Dredging is just one part of solution
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While reading Jo Carol Hunter’s letter to the editor over my oatmeal,
I am compelled to respectfully respond to some of Hunter’s statements
that imply that Upper Newport Bay is not worth the attention and
funding it gets (she calls the bay a “boondoggle”). Let me offer the
following thoughts:
Silt removal from the bay is mandated by federal law. The court’s
interpretation of the Clean Water Act requires us to keep sediment
out of the Bay and to remove it once it’s there. When you drive
University Drive, near UC Irvine, you go past sediment catch basins
that the city funds (along with upstream cities) on an ongoing basis.
Those basins trap and remove upstream sediment before the sediment
gets into the Upper Bay. The city spends about $70,000 a year to do
this. The proposed Newport Bay Ecosystem Restoration Project (the
“Big Dredge”) is intended to occur just once every 21 years. This
project is also a federal mandate -- in large part because of Defend
the Bay’s lawsuits against the United States Environmental Protection
Agency in the mid-1990s.
Contrary to Hunter’s assertion, we don’t dredge every year. Nor do
we spend “millions year, after year, after year.” We don’t dredge
even every five or 10 years. The Ecosystem Restoration Project’s
scope is unprecedented -- it’s never been done before. The last major
dredging project was only one-third the size and cost, and it wasn’t
intended, as this one is, to fully restore the Upper Bay to its
optimal ecosystem.
We have made some major strides in working with upstream
communities such as Irvine, Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Tustin and Lake
Forest, to stop sediment transport and the trash that comes down the
watershed with each “first flush” of a major rain event. Hunter
should see the great work that Lake Forest has done in Serrano Creek
(a Back Bay tributary) to protect the creek’s slopes from sediment
loss. It’s truly remarkable to see the kind of community support that
the Serrano Creek Project has received. Further, each city is subject
to new and stringent trash removal requirements from streets, curbs
and catch basins. We have a ways to go, but the cities have made a
good start.
Next, Hunter falls into a trap that I think many people fall into,
and it’s unfair. There is a smell to the Upper Newport Bay at low
tide -- it’s a strong smell, but it comes from the very natural
decomposition of all of the bay’s biology. If humans weren’t here, it
would smell just as strongly. The Back Bay’s smell is not due to
sewage -- sewage is not discharged into the bay in any legal way.
There are no legal discharges from sewage treatment plants into the
bay. Accidental spills (where a line gets blocked from tree roots or
a restaurant’s grease control device fails) are, thankfully, fewer
and farther between. The year 2003 saw the fewest spills (six) of any
recent year. We have an aggressive “illegal connection” detection
program to find and disconnect errant wastewater pipes, and the bay
is officially and significantly a federally-designated “no-discharge”
harbor.
That does not mean that some boaters don’t illegally pump their
heads into the bay. We think it happens rarely -- and we and the
Orange County Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol aggressively seek out illegal
dischargers. Pumping a head into the bay is a serious criminal
violation of the Clean Water Act that can subject a violator to huge
fines and jail time. Detection is difficult, but I also believe that
fewer and fewer boaters show this blatant disregard for the law and
the bay’s valuable habitat.
Finally, I’ll take this opportunity to remind everyone that urban
runoff -- correctly cited by Hunter to bay pollution -- remains a
problem. So please do your best to limit runoff (water from
over-watering your yard, hosing down your driveway, or washing your
car in the street) to protect the bay. Remember that storm drains are
for rain only -- they are designed to take rainwater off of our
streets quickly so that we don’t flood. The water does not go through
any treatment process as it hits the gutter -- it shoots down pipes
beneath the streets and goes straight to the bay or ocean. Readers
should report any illegal discharges of runoff to the city’s water
quality enforcement team at (949) 644-3215.
We’re making great progress with the Back Bay. And I know that the
Newport Bay Ecosystem Restoration Project -- far from being Hunter’s
“boondoggle” -- will, if funded (with thanks to Rep. Chris Cox), be a
critical milestone in the Upper Bay’s continued protection.
TOD W. RIDGEWAY
Newport Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Tod Ridgeway is the mayor of Newport Beach.
Jo Carol Hunter is correct when she states that the Back Bay is
gorgeous and ugly at the same time. The Upper Newport Bay and the
watershed that feeds it is a complex system that has been messed up
by our actions -- all of our actions. She is also correct when she
states “dredging is an incomplete solution.”
