Cleaner water may trickle to O.C.
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Alicia Robinson
Cleaner water could filter into Orange County because of an agreement
by the state Department of Transportation to install filters and
other pollution controlling methods along highways around the state.
The agreement, filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court, was the
result of a lawsuit filed in 1993 against Caltrans by the Natural
Resources Defense Council and Santa Monica BayKeeper. The suit
alleged that Caltrans didn’t do enough to stop pollution in highway
runoff in Los Angeles and Ventura counties and thus violated the
Clean Water Act.
Newport Beach activist Garry Brown, executive director of
CoastKeeper, hopes to use the decision to strengthen his fight
against Caltrans.
“Now we can all go back and say, ‘If you’re going to do it for Los
Angeles and Ventura counties, these [other] areas are just as
sensitive,’ and we can start that process,” Brown said. “I would
certainly contend that [Pacific Coast Highway] going through
Huntington Beach and Newport Beach are as sensitive areas as you can
get anywhere in the state.”
Brown fought a 2002 Caltrans highway drainage plan for East Coast
Highway above Crystal Cove that he considered inadequate. That plan
has since been modified to require Caltrans to monitor water quality
in its drainage system.
“Caltrans has always totally avoided and opposed any type of
mechanical filtration device, and that was the same issue we had with
them in Newport Coast,” Brown said. “They just don’t recognize any of
the modern technology in cleaning runoff from Caltrans roads.”
The decision is expected to have a direct result on water quality
here.
“It really does impact Orange County.... This part of the
settlement will not only affect those two counties but will affect
Caltrans construction practices throughout the state,” said David
Beckman, senior attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council.
The agreement will require Caltrans to consider using storm water
control measures when building new highway projects and making
improvements encompassing more than three acres to existing highways,
Caltrans spokesman David Anderson.
“We are very, very pleased to be working together with our
partners there at the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Santa
Monica BayKeeper,” Andreson said. “I think we’ve come to a good
resolution on an important environmental issue.”
The recent agreement to install filters is the first time Caltrans
has agreed to use new technologies to treat runoff, and it will set a
statewide precedent, he said.
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