Chlorine may have spilled into creek
Susan McCormack
CRYSTAL COVE -- Officials from several regulatory agencies are studying
the possibility that an Irvine Co. contractor accidentally spilled an
unknown amount of chlorine into Los Trancos Creek, which leads into
Crystal Cove State Park.
“We don’t know how high the chlorine levels were, if there was any there
at all,” said Larry Honeybourne, water quality program chief with the
Orange County Health Department.
Irvine Co. officials also said they don’t know if anything really
happened.
“We’ve received complaints and are looking into it,” said company
spokesman Paul Kranhold.
The agencies were alerted to the situation Monday, after residents and
visitors complained about a chlorine-like odor coming from runoff flowing
through Los Trancos Creek. The runoff reportedly had been flowing for
about five hours.
“The flow was so great, it filled both sides of the creek,” said Mary
Blake, founder of Alliance to Rescue Crystal Cove, which is working to
prevent upstream development runoff from flowing into the pristine area.
“It reeked so badly you could stand 20 yards away and smell it. It burned
your eyes if you got closer.”
Blake said she was ill-equipped to collect a specimen of the allegedly
chlorine-ridden water.
The alliance has been concerned that nearby construction of a Marriott
time-share resort and 800 homes by the Irvine Co. will increase runoff
problems at the park. Posted signs already warn beachgoers of
contaminated water.
It is standard practice to use chlorine to decontaminate new water pipes
when a new community is being constructed. Therefore, while officials
concede that chlorine was in the vicinity, they said they do not yet know
whether the chemical exceeded an acceptable level or whether it was
properly disposed of after it was used to clean the pipes.
The state Department of Fish and Game, the Orange County Health
Department, and the U.S. Coast Guard examined the area Monday and will be
conducting an investigation to confirm the source of the runoff and if it
was contaminated.
Mark Stephens, chief petty officer with the Coast Guard, said his group
did not witness any indications of unusual chemicals in the runoff or
surrounding area and said the runoff might have been illegally dumped
water from a swimming pool.
Honeybourne said officials from his agency also did not see anything
suspicious.
“No odor was detected,” he said. “But, chlorine dissipates very quickly.”
Dennis Kelly, professor of marine science at OCC, said chlorine can be
deadly to sea life, including sea anemones, limpets, marine crabs, algae
and seaweed.
Kelly said once the chlorine reaches the ocean, it becomes diluted and is
“pretty harmless.” It is during the trek the flow makes from the creek,
across the beach and to the ocean when the chemical can do the most
damage.
And, he said, it takes very little chlorine to kill.
“It’s very toxic stuff,” he said.
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