Los Angeles Times

New gas monitors focus on Tijuana sewage crisis

- By Tammy Murga Murga writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — It’s only the first of six monitoring stations that will be placed along the border region near where sewage flows through the Tijuana River watershed, but in the three months since it was installed, it has confirmed what south San Diego County residents long suspected: The air they are breathing is unhealthy.

What, they wonder, will the other five monitoring stations show? And how will the data collected be used to remedy the decades-long, unchecked discharge of contaminat­ed water from the U.S.-Mexico region?

Since late September, six monitors came online at a station the San Diego County Air Pollution Control District built at San Diego Fire Station 29 in San Ysidro. The air-quality monitors are measuring, on an hourly basis, the quantities of the potentiall­y toxic gas hydrogen sulfide, which has a characteri­stic rottenegg odor. Their data show that people have repeatedly been exposed to low levels of the gas that sometimes exceed state and federal air quality standards.

The data are “consistent with the anecdotal reports that we’ve been receiving for a long time that the odors are there and that, at minimum, they cause a quality of life issue for the people who are close to the areas where these odors are being detected,” said Imperial Beach Mayor Paloma Aguirre. “What’s really concerning is that we don’t know what the long-term effects of this exposure are.”

The monitors also detect levels of sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide and other gases that contribute to poor air quality.

No data on these chemical compounds have been collected around the clock in the area until now. The early findings support what many residents in Imperial Beach, San Ysidro and the surroundin­g South County communitie­s have been saying for years: The millions of gallons of sewage-tainted water that routinely flows over the border are emitting gases that cause irritating and often nauseating odors, gases they are breathing and that are affecting their way of life.

An inoperable wastewater plant in Mexico, a pipeline rupture and a failing wastewater plant in the San Diego region that serves as a backstop for Tijuana’s sewage have resulted in discharges to the canyons, the Tijuana River and the Pacific Ocean. Though infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts were made in the 1990s and new efforts on both sides of the border are underway, Tijuana’s wastewater facilities have not kept pace with its population growth. Poorer communitie­s also remain unconnecte­d to the city’s sewer system.

The San Diego County Air Pollution Control District’s monitors, which they obtained through a $100,000 federal grant after residents raised concerns about odors, are showing just how much is in the air and when. Officials hope the informatio­n will clarify the true severity of long-term exposure to wastewater gases and help motivate decision-makers to curb sewage pollution swiftly.

All six monitors in operation at the San Ysidro fire station are capturing data from the air that flows through them. To get a more complete image, the district is working to relocate five of them across South County.

Among the locations eyed: Imperial Beach City Hall and at or near its pier, the communitie­s of Nestor and Otay Mesa West, and at or near the South Bay Internatio­nal Wastewater Treatment Plant in the Tijuana River Valley.

Imperial Beach city officials said an agreement that would allow the district access to the city’s property will be finalized soon. Officials at the Port of San Diego, which owns the pier, said they are in talks with the agency about doing the same. San Diego Parks and Recreation officials said they are also in discussion­s to add the San Ysidro Athletic Area Larsen Field as a potential site.

While waiting for agreements to be approved, the district is paying close attention to the recorded levels of hydrogen sulfide. It is a colorless gas emitted by sources such as geothermal fields, human and animal waste, landfills and sewage treatment facilities.

According to the California Air Resources Board, humans can detect hydrogen sulfide at the low level of 0.03 parts per million or 30 parts per billion. The U.S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion’s odor threshold is even lower, at 0.01 parts per million or 10 parts per billion. Prolonged exposure to concentrat­ions between 2 and 5 ppm (2,000 and 5,000 ppb) “may cause nausea, tearing of the eyes, headaches or loss of sleep,” OSHA guidelines say. After 48 hours, death may result at levels of 100 ppm or higher.

Since Sept. 28, the monitors have detected concentrat­ions of hydrogen sulfide sometimes above the state’s air quality standards at 30 ppb, and they repeatedly surpassed OSHA’s odor threshold at 10 ppb.

The highest recorded level was 43.45 ppb around 7 a.m. Oct. 5.

Residents in Imperial Beach, San Ysidro, Nestor and parts of Chula Vista and Coronado took to social media, testified at government meetings and wrote to federal and state lawmakers expressing frustratio­n over having to decide whether to shut their windows in the middle of summer or tolerate the sewage stench. Some even complained to their physicians about their eyes burning or asthma returning.

Exposure to high levels of hydrogen sulfide is well documented, but little is understood about persistent exposure to low levels.

A July 2023 paper published by University of Michigan researcher­s found that “exposure to much lower levels, below 0.03 ppm (30 ppb), has been associated with increased prevalence of neurologic­al effects” and increments below 0.001 ppm (1 ppb) “have been associated with ocular, nasal, and respirator­y effects.” They said, however, that long-term community-based studies are needed to confirm findings.

But not much has been done over the years. A paper on the same subject from more than 20 years ago arrived at the same conclusion, calling on “the need for further studies.”

Aguirre said she believes the informatio­n will help in making a stronger case for getting residents some relief.

“We’ve been hearing a lot from folks who couldn’t open their windows [because of the foul odors] and had to have these filters in their homes,” she said. “Why do people need to pay out of their own pockets for these types of devices?”

The California Coastal Commission has joined the call for more to be done about the sewage crisis after officials from the agency visited south San Diego County in October to hear directly from those most affected by the pollution. Alarmed by testimonie­s and commission­ers’ own experience­s during their stay, the commission agreed to request that the county start conducting epidemiolo­gical tests.

All “I could smell was poop,” said commission Chair Donne Brownsey of the panel’s visit to Imperial Beach. “This is what [residents] talked to us about all day long . ... I’ve never been to a coastal community where if there’s a beautiful beach, that I haven’t walked on it. And I didn’t walk on this beach.”

As all monitors go online from their sites, David Sodeman, chief of monitoring and technical services with the air pollution control district, said the data will be shared with the county Public Health Services Department, state and federal agencies and interested health researcher­s to get a better understand­ing of how long-term exposure is affecting people’s health.

 ?? A NET GATHERS Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? sewage and debris on the Tijuana River in 2018. Six air monitors in San Ysidro are documentin­g the effects of Tijuana’s sewage crisis.
A NET GATHERS Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times sewage and debris on the Tijuana River in 2018. Six air monitors in San Ysidro are documentin­g the effects of Tijuana’s sewage crisis.

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