County pushes water program
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June Casagrande
The Orange County Water District has launched a full-scale media
blitz to promote its Groundwater Replenishment System -- a project
that will add treated sewer water to drinking water supplies.
The message “safe as bottled water” is central to the $700,000
promotional campaign, that includes public service announcements on
five cable stations and three rounds of mailers, each to 783,000
homes in about 20 Orange County cities.
The Groundwater Replenishment System, the first of its kind in the
country, will use wastewater treated to drinking-water standards to
make up the difference between supply and demand for water in Orange
County. The water will go through three treatment processes --
microfiltration, reverse osmosis and ultraviolet disinfection --
before it is sent to ponds where it gradually filters back into the
groundwater basin.
Phase I of the project, which will cost about $450 million, is
expected to begin supplying about 20% of the water in the groundwater
basin in 2006 or 2007. The project is expected to be complete by
2020.
“Imported supplies are becoming less and less reliable so we need
local projects like the Groundwater Replenishment System to prevent
local shortages,” said Jenny Glasser, public affairs specialist for
the water district. “We want to make sure that everyone in Orange
County knows that we need this project, and understands the reason
why: So we can’t prevent future water shortages.”
Demand for water in Orange County is expected to rise about 20% by
the year 2020 -- a level that can’t be sustained by current supplies.
Further, sources of imported water that the district relies on to
make up the difference are expected to cut back the amount they are
willing to sell to the Orange County Water District.
The city of Newport Beach is one of several dozen agencies that
supports the plan. Newport Beach gets about 75% of its water from the
groundwater supply managed by the Orange County Water District.
“Absolutely, we support the plan, but with the caution that the
water district continue to stay vigilant to watch for contaminants
that have taught us all lessons in the past, like 1,4-dioxane and
NMDA,” Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said. “It’s important to know
that quality standards for our groundwater basin are as good or
better than bottled water. If there’s a bad chemical out there
somewhere in the water supply, it’s more likely to end up in your
bottled water than in the groundwater. Me, I’ll drink the
groundwater.”
1,4-dioxane is an industrial chemical that was found in very small
quantities in water drawn from Newport Beach wells in January 2002.
Though the contamination was corrected at the source within a few
days, the incident was an eye-opener for water regulators because
they hadn’t known that chemicals could get past the reverse-osmosis
treatment process. As a result, the water district has added a third
treatment process, using ultraviolet light, to remove agents such as
1,4-dioxane.
The project will be paid for partly by government grants, partly
by increased costs to water customers. The district has secured about
$92.5 million from state, local and federal grants, which includes
$37 million from the State Water Bond (Proposition 13) approved by
voters in 2000. The portion paid by consumers will average about 74
cents per month per household in perpetuity.
“The most advanced technology will allow us to obtain purified
water as clean and pure as bottled water,” U.S. Rep. Chris Cox said
in a statement Monday announcing that the U.S. Congress would give
financial support needed to complete the project by 2020.
“Orange County’s Groundwater Replenishment System will aid our
state in avoiding a serious water crisis in times of drought and
fiscal shortages,” said Cox, a Republican who represents Newport
Beach.
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