THE SCIENTIFIC sleuth
Paul Clinton
As a boy living on a small island in southwestern Alaska, Stanley
Grant was always close to the water. He basically lived on a dock
near his parents’ shrimp-processing plant.
During the summers, Grant would hop into a kayak and paddle around
the Gulf of Alaska near Kodiak Island. It was at these times that he
developed an affinity for the ocean, which has endured up to the
present day.
This bit of personal history provides a revealing backdrop to
Grant’s current effort, as a professor of environmental engineering
at UC Irvine, to isolate the cause of the recurring, and somewhat
enigmatic, bacterial outbreaks along the Newport Beach and Huntington
Beach shorelines.
“I’ve lived next to the ocean all my life,” said Grant, who just
celebrated his 40th birthday. “I see it as an opportunity to try to
do the community a service to find out what’s causing the bacterial
contamination.”
Grant’s easygoing manner, ability to simplify complex scientific
data for the public and his high academic profile have made him
popular among the regulators, city leaders, environmentalists and
even sanitary officials grappling with the problem.
At the moment, Grant is leading two major studies -- one that will
determine whether boats are dumping sewage into Newport Harbor and
another that looks at the role of wetlands as a possible contributor
to ocean pollution.
Playing the role of scientific private eye, Grant has also been a
central player in a handful of important studies that have offered
in-depth investigation and also questioned assumptions about ocean
water pollution.
“He doesn’t seem to be afraid to debunk some myths,” said Dave
Kiff, a Newport Beach assistant city manager. “I appreciate that he’s
not afraid to challenge those things.”
Grant has taught in UC Irvine’s Henry Samueli School of
Engineering for 11 years but came into the spotlight shortly after a
rash of bacterial outbreaks turned Huntington Beach into a ghost town
during the summer of 1999.
After graduating from Stanford University, Grant went to work as a
seismologist. He left that field to enroll in the environmental
engineering program at Caltech. At UCI, he says his specialty has
been on “particle physics and particle chemistry, relative to
removing particle contaminants from water.”
Grant lives on campus with his wife, Lisa, a seismologist, and two
children. When he isn’t thinking about bacterial pollution, he likes
to play the piano and cook dinner.
Early on in the search for answers about the persistent bacterial
outbreaks, Grant nailed down funding from the National Water Research
Institute for $140,000 to look as the sources of fecal pollution at
Huntington State Beach. The institute later renewed the grant for
another $600,000.
After the outbreaks, Grant theorized that the Orange County
Sanitation District’s outfall pipe could be the “smoking gun” that
was forcing public health officials to post and close beaches in both
Surf City and Newport Beach.
The sanitation district releases 234 million gallons of partially
treated sewage into the ocean. Grant was one of the first scientists
to surmise that the waste-water plume was returning to the surf zone.
He theorized that ocean currents known as internal tides were washing
the plume back to the shoreline, where it was being sucked into the
surf zone by the cooling system of the AES power plant.
But after participating in a $5.1-million district study, during
the summer of 2001, Grant began backing off that stance. Now, he says
he believes the heightened bacteria is probably caused by a number of
factors, including urban runoff, animal waste and possibly the power
plant.
In a separate study, Grant found that Surf City’s Talbert Marsh is
a source of fecal bacteria from bird waste, vegetation and sediment
that is washed into the surf zone with ebbing tides.
Grant has become both a sought-after expert and a popular teacher
because of his down-to-earth style and his willingness to investigate
several aspects of the problem.
“He’s an excellent communicator,” said Semsi Emsari, a former
student. “His style is very successful.”
Between July 26 and July 29, Grant and a cadre of students took
more than 400 samples of water in Newport Harbor.
Grant and his undergraduate students collected the samples at the
Balboa Yacht Basin, the city-controlled section of the marina near
Balboa Island.
Two additional rounds of testing are scheduled for the $50,000
survey.
On Aug. 13, the UC Office of the President awarded $640,000 to a
research team led by Grant to study how coastal wetlands affect the
levels of fecal pollution along the Southern California coast. The
Back Bay, Newport Harbor and the Santa Ana River sloughs will be
included in the survey.
Two days later, Grant made news again, when a research team he
joined released a report suggesting that bacteria levels in
Huntington Beach are much better than previously thought, based on 43
years of water-quality data -- the longest such study of its kind.
For his work, his peers at UCI handed Grant the chairmanship of
the environmental engineering department within the engineering
school.
“This is extremely important research,” said Nicolaos Alexopoulos,
UCI’s dean of engineering. “He is the test example of an engineering
mind. We are programmed problem solvers.”
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment and politics. He may be
reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at paul.clinton@latimes.com.
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