A tough plan to stomach
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Make no mistake: A plan in the works to ensure Huntington Beach’s
future drinking water supply is a tough one to swallow. It’s an idea
that obviously will take some getting used to, and one that raises
legitimate questions about safety standards.
The $600-million plan being proposed by the Orange County Water
District would convert 150-million gallons of treated sewage water
each day into potable water, for use both in the tap and to keep
seawater from entering the area’s underground aquifer. It could
provide water for 144,000 families for a year, officials say.
Exactly our thoughts. Drinking sewage water? Are times that
desperate?
Officials with the water district say, no -- not yet. But the
water supply is reaching capacity, and as everyone knows Orange
County’s population is only getting bigger.
That leaves the next, even more obvious question: How can this
possibly be safe?
Officials insist the three-part purification system will meet the
toughest standards. “We have to meet higher standards than bottled
water,” district spokesman Ron Wildermuth told the Independent.
It first will involve microfiltration, which captures small
particles, bacteria and some viruses. The next step, reverse osmosis,
will force the water through a tiny membrane to break up the
molecules, removing the smallest pieces of salt and debris, while
only allowing smaller water molecules to pass through. Finally, the
water will be exposed to ultraviolet light to kill any organisms that
might have made it through.
All that is reassuring. The trouble is that systems can falter or
break down. The water district will also have to assure residents of
Huntington Beach and the county that safeguards are in place in case
of a mishap.
That message most likely will be a hard sell, as will the more
overarching one to get people comfortable with knowing where their
water came from. It will take more than public relations photos of
district leaders drinking the water themselves, or other such stunts.
But by all accounts, such extreme measures are the only ways this
area will be able to handle the influx of people who -- for all the
reasons we know so well -- want to move here. And that’s a reality
that isn’t about to change, whether we can stomach it.
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