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Pledging to clean up water

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The annual Heal the Bay Beach Report Card, now in its 15th year,

provided the usual sobering account of the cleanliness of our

beaches. For the most part, the results were good, suggesting that

continued vigilance by city leaders -- and their efforts to get

inland communities to reduce their polluting -- is making our beaches

and water cleaner and safer.

Huntington’s usual trouble spots remain problems, according to the

report releases late last month: The portion of Huntington State

Beach near the intersection of Brookhurst Street and Pacific Coast

Highway was given a B grade, while the Santa Ana River mouth received

a C grade. Overall, the city was cleaner than when tested six months

earlier.

It was when it rained that our beaches went -- one can suppose

literally -- into the toilet.

Almost all of Huntington’s shoreline turned from clean when the

sun shines to polluted after rains. It’s what we all know: After it

rains, you have to stay out of the water. The question now is: What

are city leaders going to do with this information?

Our suggestion is to use as their blueprint the success they’ve

had with keeping the beaches clean during dryer weather. By targeting

businesses, working with inland cities and raising awareness among

residents, spills and other anomalies seem to be less and less

frequent. Our water, in general, is cleaner.

Without letting up on these efforts, now the test is handling the

heavy flows of water on rainy days. More natural treatment via

wetlands, which has shown promise, ought to be part of the solution.

Finding money to pay for expensive treatment of storm water should be

a priority. Discovering effective ways to contain storm water will

have to play a role.

What is encouraging is the improvement we’ve seen already. It

suggests that a promise of clean water in our future is no pipe

dream.

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