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[Water_news] 4. DWR'S CALIFORNIA WATER NEWS: WATER QUALITY - 5/22/08

Department of Water Resources

California Water News

A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment

 

May 22, 2008

 

4. Water Quality –

 

 

California seawater has improved, pollution survey finds

Los Angeles Times

 

Editorial:

Vile assault on the land

Eureka Times Standard

 

+++++++++++++++++++++++++

 

 

California seawater has improved, pollution survey finds

Los Angeles Times – 5/22/08

By Susannah Rosenblatt, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

 

Waters off California's coast are cleaner -- and safer for swimmers and surfers -- in dry weather than they've been in years, according to an environmental report released Wednesday.

But although water quality is improving overall statewide, Los Angeles County is home to the most bacteria-laden seawater in California for the third straight year. Half of the 10 foulest shorelines in the state are in Los Angeles County, with the dirtiest water at Avalon Harbor Beach on Santa Catalina Island.

 

Other "beach bummers" with the worst water quality were the waters at Santa Monica Pier, Poche Beach and northern Doheny State Beach in southern Orange County, Marie Canyon at Puerco Beach in Malibu, Cabrillo Beach in San Pedro and various locations in Long Beach.

Drier-than-average weather helped keep most ocean waters cleaner; in rainy conditions, however, more than half of Southern California beaches tested fair to poor for traces of fecal bacteria.

"For storm water pollution, we're not doing a good job at all," said Mark Gold, president of the Santa Monica-based nonprofit group Heal the Bay, which compiles the report. "The beaches are just as polluted today during rainstorms as they were 15 years ago."

Runoff can contain trash, toxic heavy metals, pesticides, fertilizer, petroleum byproducts, animal waste and human sewage.

"It's not surprising -- it's just frustrating," Gold said. "We've had so much progress in so many other, different areas of coastal protection, [yet] our beaches still look like landfills after every rain."

Heal the Bay's annual beach report card tests more than 500 locations on the California coast for daily and weekly fecal bacteria pollution levels. Letter grades from A to F indicate the risk of health effects such as stomach flu, ear infections and rashes from swimming in contaminated water. Ocean water is analyzed for total coliform, fecal coliform -- also known as E. coli -- and enterococcus; total coliform can come from soil, plants, animals and humans, and the other two bacteria are found in bird and mammal droppings.

This year, 87% of beaches statewide and in the Southland received A or B grades during dry weather; only 71% of beaches in Los Angeles County alone scored that high.

Santa Monica Bay, long the subject of environmental and government scrutiny for pollution problems, is cleaner, Gold said.

At the same time, Long Beach, at the terminus of the Los Angeles River, has developed as a new trouble spot, with particularly dirty water two years running.

"They're stuck sort of at the proverbial end of the pipe," Gold said.

The city has spent more than $300,000 to pinpoint the source of contamination, and diverted about 1 million gallons of runoff from Alamitos Bay to the sewer system, officials said.

"We still have work to do," said Dr. Jonathan Fielding, director of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health.

"The good news is most of Los Angeles County beaches are in great shape the vast majority of the time."

Orange County beaches were their cleanest in five years, with 93% of testing stations receiving A or B grades in dry weather; parts of the coastline in Seal Beach and Newport Beach were particularly unpolluted, according to the report.

The 10 dirtiest beaches in the state, including Poche and Northern Doheny State Beach in Orange County, are slated to receive grant money from the State Water Board's Clean Beaches Initiative, which funds similar projects across the state.

In July, a new treatment system is scheduled to begin operating at Poche Beach in San Clemente, where runoff from a flood channel has contaminated waters. At Doheny, the city of Dana Point has built a low-flow diversion system to channel dry-weather flows from the North Creek storm drain into the sewer system, according to a State Water Resources Control Board spokesman.

Doheny is a perennial loser in analyses by Heal the Bay, with high bacteria levels attributable in part to the nearby harbor and runoff from area creeks. But Baby Beach in Dana Point Harbor showed improvement from its usual failing marks.

One factor in Los Angeles County's water testing dirtier than the rest of the state's is its new technique of measuring samples directly in front of flowing storm drains and creeks; other jurisdictions tend to collect water samples from dozens of yards away, where the contamination is less concentrated.

Gold argues that samples gathered at the pollution source provide more accurate data, and Heal the Bay is pushing for all water to be collected that way.

The full report card, with county-by-county grades, can be found at
www.healthebay.org/brc.#

http://www.latimes.com/news/science/environment/la-me-beaches22-2008may22,0,4489938.story?track=rss

 

 

Editorial:

Vile assault on the land

Eureka Times Standard – 5/22/08



The historically benevolent attitude toward marijuana in Humboldt County ignores the severe environmental damage caused by cannabis cultivation. But it was hard to ignore last week's south-county diesel spill that contaminated creeks and polluted the water for more than a dozen families.

 

The 1,000-gallon spill came from fuel tanks for a generator providing power to two alleged marijuana grow houses near Hacker Creek below Goat Rock. Like many areas on the North Coast, it was so remote that it took authorities two days after receiving an anonymous tip to trace the source of the contamination. By then, growers had ripped out the pot plants, state fish and game wardens said.

 

By Tuesday, the spill had spread 300 to 400 yards downstream, into Salmon Creek, despite frantic efforts that have included three semi-trailer loads of absorbent pads. Environmental cleanup is expected to take weeks.

 

The irony is not lost on us. On the North Coast, many expressed outrage when fuel from a ship fouled our bay but seem oblivious to the toxic assault on our lands every day from marijuana grows and methamphetamine labs.

 

Average-sized pot grows -- say, 1,000 plants -- require up to 5,000 gallons of water daily. This not only strains small streams and damages downstream vegetation, but growers will divert creeks or terrace lands for irrigation, causing rapid erosion and other damage. Native plants are clear-cut, permitting invasive plants to alter the ecosystem. Wildlife is killed to protect the crop, and growers discard toxic chemicals, garbage and human waste into the watershed.

 

Meth is even more harmful. Chemicals used in its production include lye, red phosphorus, hydriotic acid and iodine. Five to six pounds of hazardous waste results from the production of one pound of finished methamphetamine. Where does it go? Dumped on the ground to leach into the water we drink.

 

Officials who discovered the Hacker Creek spill say the landowner is cooperating with the cleanup. That means he or she should pay for it, not the taxpayers. No doubt it will cost thousands of dollars. There may be criminal charges, as well, and that also is only fitting.

 

But it's far from enough. People are in the business of illegal drugs not only because it is highly profitable and because criminal penalties are minimal, but also because in some communities it's socially acceptable. Despoiling the land should never be socially acceptable in Humboldt County.#

http://www.times-standard.com/opinion/ci_9343512


 

 

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