If you were to pick a historical time when “modern man” really
started to mess things up in the bay, it would be at the beginning of
the 20th century. That was when a channel was dug toward Upper
Newport Bay to improve agricultural drainage for those areas on
either side of Peters Canyon Wash. And the time when the ridge that
had historically dammed water in the Tustin Basin was breached,
draining the “Swamp of the Frogs.” Until this time, there were no
large storm flows carrying large amounts of sediment into the bay.
This was the beginning of accelerated sedimentation of the bay. We
are not going to dam up San Diego Creek and return to the “Swamp of
the Frogs” unless a lot of people move out of Irvine and Tustin.
As with many issues regarding the spending of public money, it is
tempting to list all of the things that are being ignored to do this
or that “less important project.” The point being missed is that in
our current system, money is allocated for specific needs and is not
in one big pot. You can argue the merits of such a system, but that
is the way it is. In this case, voters chose to raise money via bonds
to address or prevent man-made problems in the environment, so that
money is earmarked for environmental projects. The same process just
took place in last week’s election when voters chose to raise money,
through the sale of bonds, for physical school repairs and upgrades.
The budget process at the federal level is similar, in that money in
the budget is allocated to particular areas.
The money comes from many different sources. The overall cost of
the dredging project is too large for the city, county or state to
handle alone. So the process is to use a matching system whereby one
entity starts the ball rolling by coming up with some “seed money.”
Other government entities are then approached to “match” the funds.
In many cases, private foundations, companies and even individuals
are also approached and participate. It all comes together like a
house of cards, through a lot of work by many people and
organizations. When one player balks -- in this case the federal
government -- the project stalls and can’t move forward. Many
projects, this one in particular, can’t effectively be done
partially.
In regards to the beauty: The beauty I see is what photographer
Kent Treptow captured in his photos featured in the Pilot on Jan. 21.
The beauty many don’t see is under the surface in the teeming life of
the mud and the nursery in the waters of the estuary. The beauty of
the bay is in the huge number of critters that make it home or a
resting and feeding stop on there way north or south. These critters
need an estuary, not a meadow. The beauty is also in the diverse
habitat and plants that cover the estuary.
You mention the stench, which you categorize as ugly. In reality
this is actually a systemic beauty, not the stench, but its cause. It
is not sewage. The rotting of large amounts of vegetation in the
normal cycle of life and decay in the bay creates the smell. It is
particularly strong in the Big Canyon area of the bay. When I take
people on kayak tours, we always get a good whiff as we approach the
shore at the Big Canyon parking area. We actually see the gas bubbles
coming up through the mud and water, as if scuba divers were swimming
below. This is part of the natural replenishment of the nutrients in
the mud, which feeds the snails, worms, clams and other denizens that
in turn provide food for the birds that probe the rich, black mud.
Now the real ugly: The garbage (trash) comes from us, and by that
I don’t mean just Newport Beach, but the residents of all of the
Newport Bay Watershed, extending from Lake Forest across to Santa
Ana. As long as we continue to use large quantities of throw-away
materials and don’t dispose of them responsibly, we will have this
problem. To me, this is the ugliest and it is preventable.
Hunter’s next item, runoff, is a problem that is recognized at all
levels of government and is receiving a great deal of attention as
evidenced by the very restrictive requirements in the new National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permitting requirements that
apply to cities, counties, the state and businesses regarding
drainage into public waters. Also, a great deal of dry weather runoff
is now routinely routed to the Orange County Sanitation District for
processing along with normal sewage flow.
As I hope is evident, the Upper Newport Bay is a complex and
wonderful place. It is part of a large watershed system that includes
a very large population of people and their related activities. The
dredging should be considered a stop gap measure, regarding sediment,
while long-term solutions are being put in place. Examples of these
include the construction and maintenance of sediment capturing basins
in San Diego Creek; requirements on construction projects to catch
and control all runoff; and better control and capturing of run off
from “hard scapes,” such as parking lots, streets and roofs.
The bay is beautiful, and the beauty is really much more than skin
deep. As with any complex system, if you look closely you will also
see the ugliness and scars of abuse and misuse. If the sediment issue
is not addressed, the “beauty of the bay” will have no meaning, since
it will become a meadow then be graded and covered with houses,
condos, and maybe a new mall or two -- adding to the 95% of wetlands
lost in the state.
I invite you, Hunter, and all that want to really find out about
estuaries, and particularly the Upper Newport Bay, to join the
Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Estuary
Awareness Day on May 1 at Shellmaker Island, following the Great
Earth Walk in the morning.
DENNIS BAKER
Corona del Mar
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Dennis Baker is a board member and volunteer
naturalist for the Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends organization.
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