will be sent into the Orange County
Sanitation District’s system for treatment.
About 180 million gallons per minute flow down Buck Gulley, according
to CoastKeeper spokesman Randy Seton. The runoff reaches the beach and
flows into the ocean, degrading a protected environment, he said.
The stretch of land is one of 34 Areas of Special Biological
Significance in the state, an environmentally protected zone.
CoastKeeper’s diversion plan, an elaborate system of pumps and hoses,
will handle 100 million gallons a minute.
The program is being paid for out of a $50,000 grant given to the
group in March by a donor who has remained anonymous. In addition, the
city was awarded a $222,025 grant from bond revenue in May to help pay
for work in Buck Gulley.
Seton said the group will try to sell the filtered water to the
neighboring Pelican Hill Golf Course. A typical 18-hole course usually
uses 500,000 gallons a day to water the course during summer months.
The group hired Clear Creek Systems Inc. of Bakersfield to install the
pump system.
The council also agreed to enter into an agreement with the Orange
County Sanitation District to receive the runoff.
In addition to the city’s approval, CoastKeeper must also get other
approvals. In a July 3 letter to the city, the Santa Ana Regional Water
Quality Control Board endorsed the move.
Other agencies that must sign on include the California Coastal
Commission, the county and the California Department of Fish and Game.
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