New full-treatment sewage decision applauded
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Paul Clinton
Newport-Mesa -- By approving new, higher-level treatment standards
for its waste Wednesday, the Orange County Sanitation District board
moved away from a treatment method that was decidedly out of step
with most of the nation’s other sanitation agencies.
Sanitation district members approved the new full-treatment method
after a heady debate Wednesday evening on a razer-thin 13-12 vote.
The board also decided to drop its pursuit of a controversial federal
waiver allowing it to skirt standards laid out in the Clean Water Act
of 1972.
The move is expected to help address nagging beach postings and
closures in the county struggling with enigmatic bacteria outbreaks
off its shoreline. The issue reached a flashpoint during the summer
of 1999, when Huntington Beach took a crippling hit to its stream of
visitors after a rash of closures. Surf zone contamination has been
detected as close as 1/2 mile from the Newport Beach shoreline.
“I think there’s a broad appreciation for having clean beaches,”
Newport Beach Councilman Gary Adams said. “It’s a decision that
should have been made five years ago. It’s a tardy decision, rather
than a legacy decision.”
Adams sat in for Mayor Tod Ridgeway, a member of the board, during
the Wednesday meeting. Both Adams and Costa Mesa Sanitary District
member Jim Ferryman, who is also a Newport-Mesa Unified School
District board member, added their votes to the supporters.
A contingent of inland cities represented on the board had
resisted stepping up to the higher treatment due to its higher cost.
Sanitation district leaders said they would need to spend $423
million between now and 2020 to implement the new treatment.
As a result, ratepayers will probably have to absorb a
$16-per-year increase in their basic sewer rate. The average
household now pays $87.50 per year.
Representatives of inland cities also questioned the effectiveness
of the new treatment method, known as “full secondary.” A form of
this method was developed in the late 19th Century, but has since
been refined.
“When you really analyze it, it doesn’t do the job,” Placentia
Councilman Norm Eckenrode said. “This is an 1860s process.”
A contingent of environmentalists who had pushed for the new
treatment and the waiver -- disputed those claims.
“That would be like saying the dollar bill in my pocket is no good
because it’s only been backed by the U.S. government for a couple
hundred years,” said Bob Caustin, founder of Defend the Bay, a
Newport Beach environmental group.
With the dozen inland cities opposing the new treatment,
Wednesday’s vote was a close one.
Anaheim representative Shirley McCracken broke from the ranks to
support the increased treatment.
“It’s nice that an inland city like Anaheim recognizes the
importance of clean beaches,” Newport Beach Asst. City Manager Dave
Kiff said. “They’re a tourist-dependent city.”
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