Pollution study of Back Bay planned
- Share via
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- The Orange County Sanitation District has launched a
major study that could help pinpoint whether bacteria reaches the beach
during a sewage spill in Upper Newport Bay.
“It’s going to look at, if there’s a spill in the watershed, how the
bacteria reaches the beach,” district spokeswoman Lisa Lawson said.
Many sewage spills that occur in the bay cause bacteria to flow into
the Santa Ana River and down to the beach off the Newport Slough. The
bacteria is contained in waste water and often causes a beach posting or
closure as a result of a spill.
The study, still in a preliminary planning stage, came about as a
result of a spill in La Habra on June 9, 2000. The waterfront in Seal
Beach was closed for three days as a precaution even though no bacteria
from the spill reached the beach.
The Orange County Health Care Agency imposed the beach lock-down.
The sanitation district was fined $107,500 by the Santa Ana Regional
Water Quality Control Board for the spill. Of that money, $82,500 will go
toward paying for the study. The remaining $25,000 was used on cleanup.
The Southern California Coastal Water Research Project, an umbrella
agency that includes the sanitation district as a member, has been given
control of handling the study.
The project will contribute some matching funds for the study, said
agency executive director Steve Weisberg.
“It’s pretty ill-defined,” Weisberg said about the state of the work.
“The generic goal is to better understand how flow from tributaries [of
the Talbert Watershed] transport once they get into [Upper] Newport Bay.”
QUESTION
Foul water
Where should the focus of pollution studies in Newport-Mesa be? Call
our Readers Hotline at (949) 642-6086 or send e-mail to
[email protected]. Please spell your name and include your hometown
and phone number, for verification purposes only.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.