Activist calls for Coastal Commission to review Talbert runoff plan - Los Angeles Times
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Activist calls for Coastal Commission to review Talbert runoff plan

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What do you do with urban runoff, dirty with all the junk that goes down north county storm drains? If a city plan goes through, the answer will be: send it to Central Park.

According to a plan developed by city officials, the city would spend $5.5 million to divert about one million gallons of water per day into the park’s Talbert Lake, whose water levels are low. But before the water reached the lake, a man-made wetland would naturally clean it, according to officials.

The water would come from the East Garden Grove Wintersburg Channel, which brings runoff from as far as Anaheim and Orange down a path that ends at the ocean on the edge of the Bolsa Chica wetlands. An inflatable rubber dam would divert the channel’s water into the lake instead, except during storms — when waters could rush down the channel to prevent flooding, according to officials.

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In addition to refilling the lake, the plan’s stated benefits include the creation of habitat for rare wildlife — the same man-made wetlands that would clean the water — and eventually excess water that could be used to irrigate plants and fields in the park.

While city officials are relatively united in favor of the project, a some skeptics remain. Resident and open-space activist Mark Bixby said that while he thinks the project’s aims are admirable, he doesn’t want to lose some “pretty lush” bird habitat inside the channel when the fresh water flow stops. Bixby also said he fears that cutting off more than a million gallons of fresh water to the Bolsa Chica wetlands might make them more salty and damage that habitat.

City officials have said the salinity (saltiness) of the wetlands won’t cause a major problem, but Bixby said he hasn’t seen any hard numbers from the city and wants the California Coastal Commission to review the issue.

“If Coastal Commission staff say, ‘We don’t see a problem,’ you can mark me down as a cheerleader instead of a skeptic,” he said.

The city zoning administrator will hold a public hearing on the plan, at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in City Hall, room B8. But the City Council must still weigh in on the project, and is expected to vote on a contract for the construction in mid-October.


MICHAEL ALEXANDER may be reached at (714) 966-4618 or at [email protected].

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