Newport needs neighborly help
- Share via
What else could Newport do to combat or prevent water pollution?
Well, the article about the city of Newport Beach being an active
watchdog leader of water quality is great, and they deserve it
(“Water-quality efforts equal best in the West,” Friday).
The big step to help Newport Beach’s water quality comes from our
neighbors and the County of Orange. San Diego Creek spews 9 million
to 13 million gallons of urban runoff a day from its 112-square-mile
watershed and tributaries. (They’re really flood-control channels.)
Irvine Ranch Water District’s Natural Treatment System project
will help if it works, along with the New Delhi flood control
channel, which belches 3 million gallons a day of its nasty urban
soup (it doesn’t come from Newport Bay) into the upper bay.
We’d like to learn more about the proposed $50 to $100 per
household urban runoff tax proposed by the Orange County Sanitation
District. Newport needs its watershed neighbors to be major
stakeholders in the fight for clean and safe waters. We need to fix
the county basin plan for drainage, so if a city or new development
adds water and sediments to our bay, they should have to contribute
specific dredging funds to get it out of the bay and help fund our
nutrient and sediment total maximum daily
loads.
It’s about the pollution in the water you don’t see that is
impairing our coastal ecosystem and posting health warnings in our
community recreational areas.
So, now that Newport’s house is in order, let’s get our neighbors
to also be major stakeholders of Newport’s most sought-after
resource, the beautiful bay, the fabulous beaches and magnificent
ocean.
Kudos to Newport’s council and the community for a proactive water
quality program.
* RANDY SETON is a resident of Balboa Island and program director
of Orange County CoastKeeper.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.