Wells back in use
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT-MESA -- Wells taken out of service after a potentially
cancer-causing chemical was detected are again providing water to Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach.
Mesa Consolidated Water District, which provides water to Costa Mesa,
stopped providing water from its three wells on Jan. 29 after the Orange
County Water District announced it had found traces of the industrial
solvent known as “1,4-Dioxane” in the county’s aquifer. Newport Beach
also stopped service from its wells in Fountain Valley in response to the
discovery.
“The amounts represent a very insignificant health risk,” said Diana
Leach, general manager of the Mesa Consolidated Water District. “The
wells were taken off line due to our caution. We wanted to assess the
situation by getting more information.”
After discussions with the state’s Department of Health Services and
on the recommendation of the Orange County Water District, Mesa district
officials and Newport Beach officials decided to resume water delivery
from all the wells on Wednesday.
Wells throughout Costa Mesa and Fountain Valley have shown 1,4-Dioxane
levels of anywhere from four parts per billion to 20 parts per billion.
At the level of 300 parts per billion, health authorities recommend
stopping using wells. When amounts of three parts per billion are
detected, officials recommend that water providers monitor the situation.
No standards exist that require water agencies to stop service because of
1,4-Dioxane.
“People should have full confidence that we are putting the wells back
in service because they meet all standards and in fact exceed them,”
Leach said. “High-quality water is being delivered. We would not consider
doing anything to affect peoples’ confidence in us or the water that they
drink.”
She added that the well water is mixed with water from other sources,
which further dilutes the threat of 1,4-Dioxane.
The switch back to wells ends a costly situation for the two cities,
which were paying about twice as much to import water as it costs to
provide it from the wells.
“This has been a wake-up call for us to realize that we have to
protect our ground-water basin,” Newport Beach Assistant City Manager
Dave Kiff said. “We’ll continue to monitor levels of 1,4-Dioxane to make
sure the levels don’t change. At the current levels, we don’t need to be
concerned, but the important message here is that we have to take much
greater care of our waste water because at some point it’s recycled into
drinking water.”
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