EDITORIAL
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The Newport Beach City Council deserves applause for its decision last
week to jump aboard the growing coalition of coastal cities that plan to
oppose a federal waiver allowing the Orange County Sanitation District to
pump partially treated sewage 4 1/2 miles off the city’s shores.
The waiver, which is set to expire in 2003, was granted to the
district by the Environmental Protection Agency. Without it, all
236-million gallons of sewage the district sends into the ocean each day
would have to be treated fully. Now, half of the sewage has only had the
solid waste removed. The waiver, environmentalists say, leaves it rife
with bacteria.
City leaders -- not to mention residents and business owners -- have
many reasons to want the water to be as clean as possible.
For the city’s businesses, the importance of a clean beach and water
was clearly demonstrated in the summer of 1999, when constant beach
closures wrecked usually profitable months in Huntington Beach. A similar
summer horror is just a series of spills away in Newport.
For residents who go to the beach, being able to go in the water --
let alone sit anywhere on the sand they like -- is part of why they live
in Newport Beach. Denied that joy and benefit, they may as well live in
Missouri.
For the council, when a decision will benefit all its constituents,
the verdict might seem an easy one. But it was still a bold one, as it
joined only Seal Beach and Huntington Beach as early opponents of the
waiver. Now, this trio of cities needs to work to get other, non-coastal
towns aboard this opposition, and Newport Beach leaders should not
hesitate to take the lead and push for this cause. Come November 2002,
when the sanitation district will decide whether to push for the waiver’s
continuation, the county’s other cities will need to be united in
opposition. Costa Mesa are you listening?
We hope so because fighting this waiver is the right thing to do.
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