Cleaning the water, clearing the memories
Deepa Bharath
CORONA DEL MAR -- The spring of 1952 at Little Corona Beach is still
fresh in Jack Skinner’s mind. It was the time he met the woman of his
dreams, now his wife.
Skinner was a lifeguard, she a young college student who came to the
beach for Spring Break.
He and others who have countless memories embedded in the sands of one
of the most charming and treasured beaches in the area are now engrossed
in an attempt to save its natural beauty and inherent value.
On Friday, local agencies and residents got together to test a machine
they believe will clean the dirty water that has been streaming into the
ocean.
The mobile runoff filtration equipment sucks the surface runoff from
the nearby gully and pumps it back twice as clean as drinking water, said
Joe Gannon, president of Clear Creek Systems that supplies the machines.
Surface runoff is essentially the water that cascades from the city’s
homes and streets into the tide pools. It could contain anything from
human and animal waste to cigarette butts or candy wrappers thrown on the
street.
The filtration machine is a bigger version of the water purifiers used
in homes, said Gannon. More than 100,000 gallons of water flows through
the gully every day.
The machine uses reverse osmosis technology to filter sediments and
ultraviolet rays to kill bacteria that makes the water crystal clear, he
said.
“People are still not prepared to drink the reclaimed water,” said
Gannon, “but it can easily be used for irrigation, showers and toilets.”
The testing was made possible thanks to an anonymous donation of
$50,000 to Orange County Coastkeeper, officials said. The first testing
phase has cost $8,000 so far.
The next phase, said Coastkeeper Garry Brown, is to clean the runoff
and divert it to homes, developments or even possibly the neighboring
Pelican Hill Golf Course.
“It’s a joint venture between us, the city, county, the regional water
board and the residents,” he said. “If we can find a solution for this
problem, it can be replicated in other areas that face similar problems.”
Project director Michael Beanan said the runoff also harmed precious
marine life in the area.
“This water is fresh water that mixes into the ocean,” he explained.
“It affects the kelp and other organisms in the sea that need salt water,
not fresh water.”
Resident Nancy Gardner, who is active in the environmental Surfrider
Foundation, said she wants the beach back to how it was several years
ago.
“This is my beach and I have an emotional attachment to it,” said
Gardner. “This is like a hide out for us local people. We need to clean
it up.”
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