Adams downplays water contamination
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- Delivering his comments by proxy Thursday, Mayor Gary
Adams downplayed bacterial contamination found in ocean waters off the
coastline.
Sick with the flu, Adams sent Assistant City Manager Sharon Wood to
read a prepared statement at the Orange County Coast Assn.’s annual
state-of-the-environment luncheon.
The group invited the mayors of the county’s seven seaside cities to
speak about coastal issues affecting them.
In his statement, Adams cited the upcoming dredging of Upper Newport
Bay, concerns about water quality, annexation plans for Santa Ana Heights
and Newport Coast, and the push to extend flight caps at John Wayne
Airport as the city’s most pressing environmental issues.
Reports of bacterial contamination have dogged the county’s coastline
since 1997, when an underwater plume was found off the Huntington Beach
shoreline. The fecal bacteria has been detected in parts of the water off
of Newport Beach.
“It’s not that [the ocean water in] this area is dirtier that the rest
of the state,” Wood said, reading from the statement. “It’s just that we
test more than other areas.”
Costa Mesa Mayor Libby Cowan joined Adams and two others as absentees
from the luncheon, which was held at the Newport Dunes. Laguna Beach
Mayor Paul Freeman, San Clemente Mayor Scott Diehl and Seal Beach Mayor
Patricia Campbell spoke.
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