Study finds 3 possible causes of ocean bacteria
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Scientists have pegged three sources of
contamination that may have led to the closure of city and state beaches
along the city’s coast last year.
A yearlong study to find the cause of high bacteria counts in coastal
waters identified urban runoff, Talbert Marsh and the possible
interaction between the Orange County Sanitation District’s ocean outfall
as the most likely culprits of beach closures in 1999.
City, county and environmental officials gathered Nov. 16 to discuss
the results and the next steps to curb further bacteria contamination.
“The key issues are really the sanitation district’s outfall and the
marsh,” said Robert Beardsley, the city’s director of public works.
Mary Anne Skorpanich, a watershed manager with the Orange County
Public Facilities and Resources Department, which hosted the meeting,
said the study found that Talbert Marsh contributed bacterial
contamination found in urban runoff, and it surpassed runoff as a source
of the enterococcus and o7 E. coli f7 bacteria.
Water birds living in the marsh were the major source of marsh
contamination, with bacteria found in the waste they produced.
“That could be a real problem,” Beardsley said. “If the birds are a
culprit, what do you do with that? You can’t get rid of them. . . . It’s
a salt marsh.”
Sanitation district officials are also looking into a theory that
their outfall pipe, which dumps partially treated sewage five miles out
to sea, may be drifting along the shore along currents caused by AES
Corp. The power plant uses a pipe the length of the city pier to collect
cold ocean water to cool water and discharge warm water, which may draw
in contaminated water from the district’s outfall pipe and redirect it up
the coast, city officials said.
Sanitation district officials were unavailable for comment, and AES
officials did not return phone calls Tuesday.
About $5 million has been spent to study the bacteria along the
Huntington Beach shoreline, about $1.8 million coming from the city.
The city has been rerouting its urban runoff through the sanitation
district for cleansing. Meanwhile, county and city officials will monitor
the district’s outfall pipe and the marsh, and discuss the possible
reevaluation of state codes governing bacteria levels in ocean water.
“The point here is we know there’s something going on there, and it’s
not coming from our city sewer lines or the ground water,” said Rich
Barnard, a spokesman for the city. “We want to use all the numbers and
science we can to draw a final conclusion.”
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