Sanitation district gathers input on water contamination
Tariq Malik
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- Oceanographers, environmentalists and
microbiologists packed the control center auditorium at the Orange County
Sanitation District’s waste water plant on Ellis Avenue on Monday to
review ocean water tests for spring and summer.
The meeting brought together about 45 experts to form a technical
advisory committee to help the district test a theory that its waste
water plume from an outfall pipe may interact with an ocean water cooling
system used by the AES Corp. power plant in Huntington Beach. This
correlation may draw sewage shoreward, and therefore be one of reasons
for water contamination and beach closures.
In addition to representatives from environmental groups, regulatory
agencies and other coastal officials, the committee included UC Irvine
scientists who put forth the theory as a possible cause, as well as bird
waste from the Talbert Marsh, and urban runoff.
“We are thrilled that everybody we hoped would attend did,†said Lisa
Lawson, the district’s spokeswoman. “Now we have a set group of experts
that who we’ll be able to reach out to for input and comment on our
study.â€
Han Tan, an engineer with AES, said he appreciated the lead taken by
the sanitation district to get to the bottom of this matter.
“I think this was a very productive meeting, and we’ll continue to
work closely with the sanitation district on this matter,†Tan said. “We
want to be able to determine whether the power station is part of the
contamination problem, and if so, do everything we can to solve and
control it.â€
But some committee members thought the study may need a broader scope.
Vic Liepzig, a former Huntington Beach mayor and executive director of
the environmental group Orange Coast Watch, said focusing on the
relationship between AES and district as the possible cause to beach
bacteria contamination may be a mistake.
“It doesn’t do the district any good to just address that question,â€
he said, adding that a “yes†answer would comfort some members of the
public, putting to rest the doubt on the subject, but a “no†answer would
not.
“Regardless of what the source is, we’re looking to find that,†he
said.
Committee members formed three groups Monday, one to study the
long-term objectives of ocean testing, a second to review how the
county’s watershed could be affected, and a final group to go over the UC
Irvine hypothesis in detail and critique the district’s study plan.
Monday’s meeting was the first of four planned gatherings of the
committee between now and April, with more sessions possible as spring
and summer water tests are conducted.
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