WHAT’S UP -- steve smith
A couple of years ago, I was asked what posed the greatest threat to the
American family. Without hesitation, I replied, “pollution.” It isn’t
just pollution’s darkest side -- the decreased ability to breathe or the
increased possibility of getting sick from our saltwater -- that had me
concerned. It was the idea that families could not be where they needed
to be most once they were out of their own home.
“Pollution,” I said, “will keep people away from places like the beach.
Once that happens, it is the beginning of our end.”
Our neighbors in Huntington Beach are going through one of the worst
tragedies to befall the county in recent memory. From the looks of it,
the bacteria and sewage that has infected their coastline will make the
bankruptcy look like a tea party.
The cost of the cleanup is not the only problem, it’s the fact that this
could signal the fateful beginning of the end of our local lifestyle. The
pollution, you see, will not stop at the Huntington Beach city line.
Germs don’t carry maps.
As recently as last Aug. 28, the Newport Beach City Council, through
Mayor O’Neil, issued a water-testing report which showed that Newport
waters were safe. The mayor’s letter came one day after county workers
indicated that the polluted Huntington water was headed to Newport.
I have no indication that Newport waters are not safe. The sky over the
beaches of Newport is not falling. But the Huntington Beach scum must
serve as a wake-up call for us to start living the clean life.
The problem in Huntington, after a $1.2-million search found no source,
is quite likely folks with the same bad habits as you and me. It’s you
and me and the small leak in the car we drive. It’s you and me and the
animal poop we don’t scoop. It’s you and me and a thousand other ways we
use our drainage system as a trash can.
Doug Farnham, 31, is a member of the steering committee for the Newport
Beach chapter of the Surfriders Foundation. In case you haven’t heard,
the Surfriders Foundation is in its 16th year and is no longer a band of
surfers trying to protect their spots.
The Surfriders Foundation now has more than 25,000 members in 42 chapters
worldwide.
In Newport, Farnham is the guy who chairs the ultra-successful “Test and
Teach” program at Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar high schools.
“Over 85% of ocean pollution comes from urban runoff,” Farnham told me,
“And there isn’t one specific source. It comes from our streets and our
driveways and our storm drains directly to the ocean.”
One of the greatest effects of beach pollution for Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa will be economic. Disneyland may have put Orange County on the
map, but our beaches have kept it there as tourists flock to our
beautiful shores. The beach closures in Huntington affected businesses of
all types and sizes and is sure to happen here, too, unless we are
careful.
It won’t be hard to ruin our beaches. Newport has 2,000 storm drains that
dump runoff into the water, many of which bring pollution from other
cities. That’s a lot of opportunities to make beaches dirty.
Farnham offered several ways for people to stop beach pollution. “The
Surfriders Foundation is nonpartisan, so we encourage people to write to
elected officials of any party. And we need to look at ourselves and the
little things we can do and try to incorporate these things into our
lives.”
There is one more way. You can join the thousands of Surfriders
Foundation members who work to keep our beaches clean. These people
aren’t the activist style; you won’t seem them chaining themselves to a
buoy or forming a human blockade at a storm drain. This is an action
group. Whether it’s stenciling the “Drains to Beach” signs on our sewers
or testing our waters, these are people who get things done. What they
are doing benefits everyone and they deserve our support. As of this
week, I am a Surfriders member.
The Surfriders Foundation meets the second Tuesday of every month.
November’s meeting is on the 9th at 7 p.m. at the Oasis Senior Center in
Newport Beach. For more information, call Doug Farnham at (949) 632-6273.
Enjoy the beaches as you always have, but respect them, too.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. He can be
reached at (949) 642-6086 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected]
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