A quick fix
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June Casagrande
No one admits they do it, but the offenders are out there
somewhere: Boaters who, for sake of convenience, sometimes pump the
contents of their boat bilges into the ocean.
It seems harmless enough, just flushing out accumulated ocean
water, until you consider that just about any filled boat bilge
contains a significant amount of oil and gas. And these pollutants
contribute to the destruction of fragile marine environments.
A new program is aiming to change all of this. The Environmental
Health division of the county’s Health Care Agency has started a
pilot program in Newport Harbor. Boaters can pick up free absorbent
bilge pads at the Shell Station at the Newport Landing Fuel Dock.
Vessel operators simply lay down the pads over their bilge water and
the pads do the rest -- absorbing the oil and gas without absorbing
water.
Then, boaters just turn in the used pads for recycling and get new
ones every time they change their vessel’s oil.
“It’s easy and it’s free,” said Steven Kim, hazardous waste
specialist for the county agency.
The pilot program is paid for by state environmental grants funded
largely through surcharges consumers pay for every quart of oil
purchased. The agency also hopes for state funding to expand the
program into a permanent one that would include a free bilge pump-out
station.
“If you’re a resident or anyone else who enjoys the marine
environment, it’s clear why this is a good thing to participate in,”
Kim said.
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