Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
October 31, 2008
4. Water Quality -
Major sewage spill forces closures along Laguna coast
By Tony Barboza
In what is being described by
Waters roughly two miles north and south of the spill, from
"People can still use the beach and the sand; only the ocean is closed," said Deanne Thompson, a spokeswoman for the Orange County Health Care Agency, which monitors ocean water quality.
County health authorities ordered the closure after being alerted about 2:30 a.m. Wednesday to flooding at a pump station near Calliope and Glenneyre streets, about a block from
City crews found effluent draining onto surrounding streets and discovered the source of the spill was a 12-inch pipe that had disconnected. They worked to drain the pump station and contain the spill, channeling the waste into a storm drain that flows into
Though several streets were closed while crews cleaned up the mess and made repairs,
"We have one of the oldest sewer systems in the county," Frank said. "We have a whole lineup of repairs, including a major renovation of this particular pump station. We just didn't get there in time."
The health care agency is testing water at 14 locations, and coastal waters will remained closed until bacteria counts return to acceptable levels.
The unseasonably warm weather has attracted more swimmers and surfers to
"We've made at least 50 to 60 contacts with people who were in the water or attempting to go into the water, even with a lot of signage all over the place," he said.
The last major spill in
Sewage spills also shut down part of the city's beachfront in November 2006 and in June 2005 during the
The last major spill in Southern California took place in January 2006, when 2 million gallons of raw sewage spilled from a
Officials launched a massive cleanup after an estimated hundreds of thousands of gallons flowed into the sand and the ocean.
The Regional Water Quality Control Board will probably ask for an investigation into Wednesday's spill in Laguna and could fine the city if it is found to be at fault.
"More than anything else this is very unfortunate," said John Robertus, executive officer for the board's
County health officials said increased government oversight and upgrades to sewer systems have in general helped reduce the number and size of sewage leaks over the last two decades.
But a community water quality group said the spill is proof that beach cities still need to make many improvements to protect their coasts.
"This is an exceptionally large spill, and yet it's something that is far too common," said Ray Hiemstra, an associate director for Orange County Coastkeeper, a
http://www.latimes.com/features/health/medicine/la-me-sewage30-2008oct30,0,2510029.story
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