Newport council issues assurances about water
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Stacy Brown
NEWPORT BEACH -- With slowing water currents easing fears about the
possibility of contaminated water crossing its ocean border, city
officials Friday issued reassurances to residents and visitors that
waters here are safe.
In a public letter, Mayor Dennis O’Neil said the waters are tested
frequently and they routinely come back with clean bills of health.
The mayor cautioned that swimming near storm drains should be avoided to
sidestep potential infection. A new state law enacted earlier this summer
expanded the county’s testing program.
The test identifies three different indicators of human pathogens. If a
particular indicator is above a certain level, the county must post the
beaches as closed.
“Given the new standards, we may see more closed beaches -- not because
they are dirtier, but because they are held to higher standards,” O’Neil
said.
City officials said a shifting tide Friday reversed the flow of
bacteria-contaminated water. A day earlier, county workers had cautioned
the currents were heading toward Newport Beach.
The cleanliness of storm drains and sewers are important indicators to
the cleanliness of the ocean, officials said. They cautioned items hosed
down into the gutter, swept into the street, or put down a storm drain
are not items that are treated. The material goes directly into the
Newport Bay or the ocean.
During summer months, those pipelines become conduits to the harbor and
ocean for dog waste, trash, fertilizers and other harmful items.
“To keep the bay clean and the beaches open, gutters must be kept dry and
residents must pick up after pets,” O’Neil urged. “Realize that if you
don’t, these materials will be in the Bay in a few days.”
O’Neil said the city has 2,000 separate storm drains that enter local
waters, with the largest tributaries to the harbor and Back Bay starting
in cities upstream such as Irvine, Costa Mesa and Santa Ana.
Upstream neighbors should be reminded to practice the same precautions
about trash, dog waste and other contaminants, the mayor said.
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