Water discharge standards on hold
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Alicia Robinson
Cities in the San Diego Creek and Newport Bay watershed have, for the
time being, escaped stricter standards on what can be in the
groundwater they discharge into Newport Bay.
The Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board decided at a
meeting Friday it will give staff members at least until its next
meeting in November to discuss alternatives with stakeholders and
possibly overhaul the proposed new standards, instead of adopting the
new permit requirements.
The water flows that would be governed by the new permit include
groundwater pumped out of construction sites, swimming pool drainage
and water from household sump pumps. They often contain nitrates,
which cause algae blooms, and selenium, which can be harmful to birds
and other wildlife. A permit isn’t required for those releases now,
though they do fall under existing limits on what can be discharged
in the watershed.
The board agreed to delay the higher permit standards in response
to a report from some groundwater dischargers that said the proposed
limits are unfeasible. Among those who signed off on the report were
the cities of Costa Mesa, Irvine and Newport Beach, as well as the
Irvine Co. and Caltrans.
The report instead proposed that those entities continue following
current guidelines while monitoring their discharges, studying water
treatment methods and working with the board to develop more specific
standards.
Some environmentalists worried that a delay in adopting the new
standards would further compromise the health of area water bodies.
The dischargers’ alternate proposal doesn’t do much except study
alternatives, said Jack Skinner, a Newport Beach environmentalist who
attended the meeting.
He added that nitrogen and selenium would continue to flow into
Newport Bay during the five years before tighter standards become
mandatory.
Outside the meeting, Bob Caustin of Defend the Bay said he was
disappointed that the board chose not to adopt the proposed permit
with tougher water-release standards.
Defend the Bay threatened a lawsuit eight years ago that led to
the establishment of the existing standards. Caustin said the
dischargers want more studies so they can put off new standards that
will cost them more to comply with.
“They’re looking for the cheapest way of getting us off their
back,” he said.
Caustin said he was surprised that Newport Beach signed off on the
report asking to delay higher standards because the city is generally
proactive about water quality. Newport Beach Assistant City Manager
Dave Kiff said the city had unanswered questions, such as whether
homeowners will still be able to pump selenium-laden water out of
their basements under the new permit.
“We generally agree with the whole concept and where the board’s
headed, especially as it would apply to big groundwater discharges,”
he said. “We probably do want tougher standards, and that’s why maybe
signing on to that [report] doesn’t appropriately say that.”
Newport Beach officials are amenable to seeing some new standards
proposed for adoption in November, but they may not want to wait much
longer than that, Kiff said.
“That seems like an appropriate time period,” he said, adding, “we
may be at a point in November be where we agree that they should
adopt the permit and then the standards will follow.”
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