Diversion of runoff begins
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT-MESA -- Orange County has begun a three-month diversion
program in the Santa Ana River to keep bacteria levels down in the waters
of Newport Beach.
The county’s Public Facilities and Resources Department installed two
large sand berms last week to keep urban runoff -- automobile oils,
animal waste and grime that washes off city streets -- out of the ocean.
The county will divert the waste water from the Santa Ana River to the
Orange County Sanitation District’s treatment plant in Fountain Valley
until Labor Day.
The county implemented a similar diversion program last summer.
“Last year’s summertime diversions did have a positive impact in
keeping area ocean waters safe,” Supervisor James Silva said. “We will
continue these efforts this year as part of our commitment to being
protective of public health.”
In addition to diverting runoff flowing from the Talbert watershed to
the Santa Ana River to the ocean, the county is also studying the types
of pollution found in runoff and their origin.
The study is expected to begin in late June.
Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said he was skeptical that the
program would reduce the high bacteria counts off Huntington Beach and
Newport Beach that have caused postings and closures in recent years.
Bacteria in the ocean are more likely to be caused by the sanitation
district’s “outflow pipe” on the ocean floor, Kiff said.
“Part of the bacteria problem is coming from these outfalls,” Kiff
said. “I don’t know how much is coming from Talbert. It’s important to
find out what the contributing source is.”
The diversion program and study is expected to cost $580,000, which
will be borne by the county, the five watershed cities -- Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach, Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach and Santa Ana -- the
Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board and the National Water
Research Institute.
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach are both chipping in $39,000 and $1,310,
respectively.
“Although they’re the ones who are directly benefiting,” Costa Mesa
Assistant City Engineer Ernesto Munoz said about Newport Beach, “it’s
also a regional benefit.”
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