Antelope Valley Press

California oil spill: Surfing, swimming OK; fishing out

- By AMY TAXIN Associated Press

NEWPORT BEACH — Four weeks after an oil spill washed blobs of crude onto Southern California’s coast, surfers have returned to the waves and people play in the surf.

But fishermen still can’t drop lines in the same waters.

California has prohibited fishing in an area that ranges about six to 12 miles off the shores of Orange County since an undersea pipeline leaked at least about 25,000 gallons of crude oil into the Pacific Ocean.

State environmen­tal health experts are conducting studies to determine whether shellfish and fish are safe for human consumptio­n — a process expected to take weeks or longer.

Scott Breneman, owner of West Caught Fish, said he still fishes for tuna and black cod well beyond the prohibited area. He said he’s been able to keep selling his catch to restaurant­s but customers aren’t buying like they usually do at a popular Newport Beach fish market because of concerns about the state fishing ban.

“People assume that local fish is contaminat­ed, and we’re fishing like 90 miles off the beach here, a long ways away,” Breneman said, adding that he’s heading out fishing about half as much as usual. “I don’t want to take the resource when I can’t sell it.”

While life along the coast is returning to normal, commercial fishermen and charter operators have been hit especially hard by the closures. Some have joined lawsuits against pipeline owner Amplify Energy of Houston and say their biggest fear is that the spill’s stigma will drive away tourists even after the oily tar that washed up on the beaches is long gone.

Eric Zelien, owner of EZ Sportfishi­ng in Huntington Beach, said clients have cancelled fishing trips even though there are plenty of areas where fishing is allowed. Instead of running daily trips, he’s now taking out groups once or twice a week.

“Most of our out-of-towners are rescheduli­ng their trips. It’s kind of like when COVID first hit,” he said.

“When you hear oil spill, everyone thinks Exxon Valdez,’’ Zelien said, referring to the tanker that ran aground, in 1989, in Prince William Sound, Alaska and spilled millions of gallons. “They panic that the entire ocean is covered with oil and everything is in a state of disrepair.”

Environmen­tal advocates initially feared the worst when they learned about the spill on Oct. 2. The initial estimate was that the spill might have been five times as large as the amount that officials later announced. The Coast Guard said much of the miles-long plume of oil appeared to break up at sea, limiting the impact on sensitive wetland areas and wildlife along the coast.

Beaches in Huntington Beach, known as “Surf City USA,” were closed for swimming and surfing for a week. But surfers there and in nearby Newport Beach quickly returned to the waves after workers cleaned up the sand and local officials tested the water, deeming it safe to enter.

But authoritie­s say eating fish from the water isn’t the same as swimming in it. Fish in oil spill zones can ingest oil, which contains polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbo­ns that can cause cancer if eaten in certain amounts, said Susan Klasing, chief of the fish, ecotoxicol­ogy and water section at California’s Office of Environmen­tal Health Hazard Assessment.

She said hydrocarbo­ns break down over time, so there’s no question fishing will resume, it’s just a matter of when.

State officials are collecting samples of shellfish from along the shore and fish off the coast and sending them to a lab for analysis. After the testing is completed, state officials will assess whether the fishing grounds closure can be lifted, she said.

That process took about six weeks after a 2015 oil spill in Santa Barbara County, northwest of Los Angeles.

The spill off Orange County’s coast was caused by a leak in the pipeline that ferried crude oil from three offshore platforms. The cause is under investigat­ion, but federal officials have said the pipeline was likely initially damaged by a ship’s anchor.

Closing fisheries hasn’t only walloped those who make their living that way. It’s taken away a recreation­al activity for many who live close to the water. Signs are posted at area beaches warning that fishing is off limits, though a handful of people still drop lines off local piers.

Ted Reckas of Laguna Beach said he’s been back to swim and surf at the beach, but since the spill has put on hold lobster diving, which he usually does when the season opens in October.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Scott Breneman, owner of West Caught Fish, slices fish for a customer, Wednesday, at a market in Newport Beach. Breneman said business has plummeted due to consumer concerns about a crude pipeline spill’s impact on local fish, even though he fishes 90 miles off the coast of Orange County, well beyond an area closed to fishing by the state.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Scott Breneman, owner of West Caught Fish, slices fish for a customer, Wednesday, at a market in Newport Beach. Breneman said business has plummeted due to consumer concerns about a crude pipeline spill’s impact on local fish, even though he fishes 90 miles off the coast of Orange County, well beyond an area closed to fishing by the state.

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