New plan may mean a cleaner ocean
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Paul Clinton and Danette Goulet
County sanitation district officials have announced they will begin
disinfecting treated sewage that is released into the waters off
Huntington Beach, waste that environmentalists have implicated as the
cause of beach closings and illnesses among surfers and swimmers.
The announcement came at a news conference last week at the Orange
County Sanitation District’s Fountain Valley plant.
District leaders said they would spend $5 million per year to bleach
the waste water, which is sent into the water through a pipe on the ocean
floor. It is a process that would remove viruses and bacteria,
spokeswoman Lisa Murphy said.
“This removes us from the equation,” Murphy said. “It will remove us
from the doubt about us impacting the beach.”
The district has also spent about $5.1 million to implement an
extensive testing program to pinpoint the location of a massive plume of
pollution off the shorelines of Huntington Beach and Newport Beach.
City officials and environmentalists have long suspected it is causing
some of the beach warnings.
“If you kill live bacteria, any time you do that, its a pretty good
idea,” said City Councilman Ralph Bauer. “We do it in swimming pools all
the time and it keeps people from getting sick.”
But Bauer worries that bleaching the water may not be enough.
“They’re the experts, but I’d hope they’d take any precautions
necessary,” Bauer said. “I believe they need to take care of the chloride
and the outfall still has to stand muster to the clean water act.”
The sanitation district currently holds a waiver that allows it to
discharge sewage into the ocean that does not meet the standards laid out
in the Clean Water Act of 1972.
The district pumps 243-million gallons of partially treated sewage
into the Pacific Ocean each day through the pipe on the ocean floor. The
pipe opening is five miles out to sea.
District officials will begin the disinfection process within the next
90 days, Murphy said. The bleach is about three times stronger than the
household variety. Most of the $5 million for the project is the cost of
buying the industrial-strength chemical.
While environmentalists say they are glad to see proactive measures,
the bleach itself is a concern.
“I’m glad to see the district admit they have a problem, which in a
way goes into the waiver issue,” said Garry Brown, executive director of
Orange County CoastKeeper.
“We’re extremely concerned as to the volume of bleach they are putting
in and its effects,” he added. “We agree that we would support any
measures that are going to take bacteria out to make safe for swimmers,
but are concerned with the other possible effects.”
Any long-term plans to chlorinate would also have to include a
dechlorination process, Brown added.
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