San Diego Union-Tribune

TIJUANA SEWAGE SHUTS I.B. SHORELINE

Repairs on pump completed, but leakage starts again

- BY JOSHUA EMERSON SMITH

San Diegans will undoubtedl­y head to the ocean this weekend as temperatur­es warm — but not in Imperial Beach.

Sewage spilling over from Tijuana forced officials on Friday to completely close the city’s shoreline yet again.

The move comes less than a week after Baja officials said repairs were completed to a broken water pump in the Tijuana River, which had allowed tens of millions of gallons of sewagetain­ted water to escape capture starting in late March.

Reports of the putrid smell have been flooding in from residents across the South Bay for weeks. Even Coronado beaches were

closed over Easter weekend.

“The stench was crazy, just terrible,” said Imperial Beach Mayor Serge Dedina. “We’re just going into our round robin of endless openings and closures because of the residual sewage in the river.”

Lifeguards have continued to patrol the water during the nasty conditions, including on Thursday when a man drowned after jumping off the Imperial Beach Pier.

“A lifeguard got really sick from making rescues,” Dedina said. “One had to do CPR on someone who was in polluted waters.”

Baja officials have said they’re making headway on

long overdue fixes to its aging wastewater treatment system including efforts to replace a crumbling treatment plant called San Antonio de los Buenos.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency said in February that it planned to spend roughly $300 million to address the pollution. The agency is now launching an environmen­tal review process for a suite of projects, most notably the constructi­on of a water-diversion system in the Tijuana River north of the border to capture and treat polluted flows. San Diego officials have been pushing for a new system since 2019.

The EPA is also looking to expand concrete basins in the river valley that capture urban runoff in canyons along the border. The facilities were upgraded in 2010, but sewage and chemicalta­inted flows continue to overwhelm their capacity.

Border Patrol agents routinely complain about having to work in toxic sewer sludge, reporting everything from skin rashes to chemical burns to respirator­y problems.

The south end of Imperial Beach along the Tijuana Sloughs has yet to open for swimming this year and was closed last year for 295 days, according to city officials. The city’s main beachfront north of Seacoast Drive has so far been closed for roughly half of 2021.

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