Los Angeles Times

Activists seek to stop sewer line under park

- By Bradley Zint Bradley Zint writes for Times Community News.

A proposed sewage pipeline that would run under a regional park in coastal Orange County is being challenged by local environmen­talists.

But officials say the estimated $23-million project at Talbert Regional Park in Costa Mesa is essential and will help guard against a disastrous spill of untreated sewage onto city streets.

The plans also involve driving a new pipeline under a residentia­l street and decommissi­oning a handful of undergroun­d pump stations near Talbert in an effort to save costs on maintenanc­e and electricit­y.

There will be some environmen­tal effects, officials say, but they will be mitigated in a variety of ways, such as planting native vegetation to replace non-native plant species there. They also want to create a barrier that, theoretica­lly, would shield area birds from noise.

Still, for Kevin Nelson and others, a pipeline simply doesn’t belong in the park.

The proposed undergroun­d sewer pipeline that would go through Talbert Park is designed to be about 4,800 feet long.

It would start on a tiny residentia­l street in the Newport Terrace neighborho­od of Newport Beach, bend south where Balboa Boulevard meets the terminus of West 19th Street before heading west into Talbert Park, under the Santa Ana River and eventually into the county wastewater treatment facility in Huntington Beach.

The Talbert pipeline would move untreated sewage using gravitatio­nal forces, rather than pump stations that apply pressure to the line to move material. It would be maintained, constructe­d and funded by the Orange County Sanitation District, which is contributi­ng $14.9 million to the project.

On a recent afternoon, the unseasonab­ly hot weather made tolerable by frequent ocean breezes, Nelson’s eyes squinted in the sun.

Nelson, who grew up in Costa Mesa and lives in San Clemente, was trying to reach the best vantage point for viewing a portion of Talbert that, in his mind, faces irreparabl­e harm if the officials have their way and construct the pipeline through the park.

But finding that vantage point to see the pipeline’s potential path was a little tricky that day.

Recent rains made Talbert’s otherwise dry trails wet with puddles and slippery.

The roughly 180-acre county-owned park, perhaps the most remote area in Costa Mesa, is mostly nature preserve split into two sections north and south of Victoria Street and adjacent to the Santa Ana River.

The park has few modern improvemen­ts and no parking lot of its own.

It even has a lake — but it’s gated off, preventing legal access to its shoreline.

In Talbert’s southern portion particular­ly, the trees and brush grow high and thick, making them appealing to wildlife but with the added benefit of shielding park users so they can escape the outside urbanized world.

For Nelson and others, Talbert’s remote, natural environmen­t is exactly what makes it so special for Costa Mesa — and why it shouldn’t be touched by a pipeline.

“It’s one of the few places that’s wild,” he said. “That’s its primary value.”

 ?? Kevin Chang Daily Pilot ?? A MAN walks a trail in Talbert Regional Park. Officials say planting native vegetation will help mitigate the environmen­tal impact of a proposed sewer line.
Kevin Chang Daily Pilot A MAN walks a trail in Talbert Regional Park. Officials say planting native vegetation will help mitigate the environmen­tal impact of a proposed sewer line.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States