Displaced ducks put city in fowl mood
- Share via
June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- A stealth operation worthy of Saturday morning
cartoons could be simmering. Ducks displaced by the city’s new
waterfowl-feeding law might be nabbed under cover of night. But once the
feathers stop flying, they’ll wake up in a new home not too different
from the one they now know.
Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff is considering ways to deal with
ducks still hanging out on Balboa Island. Since the ordinance that
forbids setting out large containers of food and water went into effect
Feb. 7, there have been reports of marauding groups of ducks and mallards
cruising the alleys in search of food.
But this doesn’t mean everyone’s been obeying the new law. On Feb. 8,
several ducks drank water from a large pan set out on the dock of the
Balboa Island home that some have dubbed “Duck Central.”
And, as if that situation weren’t daffy enough, there’s another
complication. While white ducks, local officials believe, fall under the
jurisdiction of city government, the brown mallards are out of local
hands. Because they’re not classified as “domestic ducks,” they fall
under the purview of the U.S. Department of Fish and Game.
“We’re not sure what the best way is to deal with the problem,” Kiff
said last week.
Officials won’t disclose when or where they might conduct the midnight
roundup. If officials follow through with the idea, the ducks would be
taken to an undisclosed park somewhere inland where their effect on
harbor water quality will be reduced or eliminated.
The city in January passed the law forbidding all but incidental
feeding of ducks. The ordinance, proposed by Balboa Island City
Councilman Steve Bromberg, provided a solution to what some call an
offensive and unhealthful problem on the island and in several other
places in the city.
Duck droppings are high in the bacteria that prompt beach closures and
no-swimming warnings. To some, they are also highly unpleasant, and
inspired comments such as “disgusting” and “awful” from some Balboa
Island residents at the Dec. 11 City Council meetings.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
QUESTION
IS ALL DUCKY?
What are your thoughts on the city’s latest duck solution? Call our
Readers Hotline at (949) 642-6086 or send e-mail to o7
[email protected] . Please spell your name and include your
hometown and phone number, for verification purposes only.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.