City Council votes to oppose waiver
- Share via
June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- Sewage is coming too close to local beaches, the City
Council decided Tuesday.
Amid a hot debate between environmentalists and representatives of the
Orange County Sanitation District, the council voted unanimously at its
meeting to push for stepped-up treatment of sewage sent into the ocean
off the city’s shores.
Councilman Tod Ridgeway, who represents the city on the district’s
25-member board, said he will vote against a federal waiver that allows
the district to send 243 million gallons of sewage into the ocean after
just filtering out solids. This primary treatment should be supplemented
with the secondary steps required to kill many of the microorganisms and
sift out even more of the solids, the council decided.
“This is one of the most important things we can do for our
community,” Ridgeway said.
The council decision puts Newport Beach in alliance with Huntington
Beach and Seal Beach in opposition to the waiver -- a move that could pit
coastal cities against those inland in a fight over who should pay for
clean coastlines.
Current estimates show it will cost about $400 million to build
secondary treatment plants on existing sites in Fountain Valley and
Huntington Beach. This could add about $78 a year to the average Orange
County homeowner’s current sewage treatment expense of $102.
Two sanitation district representatives argued at the meeting that the
costly treatment might not even achieve the city’s goals of ensuring
cleaner, safer water for swimmers and surfers.
“There’s no scientific evidence to support going to full secondary
treatment,” said Dr. Jeff Armstrong, a biologist for the district.
Armstrong said the secondary treatment being considered is not the
equivalent of disinfection and might not significantly reduce the levels
of illness-causing bacteria and viruses that have been detected as close
as a half-mile from city beaches. He said evidence suggests that the
current treatment is adequate.
“I don’t want adequate,” Councilman Steven Bromberg said. “I want the
very best we can get.”
Ridgeway said the city should examine some alternative technologies,
such as ultraviolet treatment, that could be less expensive and more
effective.
The Ocean Outfall Group, which is made up of community members to
study sewage treatment options, is examining cutting-edge alternatives.
It’s possible that this push could lead toward full reclamation of county
sewage water for drinking water, Ridgeway said.
About 70% of county water now arrives through this toilet-to-tap
process, which usually includes microfiltration and aerobic treatment to
kill microorganisms.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.