Shifting tides put Newport on alert
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Stacy Brown
WEST NEWPORT-- The tide has shifted bacteria-contaminated water
toward Newport Beach, officials monitoring the situation said Thursday.
“The currents in the ocean have now shifted southwest toward Newport
Beach and (county workers) are on alert,” Councilman Tod Ridgeway said.
The contaminated water has forced the closure of four miles of
Huntington Beach, from its border with Newport past the city’s pier.
County health officials continued to try to find the source of the
contamination, which has eluded them for nearly two months.
Federal, state and local officials -- including Rep. Dana Rohrabacher
and county Supervisor Jim Silva -- gathered Thursday at the Huntington
Beach Pier to discuss the spreading contaminants.
With the currents shifting to the southwest, county Sanitation
Department workers are focused intensely on testing waters in West
Newport, Ridgeway said.
“There is no cause for alarm,” Ridgeway cautioned. “However, we now
know fecal chloroform levels are down, which means this is a long-term
thing.
“There is some concern about the currents,” Ridgeway said.
The councilman also speculated that a reason Newport Beach has so far
escaped the problems facing its northern neighbor is due in part to the
restrooms on the Huntington beaches. There are no such facilities in
Newport.
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