Billion gallons of water to fill basin
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Andrew Edwards
After about 11 years, a landslide and a lawsuit, the San Joaquin
Reservoir is officially back in business.
Officials from the Irvine Ranch Water District, Newport Beach and
other cities on Thursday joined homeowners whose houses overlook the
basin for a short dedication ceremony, which ended as water gushed
into the partially filled basin.
The reservoir, which sits in the hills above Bonita Canyon Sports
Park, can hold about 1 billion gallons of water when full and will
store recycled water that will mostly be used to irrigate landscaping
in Newport Coast and parts of Irvine, project engineer Michael
Hoolihan said. Much of the water stored in the reservoir would have
otherwise been discharged into Newport Bay.
Though the completion of the $16-million project was commemorated
Thursday, water has been flowing into the reservoir since a few days
before Christmas, Hoolihan said. The presence of water was a relief
to neighbors, who had tired of looking at a giant cavity in the
ground for more than a decade.
“Our property values go up because we’re overlooking water instead
of an empty hole,” neighbor Marsha Steinbrenner beamed.
The reservoir, then operated by the Metropolitan Water District,
was shut down in 1994 after a landslide that took five years to
repair. That agency would have had to build a cover over the
reservoir, which neighbors did not want, to be able to store drinking
water in the basin after the landslide damage was fixed. But when the
estimated price tag for a cover shot up from $17 million to about $35
million, the Metropolitan Water District nixed the project.
The Irvine Ranch Water District purchased the reservoir in 2001,
and construction to reopen the basin started in January of last year,
but the project was altered by a 2001 lawsuit filed by Newport Beach
environmental group Defend the Bay.
After the lawsuit was filed, the plan was changed to include
facilities to pump groundwater to prevent seepage from entering the
Back Bay and to use liquid chlorine to treat the water instead of
chlorine gas. Defend the Bay founder Bob Caustin said he was
satisfied with the project as completed, though he was disappointed
Newport Beach officials did not demand the modifications he sued for
when they sold their stake in the reservoir to the water district.
“It was a shame we had to spend our limited reserves on the
fight,” he said.
Hoolihan characterized having to change the project because of the
lawsuit, as well as post-Sept. 11 security concerns regarding the
presence of chlorine gas, as a learning experience.
“When someone challenges it, it forces you to look at the project
from a different perspective,” he said.
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