Talbert water among worst
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Alicia Robinson
A Surf City water body is near the top of a list of Orange County
waters with poor water quality, according to a report released by
Orange County CoastKeeper and other coastal monitoring groups.
The report is based on data collected May 17, a statewide
water-monitoring day for various water-quality organizations. The
Talbert Channel showed high levels of phosphates and nitrates, which
can cause explosive plant growth and kill fish, CoastKeeper project
coordinator Ray Hiemstra said.
The waterway is one of the four worst sites monitored in Orange
County, Hiemstra said. The other three top offenders were Los Trancos
Creek in Newport Beach, Aliso Creek in Laguna Beach and Segunda
Deshecha in San Clemente.
Of the 36 sites checked countywide, water at 31 sites exceeded at
least one of the standards measured. Federal Environmental Protection
Agency standards were used in the monitoring, Hiemstra said.
“Pretty much every stream that we monitored had some kind of
problem,” he said. “Some of them were just more serious than others.”
Compared with an EPA-designated “acceptable” level of 0.1
milligrams of phosphates per liter of water, Talbert water contained
0.18 milligrams per liter.
The high levels of nitrates and phosphates are “your classic urban
runoff problems” caused by lawn fertilizers, people washing their
cars and the like, Hiemstra said.
The Santa Ana River Water Quality Control Board oversees numerous
bodies of water in the Orange County, including the Talbert Marsh.
Water-quality board spokesman Kurt Berchtold said he had not seen the
report yet, but the board has worked with Orange County CoastKeeper
to solve water-quality problems.
Orange County is already familiar with beach closures and
pollution of coastal waters, he said.
“There have been significant problems in the past, and in recent
years, I think, those problems have been improving, but certainly
they’re not completely eliminated,” Berchtold said.
The first step to fixing a water-quality problem is identifying
the source of pollution, he said. If urban runoff is causing
pollution, municipalities bear some responsibility, and the board can
require them to take corrective action.
“We will certainly review the report and look for any problems
that it identifies that we can address using our regulatory
authority,” Berchtold said.
Poor water-quality ratings in the water bodies did not come as a
surprise.
“We’ve looked at it many, many times,” Huntington Beach
Councilwoman Debbie Cook said of the Talbert Marsh water problem.
“Its been studied to death, and we’ve done everything we can to try
to clean up what’s coming out of there.”
The city diverted flow from Talbert Channel to the Orange County
Sanitation District, but even that hasn’t solved the problem
entirely, she said.
“It continues to be a problem and nobody’s come up with any
alternatives for what to do with it. ... We’re open to suggestions.”
Hiemstra said that about half of the 546 sites monitored statewide
showed some water-quality problems. The report will help establish
benchmark data for water quality along the California coast, he said.
“A lot of these waterways, as far as I know, have never been
tested for this,” he said. “It’s intended specifically to identify
problems that maybe nobody even knew about.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment
for Times Community News. She can be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by
e-mail at [email protected].
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