Sewage spill closes 300 feet of beach
Susan McCormack
NEWPORT BEACH -- Three hundred feet of Bayshore Beach were closed
Tuesday while Orange County Health Care Agency officials investigated a
sewage spill in the area.
Don Webb, director of Public Works, said that the spill was reported
to the city at about 9 a.m. Monday. Utilities workers responding to the
call found that sewage was flowing out of two different manholes near
Dover and Westcliff drives.
Workers found that tree roots and grease were clogging the sewage
pipes and had caused them to crack.
“The trees grow from the outside to the inside,” Webb said. “Some
trees have tiny roots seeking water. They’ll find the smallest crack, and
continue to grow because they are finding moisture.”
As is standard procedure for sewage spills, the city immediately
contacted the county’s Health Care Agency. Larry Honeybourne, program
chief, said 800 gallons of raw sewage had found its way into a storm
drain that flows toward Bayshore Beach. The agency closed the beach to
swimmers as a precaution.
The Health Care Agency conducted tests on the water and expects
results today as to whether or not the bacteria levels in the water
exceed state standards.
“It’s a very large body of water, and a small quantity [of sewage]
like this ends up being diluted quite rapidly,” said Webb, adding that
the beach should be reopened as soon as the test results show acceptable
bacteria levels.
The city was forced to close portions of the bay beaches about a year
and a half ago when the contractor on the Arches Bridge project
accidentally drilled a hole in a sanitation main. In that incident,
100,000 gallons of sewage surged into the bay.
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