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Beaches from Huntington to Newport Beach were reopened Sunday, three
days following a sewage spill that dumped approximately 1,000 gallons of raw sewage into the ocean, said Larry Honeybourne with the Orange County
Health Care Agency.
The spill occurred at 9 a.m. Thursday when a pump station at Canyon
and Wilson streets in Costa Mesa experienced a power outage, causing the
sewage to back up at a well at the station and then overflow into the
Greenville Banning Channel, which parallels the Santa Ana River channel,
Honeybourne said.
Beaches from Highland Street in Newport to the Talbert Channel in
Huntington Beach were closed.
“[The sewage] came out of a manhole at the pump station, followed
gravity down the street curb and gutter and into the storm drain system,”
Honeybourne said. “The sewage came down the Greenville Banning Channel
and flowed through flood gates underneath the Pacific Coast Highway
bridge and into the Santa Ana River channel before going out to the
ocean.”
A backup generator was brought in while Southern California Edison
repaired the transformer, said senior maintenance worker for the Costa
Mesa Sanitary District Gerald Vasquez.
Vasquez added that most of the sewage had been contained when he
arrived at the pump station at 9 a.m.
“The pumps were off for an hour or two, and that was it,” Vasquez
said.
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