Council to consider water-safety system
Stacy Brown
NEWPORT BEACH -- Tonight, the City Council will make a decision on just
how sweet the water should be.
The council will consider whether to support a proposed ground water
replenishment system.
Two Orange County agencies -- the Orange County Water District and the
Orange County Sanitation District -- plan to build a pipeline and
treatment facilities if the concept is publicly supported and receives
approval from federal, state and local authorities.
“There is a need to ensure that saltwater and other things don’t get into
our ground water,” said Mayor Dennis O’Neil. “Seventy-five percent of our
water comes through this system so if there is concern we want to take
steps to continue to (make it safe).”
City officials said the proposed system would create a new, safe and
reliable water supply to meet the increased demands for high-quality
water.
If the system was approved, treated waste water from the Sanitation
District, which is discharged into the ocean, would undergo treatment,
including microfiltration, reverse osmosis and disinfection.
The purified water would be of exceptional quality, officials said, and
would exceed all state and federal drinking water standards.
“We’re approving a system to replenish ground water to protect the system
where we own 3 or 4 wells in Fountain Valley -- where water is pumped
into Newport Beach,” O’Neil said.
City staff said the replenishment system will be available regardless of
rainfall levels or drought conditions.
Furthermore, officials said, its approval is necessary because of
predictions that the county will experience a water shortage of 150,000
acre-feet -- the amount of water needed for 300,00 families -- within the
next 20 years.
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