Council skeptical of clean-water report
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- A report proclaiming that the Back Bay and Newport
Harbor are safe for swimmers may soon be released, but city officials
aren’t exactly buying it.
And tonight, the City Council will decided at its meeting whether to
send a letter to the Regional Water Quality Control Board saying that the
results of a health risk assessment of the city’s waters are “fatally
flawed” because they are based on “poor science.”
The study, conducted by the Irvine Ranch Water District and the Irvine
Co., has drawn fire from the environmental group Defend the Bay and has
drawn skepticism from city officials who fear its science could set a bad
precedent.
“I believe this study shouldn’t be used to make policy,” Assistant
City Manager Dave Kiff said.
The study considers health risks to swimmers in the bay by measuring a
bacterium called “f specific coliphage.” A draft of the report shows that
the bay is clean of this microorganism. It recommends that water-quality
agencies focus their resources on public education, especially for
boaters who may dump their vessels’ sewage into the bay.
But Defend the Bay Director Bob Caustin said coliphage is a useless
measure. Waters clean of this bacteria can still contain viruses and
pathogens that make swimmers and surfers sick, he noted.
“They need to start looking to the sources of the pollution and
correcting those problems -- whether it be human and animal waste or
whatever the cause,” Caustin said.Councilman Tod Ridgeway said he plans
to vote in favor of sending the letter to the water-quality board.
“It’s not an appropriate scientific way to measure these things in our
waters,” he said.
Norris Brandt, assistant to the general manager for the water
district, agreed that the coliphage study should be reviewed by other
scientists to determine its usefulness.
“We’re not saying the study is good or bad,” said Brandt, who
described the coliphage study as one of many potential tools to assess
water safety.
If the council, as expected, approves the measure, the city will send
a letter to the water-quality board. The letter will propose that the
study is scientifically unsound and that it should not be used to create
policy. Some environmentalists fear that the study could result in
relaxed water-quality rules for developers such as the Irvine Co.
Many of the contaminants that end up in the Upper Newport Bay and
Newport Harbor begin as urban runoff from throughout the county --
everything from dog droppings to pesticides that wash into storm drains.
Sewage leaks can also contaminate the bay, as well as boaters dumping the
sewage from their vessels.
The Regional Water Quality Control Board helps determine acceptable
levels of certain contaminants and which ones will be used as measures of
“safe water.”
In a letter to the county, Joanne Schneider of the water-quality board
said the study should be taken “with caution” until its results can be
reviewed. Schneider was unavailable for comment Monday.
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