Search still on for way to clean up drain
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June Casagrande
A problem storm drain continues to bedevil the coastline, but the
reasons are murky as to why the Seashore Drive outlet is being
singled out by regional water authorities.
The Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control board sent a letter
to city officials last month to ask for an update on the city’s
efforts to reduce pollution coming from the storm drain.
The Seashore Drive storm drain, which empties into the Santa Ana
River, is thought to have been a source of the pollution that closed
Huntington Beach in 1999. It got a little famous after a 2001 study
by a UC Irvine researcher showing consistently high levels of
bacteria in river waters near the storm drain. The storm drain is
owned by Caltrans, but much of the pollution that gets into the drain
runs off the Newport Beach roads, through the storm drain and
ultimately into the ocean.
City officials responded to the water board’s concerns last summer
by drafting an action plan to reduce pollution in the area. On Oct.
15, the city got a nudge from the board in the form of a letter
asking the city to give a report on the efforts it has made there so
far and a schedule for implementing the remainder of its action plan.
“The city had said that a lot of the measures would be implemented
this summer, but an inspection showed that not all had been,” said
Kurt Berchtold, a spokesman for the regional board. “We’re asking the
city to give us a schedule for their plans to implement these
measures.”
The city’s plan for the area includes additional street and alley
sweeping, putting bacteria-fighting filters in catch basins,
installing signs informing residents about water-quality rules for
the area, and making more dog waste disposal bags available.
Though the city has begun implementing some of these measures, the
board has asked for a report submitted by Nov. 14 on completing the
plan.
City officials say that the reducing pollution at the site is
important, though it’s unclear why this site is any more of a
priority that storm drains throughout the city, all of which
contribute varying amounts of pollution to the ocean.
“I don’t know that there’s anything inherently different about
this storm drain from other urban drains, but in this case we have
data that confirm that there’s a problem there,” Berchtold said.
Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said he would prepare an agenda
item for an upcoming City Council meeting to satisfy the board’s
request.
“We respect the board’s intent in issuing us this letter,” Kiff
said. “We take it very seriously. However, we hope it’s reflective of
the board’s wider interesting in going after all polluted storm
drains countywide.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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