Los Angeles Times

Anger grows as noxious fumes choke El Segundo

After sewage spill, L.A. will reimburse residents for air conditione­rs and give out hotel vouchers

- By Rachel Schnalzer

On a jog in her El Segundo neighborho­od, Corrie Zupo’s head hurt and her eyes watered.

She blamed the symptoms on noxious fumes from the nearby Hyperion Water Reclamatio­n Plant, which is undergoing at least a month of repairs after dischargin­g 17 million gallons of raw sewage into the ocean on July 11.

Other residents have complained of rashes, nausea and burning eyes.

On Thursday, the Los Angeles Sanitation and Environmen­t Department, which runs the plant, announced that it would reimburse El Segundo residents for air conditione­rs if they stay in their homes, or hotel vouchers if they would rather leave.

For Zupo and others, including El Segundo city officials and L.A. City Controller Ron Galperin, that’s not enough.

They want answers on why the plant was so overwhelme­d by debris that it had to release a massive amount of sewage to avoid completely shutting down.

They want to know why sanitation officials took so

long to announce the discharge, why there was a delay in offering financial assistance to residents, and what the long-term effects on beaches and marine life will be.

Zupo, co-chair of the El Segundo Environmen­t Committee, organized a protest Thursday outside the plant.

“We totally understand accidents happen, natural disasters happen,” she said. “What we’re asking for, though, is accountabi­lity [so] that in the future, this doesn’t happen.”

Galperin called the sewage release “an environmen­tal disaster and imminent threat to the health and safety of millions of residents.”

In a letter to Barbara Romero, director and general manager of L.A. Sanitation and Environmen­t, he questioned how debris, including wood chips, concrete, paper and grease, could clog the plant’s filters to such an extent that the drastic measure was necessary.

“The fact that such a seemingly mundane sequence of events could lead to 17 million gallons of untreated sewage being released raises concerns about LASAN’s ability to prevent future emergencie­s,” he wrote.

On its website, the sanitation department this week “sincerely apologized” for any inconvenie­nce and said workers put up a “valiant struggle.”

“Their heroic efforts averted a much larger catastroph­e, and limited the discharge of untreated wastewater to 17 million gallons, which is a small fraction of the 260 million gallons per day that could have polluted Santa Monica Bay for days on end,” the statement read.

The Hyperion plant, just off Dockweiler State Beach in Playa del Rey, has been operating since 1894 and is L.A.’s oldest and largest wastewater treatment facility.

That Sunday afternoon, as the plant’s filters became clogged with “overwhelmi­ng quantities of debris,” officials decided to empty raw sewage a mile offshore instead of through the normal system five miles away, the sanitation department said on its website.

That prevented “the plant from going completely offline and dischargin­g much more untreated wastewater,” the department said.

The plant itself was severely flooded, and equipment that treats and cleans wastewater was damaged. The plant is operating on backup systems; repairs will take a month or more.

Because of the damage, a fuel that is a byproduct of the wastewater treatment is being made in smaller amounts and must be destroyed, which can cause odors, noise, smoke and flames.

“Hyperion is taking all measures to mitigate impacts (odors, noise, etc.) to the community during the cleanup and repairs to fully restore functional­ity of the plant,” the department said.

After the sewage discharge, officials from the L.A. County Department of Public Health did not immediatel­y notify the public that the beaches were unsafe, putting swimmers at risk.

About 24 hours elapsed before county officials tweeted a beach closure advisory at 5:30 p.m. that Monday, urging residents to avoid swimming at Dockweiler and El Segundo beaches.

Lifeguards found out about the closure a few hours earlier, about noon, after seeing a county worker posting a sign on a lifeguard tower.

They then began warning beachgoers to stay out of the water.

On July 14, county health officials reopened areas of Dockweiler and El Segundo beaches.

El Segundo residents in the area bounded by Imperial Highway, Pacific Coast Highway, El Segundo Boulevard and Vista del Mar are eligible for the air conditioni­ng or hotel reimbursem­ents.

El Segundo City Manager Scott Mitnick had been pushing L.A. officials for the reimbursem­ents, which were not announced until more than a week after the sewage discharge.

In a letter to Hyperion’s executive plant manager, Timeyin Dafeta, Mitnick cited “recurring impacts” such as constructi­on noise, smoke, flaring and odors.

He requested that L.A. officials “do a better job informing our community as to what is going on and when this nightmare will end.”

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? A MAN and his daughter react to being told by a lifeguard to keep out of the water at Dockweiler State Beach in Playa del Ray after a sewage spill.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times A MAN and his daughter react to being told by a lifeguard to keep out of the water at Dockweiler State Beach in Playa del Ray after a sewage spill.

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