Council approves water purification system
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Stacy Brown
NEWPORT BEACH -- The City Council voted Monday to back a proposed
ground water replenishment system that will ensure safe water for city
residents for the next two decades.
In their 4-2 vote with council members Tom Thomson and Norma Glover
voting no (Councilman Tod Ridgeway was absent), council members agreed
with two Orange County agencies and several officials who said the system
was necessary to ensure clean water.
According to city officials, the replenishment system will be
available for the next 20 years, regardless of rainfall levels or drought
conditions.
The Orange County Water District and the Orange County Sanitation
District plan to build a pipeline and treatment facilities if the concept
is supported by the public and receives approval from federal, state and
local authorities.
County officials said the proposed system would create a new, safe
and reliable water supply to meet increased demands for high quality
water.
But environmental activists Bob Caustin and his wife, Susan Skinner,
asked council to vote against the water improvements because they would
only be a prelude to more development.
“When do we say enough development, that’s what this is all about,”
Skinner said. “No one can give us 100% assurance that this method is
safe. Maybe we should say there are limits on development and that water
is a limited resource.”
Under the plan, treated waste water from the Sanitation District,
which is discharged into the ocean, would undergo treatment that includes
microfiltration, reverse osmosis and disinfection.
According to district officials, the purified water would be of
exceptional quality and would exceed all state and federal drinking water
standards.
The system will also be available for multiple purposes including
household, landscaping, industrial and prevention of sea water intrusion.
Mayor Dennis O’Neil said last week that the council’s approval would
“replenish ground water to protect the system where we own three or four
wells in Fountain Valley where water is pumped into Newport Beach.”
O’Neil said there is a need to protect the ground water from salt
water and other contaminants.
“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,” the
mayor said.
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