Los Angeles Times

Beach water pollution falls slightly

But contaminat­ion remains too high, a new report says.

- By Tony Barboza tony.barboza@latimes.com

Beaches across the country are being polluted with tainted runoff and sewage at a stubbornly high rate, putting swimmers at risk of getting sick, according to a new report by an environmen­tal group.

The Natural Resources Defense Council found that the share of beach water samples that failed health tests fell to 7% last year from 8% the year before, but it said the drop was the result of less rainfall f lushing contaminan­ts to shore, not an overall decline in pollution.

Delaware, New Hampshire and North Carolina had the cleanest beaches in 2012, according to the group’s annual “Testing the Waters” report. The states with the most-polluted beaches were Minnesota, Wisconsin and Ohio.

The findings showed little progress for California beaches, which were responsibl­e for 25% of the beach closures in the nation. California ranked 20th of 30 states for beach water quality.

The number of beach closings and advisories in California fell slightly in 2012, but not nearly enough to show that beach pollution is improving, said Noah Garrison, staff attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council.

“We want to see that number dropping,” he said. “Unfortunat­ely we still see large numbers of closing and advisory days and we still have persistent pollution problems at our beaches.”

The report analyzed bacterial test results and public advisories from more than 3,000 beaches in 30 coastal and Great Lakes states. A high bacteria count indicates the presence of pathogens that can give swimmers skin rashes, eye infections or stomach and respirator­y illnesses.

Some California beaches ranked among the cleanest in the nation. Bolsa Chica State Beach, Newport Beach and San Clemente State Beach were named in the report’s list of 13 “fivestar” beaches for their “exceptiona­lly low violation rates and strong testing and safety practices.”

Avalon Beach on Santa Catalina Island and Orange County’s Doheny State Beach and Poche County Beach, however, made the nationwide list of 11 “repeat offenders,” beaches that failed health tests more than 25% of the time.

The report called for stronger beach water quality standards to protect swimmers from exposure to contaminan­ts. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency last year approved a new set of beach water quality standards, but environmen­tal groups say they are not stringent enough to protect public health.

To clean up beaches in the long term, the council said, coastal areas should build rain-absorbing infrastruc­ture to prevent contaminat­ed runoff from reaching the shore or triggering sewage overflows.

 ?? AVALON BEACH
Gina Ferazzi
Los Angeles Times ?? on Santa Catalina Island and 10 others failed health tests more than 25% of the time.
AVALON BEACH Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times on Santa Catalina Island and 10 others failed health tests more than 25% of the time.

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