Newport seeking to buck an ocean-pollution trend
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Alicia Robinson
Time is ticking away for the city to decide how to stop water from
getting into protected areas of the ocean on Newport’s coastline via
Buck Gully.
Newport Beach faces a Jan. 1 deadline to either tell the State
Water Resources Control Board its plans for stopping discharges into
a state-designated area of special biological significance or ask for
an exception to the zero-discharge rule.
Even in dry weather, up to 350 gallons of water per minute flow
down Buck Gully and into the ocean at peak times. Discharges are
likely coming from runoff, which stems from residents over-watering
their plants and groundwater seepage, Newport Beach Assistant City
Manager Dave Kiff said.
The city is developing a plan to reduce urban runoff with the help
of a $1.1-million grant from the state water board, but thus far no
action has been taken, he said.
“We basically have done a lot of talking, but we haven’t put
anything on the ground yet,” Kiff said.
The talk will get more serious Thursday, when the city’s
Coastal/Bay Citizens Water Quality Advisory Committee meets to
discuss how to address the state deadline. Options to reduce runoff
could include restricting irrigation and ticketing violators or
building a structure at the bottom of the gully to divert water flows
into the sanitary sewer system, a potentially costly method.
The city has tried some test diversion programs before, and while
diversion is easy to do in Buck Gully, it isn’t a long-term solution,
said water quality committee member Dennis Baker.
The Orange County Sanitary District now accepts the diverted water
for free, but that may not last, he said.
“It’s kind of like there’s no real free lunch,” Baker said.
“Somebody’s got to pay for it.”
The best solution will likely be a combination of methods, such as
encouraging the use of native plants that don’t require much water
and adding satellite-controlled irrigation systems, he said. Both of
those solutions were put forth in October as a way to reduce the risk
of fire in Buck Gully and Morning Canyon, but some residents worried
about how any new planting and irrigation regulations would affect
their properties.
The committee could come up with a recommendation for the City
Council Thursday. The council must take action by Dec. 14, its final
meeting before the Jan. 1 deadline.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at
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