Beach bacteria nothing new
Eron Ben-Yehuda
As the bacteria continues to play hide-and-seek in the ocean off
Huntington Beach, evidence suggests the contamination is nothing new and
may persist indefinitely.
Similar levels of bacteria were found during the same period last year,
yet health officials neither closed beaches nor posted warnings along the
sand as they have done this time around, Orange County Sanitation
District data shows.
“It doesn’t mean the water is dirtier,” Assemblyman Scott Baugh
(R-Huntington Beach) said. “It means the standards have changed, as far
as I can see.”
The new guidelines kicked in July 26 when AB 411 went into effect. The
state law requires health officials to take immediate action when, for
example, the level of enterococcus bacteria exceeds 104 organisms per 100
milliliters of water. Before the new law, officials had more discretion
to act as they saw fit.
Studies show that swimmers exposed to bacteria counts greater than 104
suffer from stomach and respiratory ailments, said Steve Book, a
toxicologist for the state department of health services.
“If the levels go up, there will be an increase in illnesses,” he said.
Huntington Beach Hospital has not seen any more cases of swimming-related
sickness since health officials detected the contamination in late June,
said Greg Boswell, manager for the hospital’s emergency department. Of
course, that could be related to people heeding warnings to stay out of
the water.
Baugh, though, suspects that the health risks are not as great as the
state law leads people to believe, especially because bacteria levels
have risen and fallen sporadically.
This week’s readings ranged from acceptable to four times higher than
standards allow, sometimes within the same day, said Larry Honeybourne,
program chief for the water-quality section of the Orange County Health
Care Agency.
“All of the sudden it’s popped up in the morning and by the evening it’s
clear,” he said.
Under prior law, such “spikes” would not have caused alarm because health
officials had to average the high and low bacteria counts, said Baugh,
who plans to hold public hearings on AB 411 at City Hall next month.
By Wednesday, warning signs stretched from Huntington State Beach to the
city pier. Health officials have stopped short of closing beaches since
they nearly ruled out sewage as the possible source of contamination and
instead focused on storm drain runoff.
But the mystery deepened last week after water tests taken near Talbert
Marsh, where runoff flows out into the ocean, turned up negative, said
Michele Tuchman, an Orange County Sanitation District spokeswoman.
“We keep coming up against brick walls,” she said.
Next week, the sanitation district plans to recheck sewage pipes five
miles out in the ocean simply to confirm that nothing leaks, she said.
But Dr. Gordon Labedz, who heads the Huntington Beach chapter of the
Surfrider Foundation, argues the real problem isn’t a break in the system
but the whole system itself, which allows runoff and treated waste water
to flow into the Pacific.
“As long as we use the ocean as a dump, this is going to happen, to
happen, to happen,” he said. “If these guys don’t take their heads out of
the sand, we’re going to have this problem every summer and soon we won’t
be able to use the beach.”
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