Keeping ocean clean goes beyond duck roundup
- Share via
Tod Ridgeway
Newport Beach got a bit of attention when city crews and others
nabbed 60 ducks from the Grand Canal (“Ducks -- ducks -- vamoose,”
Aug. 23). The relocation effort brought chuckles from even the most
hard-core clean water supporters among us -- because we know that
duck droppings contribute to poor water quality, but we also know how
silly grown men look when chasing down ducks.
Duck roundups -- while being visible and attention grabbing -- are
a very small part of Newport Beach’s overall clean water effort. We
were proud to be one of the first cities that opposed the Orange
County Sanitation District’s continued discharge of partially treated
sewage into the ocean outfall. Here in town, the city will spend more
than $4 million this year alone on programs that attempt to clean up
the bay and the ocean shoreline.
As an important reminder, Newport Bay is one of the most
intensively tested waterways in the state. Each week, the health
department samples 35 sites around the bay. In addition, the
sanitation district and the health department sample another 20 ocean
sites from Crystal Cove to the Santa Ana River.
Where a sample exceeds state standards for bacterial indicators,
we “post” the area to advise swimmers of the bacteria. Of the 55
sampling locations, only four have chronic problems with bacteria --
the bay waters around Newport Island and, oddly, Harbor Patrol Beach
off Bayside Drive.
That’s pretty good news when you think about it -- the vast
majority of bay beaches, and all of our ocean beaches, get top marks
for water quality. As such, we have allocated our time and resources
to maintaining the good water quality we see and to improving those
areas that get poor marks. Here are the ways we do this using Newport
Beach tax dollars:
* Keeping roads clean. You may not know it, but effective street
sweeping and trash removal are some of the best tools to improve
water quality. We sweep streets daily in commercial areas and weekly
in residential areas. It’s vitally important that you move your car
in advance of street sweeping day, because the trash (especially
cigarette butts), sediment, oil, pet waste and brake dust that the
sweeper misses ends up in the bay and ocean. Street sweeping is
expensive (about $500,000 annually) -- and we’re one of only a
handful of cities that sweeps streets daily and weekly. Some inland
cities are still on a twice-monthly schedule.
* Keeping storm drains clean. Those openings in the gutter (with
the decals that say “No Dumping -- Drains to Bay”) are the new focus
of a war on urban runoff. Urban runoff is water from dry-weather
activities like over-watering gardens and washing cars at home. The
water picks up contaminants in the streets and carries it into the
gutter, down the inlet, down a pipe and straight out to the bay.
Storm drains like these do not have treatment systems like sewer
lines do. Anytime you see water in the gutter, it’s headed for the
bay and ocean, picking up trash and bacteria all the way. New
regulations adopted by water agencies now require our city to better
protect these drains -- often in a manner that will surprise you. The
regulations, too, will make the city spend about double the $300,000
it spends today on cleaning these pipes.
* New devices. If you walk around West Newport, you’ll see new
screens in front of the gutter inlets. Runoff passes through the
screens (keeping trash out of the storm drain pipe) and then through
new filters installed within boxes just inside the inlet. The filters
catch toxic materials and oils and kill some bacteria so that the
materials can’t reach the bay. In other locations, we have physically
diverted dry-weather runoff from the storm drain to the sewer system
so that the entire flow stays out of swimming waters. This summer,
we’ll also test new circulation devices around Newport Island to see
if improved circulation helps reduce bacterial levels. These efforts
have cost more than $500,000 in partnership with the state of
California’s Clean Beaches Initiative.
* Education. Huge numbers of Newport Beach tourists and many of
our own neighbors don’t realize how what they do at home and at work
impacts clean water. The single most effective way to improve water
in the bay and ocean is to reduce runoff. That means recalibrating
sprinkler controllers so water doesn’t get into the gutter. And it
means taking our cars to the car wash instead of washing them at
home.
For businesses and homeowners, it means no longer hosing down
awnings, driveways and patios -- use a broom first. If you must, use
a small amount of water after sweeping -- use so little that it
doesn’t reach the gutter. Newport Beach will soon be embarking on a
comprehensive education campaign called “Clean Water Newport” that
will increase neighborhood, business and visitor awareness of these
simple facts. Our fifth-grade education program enters its third year
this year, a partnership between the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District, CoastKeeper, Surfrider, the city, Pacific Life, Fletcher
Jones Motorcars, the Balboa Bay Club and the Newport Harbor Nautical
Museum.
* Sewers. I would be remiss if I didn’t remind you that you can
stop sewer spills at home, too. Make sure a plumber comes by at least
annually to rod out the sewer line that connects your home to the
city’s line. If you have lots of trees in your yard, you may want to
do this quarterly or twice a year. Your bimonthly sewer fees pay for
the more than $1.4 million that we’ll spend this year alone on
regular maintenance of the city’s sewage collection lines and pump
stations -- just to avoid spills.
* Boating. In partnership with the Orange County Sheriff’s
Department, we continually work on ways to get the word out about
keeping Newport Harbor clean. More than 20 pump-a-head stations make
it easy to clean out toilet facilities on boats, thus protecting our
“no-discharge” harbor. “Clean and Green” boating campaigns help
educate boaters about ways to keep cleaning and painting chemicals
out of the bay. Some believe that an Avalon-style dye tablet program
would work here to find illegal waste discharges -- but I agree with
the Harbor Patrol that our harbor’s uses and size make this type of
program ineffective here.
Finally, remember that the city’s Coastal/Bay Water Quality
Citizens’ Advisory Committee, a City Council-appointed committee with
a long name and with an important charge, works on these projects and
more each month. Meetings are open to anyone interested in learning
more about water quality and in helping the cause. Readers can all
(949) 644-3002 for more information about the Water Quality
Committee.
As I hope you can see by now, our clean water efforts involve far
more than a summertime duck roundup.
* TOD W. RIDGEWAY is the Newport Beach Mayor and is the Chairman
of the city’s Water Quality Committee.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.