Los Angeles Times

When beach garbage is the size of a bus

How did a huge concrete chunk wash up on the sand in Long Beach?

- By Jireh Deng

Long Beach residents are accustomed to seeing debris on their beaches in the aftermath of inclement weather. So Annette Freuhan wasn’t the least bit fazed when she woke up the day after the torrential rains in early February to see a concrete slab the size of a bus washed ashore on Junipero Beach.

“The ocean is pretty powerful,” said the 80-year-old homeowner. As Freuhan spoke, she could see a bulldozer clearing up smaller debris on the beach surroundin­g the concrete block. “I don’t see it as being unusual because we have had whole huge trees that sometimes wash up.”

Tree trunks, littered beer bottles, even the wreckage of a sunken ship — Freuhan has seen it all over the last seven years in her home overlookin­g Bluff Park.

But this particular concrete slab sparked several questions. What is it? Where did it come from? How did it make it to the beach? And how, exactly, would the city get rid of the thing?

To answer the third question first, apparently concrete can float. (The American Society of Civil Engineers hosts an annual concrete canoe competitio­n.) According to Archimedes’ principle, a buoyant object just needs to displace more water than it weighs. And concrete is a pretty common material used in the boating business.

As for the first question, Todd Leland, the marine manager of Long Beach’s Department of Parks, Recreation and Marine, said the hulking slab “is a dock structure, it’s made of concrete and Styrofoam plastic products.” Leland believes a weakness in that particular dock was exposed during last month’s storms, and the flood of water from the L.A. River flowing into the marina only made things worse.

“We believe [the concrete] is from a private marina in a state of disrepair.... [But] with any debris that ended up on our beachfront, we can’t be 100% sure,” he said.

The likely suspect is the Harbor Light Marina adjacent to the nearby Hotel Maya. When contacted, the hotel responded that it leases the marina from the city, and that the Harbor Island Yacht Club subleases it from the hotel.

“Harbor Light Marina had a contractua­l responsibi­lity for management and maintenanc­e for the marina,” the Hotel Maya said in a statement by email. The hotel added that the yacht club “recently decided not to renew its sublease for the marina.”

The yacht club declined to comment, but on its website it stated that it has “not been able to negotiate a lease extension with the Hotel Maya and the hotel has decided to close the marina.” Without a space to accommodat­e its vessels, it is “in the process of moving the fleet back to San Diego.”

Setting aside the question of who was responsibl­e for the lack of maintenanc­e, there’s still the matter of disposing of this concrete. Leland estimates the block weighs 1 to 2 tons; city workers have been inching the block across the sand.

“We’ve taken the last couple of weeks to slowly move the concrete about two miles from the west beach to our east beach maintenanc­e location for a contained demolition and haul-off,” Leland said last week. The demolition

might take days because they have to be careful not to pollute as they break down the concrete and foam.

Leland said they’re prepared to deal with all sizes of waste; because of the way the tides flow, Long Beach is on the receiving end of the water and trash that run down the L.A. River. In its budget for 2024, the city reported removing 3,500 metric tons of waste in river debris during 2023, 42% more than the year prior. So far this year, the city has already collected 1,600 metric tons from the storms that hit Southern California. The city estimates that it spends $1 million a year disposing of this waste.

It’s costly and time-intensive to deal with the pollution washing up on the beach, not to mention disruptive to local ecosystems.

Richard Ambrose, a professor of environmen­tal health sciences at UCLA, said there are animals such as beach hoppers, sand crabs and worms living in the sand that can get crushed by large pieces of debris or even the vehicles removing waste.

“In general, from the ecological point of view, it’s better not to be driving on the beach or bringing heavy equipment down,” Ambrose said. But leaving the waste on the beach isn’t really an option, either; it’s also bad if animals ingest plastics and other waste.

Climate change could also increase the taxpayer costs associated with managing marinas and coastal regions, according to Ambrose.

“We need to plan for having more extreme events like we’ve just had and to make sure that the infrastruc­ture is ready,” he said.

That’s just in the short term; in the long term there may be other concerns as well. “As the sea level gets higher and higher, there’s infrastruc­ture that hasn’t been exposed to big waves in the past or flooding.”

 ?? Kelvin Kuo Los Angeles Times ?? AFTER STORMS last month, this slab of concrete was found on Junipero Beach. A Long Beach official believes it’s a piece of a dock and weighs between 1 and 2 tons. City workers were gradually moving it.
Kelvin Kuo Los Angeles Times AFTER STORMS last month, this slab of concrete was found on Junipero Beach. A Long Beach official believes it’s a piece of a dock and weighs between 1 and 2 tons. City workers were gradually moving it.

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