Creek cleanup could become priority
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- Local regulators would have to pay more attention to
cleaning up six creeks in the city if they are added to a federal watch
list, which could happen as early as next month.
The Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board is recommending the
inclusion of the creeks on the list, which is overseen by the
Environmental Protection Agency.
“In a more general sense, what it means is that these water bodies
will receive more regulatory attention in the future,” board spokesman
Kurt Berchtold said. “These water bodies would be flagged as potential
problem water bodies.”
The State Water Resources Control Board must agree to the inclusion of
the creeks on the list and submit them to the federal agency by April 30.
They would then be added to the federal Impaired Water Bodies 303d
List.
The inclusion of the creeks on the federal watch list has been lauded
by environmentalists and Newport Beach officials, but Newport Coast
homeowners have filed a protest.
The creeks include Buck Gully, Los Trancos, Muddy Creek, Pelican Point
Waterfall, Pelican Point Creek and Pelican Point Middle Creek.
Once added to the list, local regulators would need to formulate
standards for what substances could be present in the creeks.
These standards as known as “total maximum daily loads” and cap the
amount of a specified substance that can be present in the creeks.
Local regulators, at the request of Orange County CoastKeeper
Executive Director Garry Brown, recommended the creeks be included on the
list because they have had high levels of bacteria that are present in
urban runoff, which contains animal and human waste.
If the creeks are placed on the list, limits on the amount of coliform
bacteria would be put in place. The regional board has committed to
beginning the process of crafting those standards in 2008, Berchtold
said. The standard would be in place by 2011.
It’s a change that isn’t meeting with strong approval in the city’s
recently annexed community of Newport Coast.
Philip Bettencourt, the president of the Newport Coast Community
Assn., wrote a protest letter concerning the decision, saying homeowners
could be forced to pay to clean up the creeks if they are added to the
list.
Bettencourt said there is “no basis for the coastal creeks to be
placed on the list.”
Tests have shown heightened coliform levels in the creeks, which drain
into Crystal Cove.
Defend the Bay founder Bob Caustin, who said he supported the move,
was instrumental in the board’s decision to enforce standards for Upper
Newport Bay and Newport Harbor, which are also on the list.
Caustin bristled at Bettencourt’s letter.
“It’s self-serving,” Caustin said. “Is it OK for runoff from his yard
to run into his neighbor’s pool? . . . He’s trying to dodge
responsibility.”
FYI BOX
State regulators are moving to cement standards for coliform levels in
these impaired creeks by 2011.
CREEK/SIZE
* Buck Gully Creek/3.79 miles
* Los Trancos Creek/4.94 miles
* Muddy Creek/3.69 miles
* Pelican Hill Waterfall/1.06 miles
* Pelican Point Creek/0.8 miles
* Pelican Point Middle Creek/1.31 miles
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