County waste to be cleaned up
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By approving new, higher-level treatment standards for its waste,
the Orange County Sanitation District board moved away from a
treatment method that was decidedly out of step with most of the
nation’s other sanitation agencies.
“We’re not doing cutting-edge stuff here,” Councilwoman Connie
Boardman said. “We’re just catching up with the rest of the country.”
After a heady debate at a
July 17 meeting, sanitation district members approved the new,
full-treatment method on a razor-thin 13-12 vote.
The board also decided to drop its pursuit of a controversial
federal waiver allowing it to skirt standards laid out in the Clean
Water Act of 1972.
The move is expected to help address nagging beach postings and
closures in a county struggling with enigmatic bacteria outbreaks off
its shoreline. The issue reached a flashpoint, during the summer of
1999, when Surf City took a crippling hit to its stream of visitors
after a rash of closures. Surf zone contamination has been detected
as close as a half mile from the Huntington Beach shoreline.
A contingent of inland cities represented on the board had
resisted stepping up to the higher treatment because of the cost.
Sanitation district leaders said they would need to spend $423
million between now and 2020 to implement the treatment.
General Manager Blake Anderson, however, has said the district’s
full wastewater discharge -- heading into the ocean off Surf City’s
shoreline 4 1/2 miles out to sea via an outfall pipe on the ocean
floor -- could reach the higher treatment level by 2011.
As a result of the
higher costs, ratepayers will probably have to absorb a
$16-per-year increase in their basic sewer rate. The average
household now pays $87.50 per year.
Representatives of inland cities also questioned the effectiveness
of the new treatment method, known as “full secondary.” A form of
this method was developed in the late 19th Century but has since been
refined.
“This is an 1860s process,” Placentia Councilman Norm Eckenrode
said. “When you really analyze it, it doesn’t do the job.”
Environmentalists who had pushed for the new treatment and an end
to the waiver -- disputed those claims.
Jan Vandersloot, one of the founders of the activist Ocean Outfall
Group, said the sanitation district wasn’t locked in to a specific
type of full treatment, only one that would reduce the bacteria
levels in the wastewater. Leaders of the group gave presentations
before the city councils of many of the county’s cities to help
inform them about the issue in the months leading up to the vote.
With a dozen inland representatives, of the 25 board members,
opposing the new treatment, Wednesday’s vote was a close one.
Anaheim representative Shirley McCracken broke from the ranks to
support full treatment.
“I’m gratified that some of the inland cities voted for [the new
treatment],” Vandersloot said. “They use the beaches as well.”
-- Paul Clinton
Rohrabacher ires congresswoman
Enforcing the time limit for speaking at a committee hearing
proved hazardous for Surf City Congressman Dana Rohrabacher last
week, as a Southern Democrat suggested he was a racist for cutting
off her long-winded speech.
Rohrabacher stopped Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Houston), 10
minutes after she had exceeded her five-minute time limit, at a House
Science Committee hearing.
After Rohrabacher asked
Lee to “be more disciplined
in being able to ask a
specific question,” she took offense.
“I’m the only member that you comment on,” Jackson Lee said. “It
may be that I’m the only African-American woman sitting here.”
Jackson Lee’s remark came after an angry exchange in which
Rohrabacher, the chairman of the committee, slammed his gavel down
and told the congresswoman she was not recognized and needed to stop
talking.
Stunned by the accusation, Rohrabacher responded: “Ms. Jackson
Lee, that type of charge is beneath you. It’s beneath your dignity.”
The exchange came
at a hearing on NASA’s cost-controlling methods and
scientist-retention efforts.
-- Paul Clinton
Mesa project on
Orange County Supervisors Tuesday unanimously upheld a county
Planning Commission decision to allow developer Hearthside Homes to
build on the upper mesa of the Bolsa Chica.
In a 4-0 decision, the board denied appeals filed by the Bolsa
Chica Land Trust following the county Planning Commission’s decision
in May to allow the developer to move forward with plans. Supervisor
Todd Spitzer was absent.
Known as the Brightwater project, the latest plan would build 388
homes on the upper mesa -- an area the California Coastal Commission
has already given Hearthside Homes permission to build on.
The project is in compliance with the Coastal Commission’s ruling
that is, even now, held up in litigation.
Hearthside Homes and landowner Signal Landmark claim in the suit
that the commission took the property by restricting what could be
built to the point where itt is no longer economically feasible.
Hearthside Homes planned to build on 183 acres of the mesa and
was limited to building on 65 acres by the commission in November
2000.
Although a San Diego Superior Court Judge dismissed segments of
the complaint in August, the lawsuit goes on.
Members of the Bolsa Chica Land Trust, a group formed with the
purpose of buying the land from Hearthside Homes, promise to keep the
fight going.
The project will now go to the Costal Commission for approval.
-- Danette Goulet
One block section of PCH to be closed
Pacific Coast Highway between Beach Boulevard and Huntington
Street will be closed to both north and southbound traffic starting
Wednesday so that construction materials being used to build a new
pedestrian bridge can be removed.
The stretch of roadway will be closed to all traffic from 10 p.m.
to 6 a.m. on Wednesday and Thursday, Aug. 1. That same stretch of
road will also be closed on Monday, Aug. 5 through Wednesday, Aug. 7.
--Jose Paul Corona
Harman turns down Bolsa Chica money
Tom Harman didn’t take the bait.
Surf City’s assemblyman made his intentions clear during a feeler
call from Gov. Gray Davis’ office in which Harman said he was told
money could be available for Bolsa Chica if he supported the budget.
But Harman, who has joined his Republican colleagues in pushing
for more spending cuts in Davis’ 2002-03 fiscal-year budget, turned
the deal down.
“He just doesn’t feel a little graft from the governor is worth
it,” said Harman’s legislative director Peter Crandall. “He just
doesn’t want to condemn the people of California to a bad budget just
to get a little goodie for his district.”
Davis’ legislative advisors have been singling out Republicans,
they might be able to sway, to nail down four more votes for a tardy
budget, which is stalled in the Assembly.
A spokesman in Davis’ Los Angeles office said he had not heard
about the call to Harman.
“We don’t have any knowledge of anyone placing that call,”
spokesman Byron Tucker said. “Certainly, the governor has been
pressuring the Republican holdouts to do their job and pass the
budget that was presented to them.”
Davis’ budget would result in a $23.6 billion deficit, the state’s
legislative analyst has said. Budgets for the following years are
expected to top $9 billion, largely due to the state’s energy crisis
from 2001 and a faltering economy.
A Davis advisor called Harman about two weeks ago to ask if he was
amenable to some deal making, but no firm number was given for how
much state money could be cut loose for the wetlands, Crandall said.
Davis’ offer isn’t surprising, but the fact that it was discussed
publicly is unusual, officials said.
--Paul Clinton
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