Cities prepared for water emergency
Greg Risling
NEWPORT-MESA -- The possibility of rationing water because of a shortage
wouldn’t happen in Newport Beach or Costa Mesa, officials said Tuesday.
In the wake of news that South County residents will probably have to
conserve water for the next 10 days because a major water main ruptured
Monday, Newport-Mesa officials said they are well-prepared for an
emergency.
“If a pipeline broke, we would be OK,” said Coleen Scarminach,
administrative services manager for the Mesa Consolidated Water District.
“In South County, they are nearly 100% reliant on imported water. That
isn’t the case here.”
Scarminach said it’s the complete opposite for Costa Mesa residents who
are served by the water district. Because importing water from other
areas was too expensive, the district decided to build a colored water
treatment facility that will be functional next July.
The primary source for a majority of the district’s water has been from
underground wells. When the plant is operational, the district will be
nearly self-reliant. Right now, the district relies on the Metropolitan
Water District to provide about 25% of its water needs.
Importing water costs $435 per acre-foot, while well water costs only
$150 per acre-foot.
“The more self-reliant we become, the less we are affected by [the
metropolitan district’s] lines breaking down,” Scarminach said. “We are
fortunate to have access to ground water, while a lot of South County
doesn’t have that same resource.”
In Newport Beach, city officials said it would take a three-pronged
failure to significantly reduce the water supply to residents. Because
the supply taps three different resources -- ground water in Fountain
Valley and two reservoirs -- the city would be hard-pressed to encounter
a major disaster.
“We have the largest backup water system in the county,” said Newport
Beach Public Works Director Don Webb. “To take us totally out of water,
it would take three simultaneous failures. The probability is very slim.”
Even with a water shortage, Newport Beach could draw from other agencies.
“Because of the mutual aid system we have, we could receive help from
Mesa or Irvine Ranch water districts,” Webb added. “But there isn’t an
agency in Southern California that can be 100% reliant on one system
alone.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.