Watchdog group forming to monitor coastal waters
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Kenneth Ma
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A new environmental watchdog is in the works to
monitor Orange County’s beaches.
The countywide nonprofit organization, dubbed Coastwatch, will serve to
educate people and to protect and monitor the county’s coastline to
improve water quality and curb beach closures, organizers said. It is
expected to be launched next month.
Coastwatch was created “as a result of the shocking awareness last summer
that our urban lifestyle was damaging the beaches,” said co-founder Steve
Bone, who is president of the Waterfront Hilton Beach Resort. “In the
last few years, businesses have moved into Orange County with an
anticipation of a high quality of life, which includes having a clean
environment.”
Last summer’s ocean closures due to high bacteria levels inspired Bone
and other Huntington Beach business leaders and residents to start laying
plans for a water-quality organization modeled after Heal the Bay in
Santa Monica.
Co-founder Anthony Brown, a local environmental consultant, said
Coastwatch is needed because there are no groups in Orange County with a
strong voice on water-quality issues.
“The people in Orange County want to know that the beaches are clean,” he
said. “The beach is the biggest draw we have in Orange County for both
individuals and businesses.”
Bone said the organization will be dedicated to keeping the coastline
clean for residents and visitors.
It is expected to cost $200,000 to operate annually. Funding, Brown said,
is expected to come from governmental agencies, as well as corporate and
private donors.
The organization is expected to have up to 30 people on its board of
directors, which will be made up of government officials, business
people, academics and environmentalists. Its headquarters will be in
either Irvine or Huntington Beach, Brown said.
Coastwatch, said organizers, will focus on three main areas:
* education -- implementing education programs through schools,
government agencies and businesses to inform them of water-quality
problems;
* protection -- monitoring the beaches by taking samples to ensure the
county’s water-quality does not degrade further;
* activism -- bringing the message of environmental protection through
the media and governmental agencies to catch polluters.
“The goal of Coastwatch is to work with cities, the county and businesses
to improve water quality,” Brown said.
Bone said he believes urban runoff may be a cause of some of the bacteria
problems at area beaches. Urban runoff is caused by everyday water uses,
such as washing cars and hosing down sidewalks. The water enters rivers
or flood control channels and eventually is discharged into the ocean.
Inland cities need to realize their residents’ lifestyles affects the
beaches, Bone said.
“If you cure the watershed, you cure the beach,” he said.
Like Heal the Bay, Coastwatch plans to eventually create an annual beach
report card for Orange County. Heal the Bay’s study grades beaches on a
scale of A, which is excellent, to F in Orange, Los Angeles, Ventura, and
Santa Barbara counties.
In addition, Coastwatch will pursue litigation against polluters if
necessary, Brown said.
Gordon Labedz, a spokesman for the Surfrider Foundation, said his
organization looks forward to working with the new group.
“It is very exciting that the business community is finally realizing the
value of our beaches,” he said. “The more environmental groups, the
better. Orange County has way too few environmental watchdog groups.”
Labedz said Aliso Creek in Laguna Beach, Doheny State Beach in Dana
Point, Seal Beach and the mouth of the Santa Ana River next to Huntington
State Beach are the poorest in water quality.
“I call them toxic hot spots,” he said.
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