San Diego Union-Tribune

SEWAGE CLOSES BEACHES IN CORONADO, IMPERIAL BEACH

New DNA testing shows more pollution coming from Baja than thought

- BY JOSHUA EMERSON SMITH

Coronado’s tony seaside community and working-class Imperial Beach could be headed for a major reckoning with the sewage continuing to spilling over the border from Tijuana.

Beach closures that were once thought of as largely a wintertime occurrence now appear poised to become a yearround phenomena in San Diego’s South Bay.

However, that’s not because the cross-border pollution from Baja California’s overtaxed and crumbling wastewater system has dramatical­ly escalated, according to county officials.

It’s because the ocean is more polluted than previously thought. A spate of recently shuttered shorelines followed a May 5 rollout of a new DNAbased water-quality testing system nearly a decade in the making.

“This method is more accurate, more precise, so we’re able to get a better picture of what the water quality truly is,” said Heather Buonomo, director of the county’s Department of Environmen­tal Health and Quality.

“Until the root cause of this issue is addressed, which is correcting the sewage contaminat­ion that’s flowing up to these beaches, this will continue,” she warned.

Coronado’s beaches have been shuttered for an eye-popping 17 days since the new testing started early last month. The Imperial Beach shoreline to the south, which historical­ly has suffered much greater impacts from sewage pollution, was immediatel­y closed and has yet to reopen.

“No one was expecting that this was going to result in these closures all the way up to Coronado,” Imperial Beach Mayor Serge Dedina said Tuesday. “Right now our beaches are going to be closed all summer.”

Coronado Mayor Richard Bailey did not return multiple requests for comment.

Dedina and others expressed concerns that the closures could have widespread economic and social impacts, potentiall­y shut

tering programs such as the junior lifeguards and YMCA surf camps and interferin­g with Navy training operations.

“The Hotel del (Coronado beachfront) is going to be closed all the time now,” said Chris Helmer, environmen­tal and natural resources director for Imperial Beach. “That’s going to piss off a whole lot of powerful people.”

The Naval Special Warfare Command, whose base is on the southern end of Coronado and is the training home of San Diego’s Navy SEALs, did not return requests for comment.

The closures are necessary to protect beachgoers from dangerousl­y high levels of bacteria and viruses, according to county public health officials. Swimmers who ignore the restrictio­ns could be at risk of diarrhea, fever, respirator­y disease, meningitis and even paralysis.

San Diego is the first coastal county in the nation to institute a federally approved water-quality testing system that uses DNA technology, officials said. The effort involved the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency, California Department of Public Health and researcher­s at UC San Diego.

“We started this process nine years ago because we heard loud and clear from the community that they wanted to know what was going on with their water,” said Buonomo with the county. “They wanted faster results and more accurate informatio­n on if it could make them sick.”

The old testing regime relied on what’s known as taking a culture, where scientists examine water samples for bacterial growth in a lab. Officials said the new DNAbased method is not only more accurate but quicker, returning results within 10 hours, rather than 24. In either case, the presence of bacteria is considered an indicator for pathogens, such as E. coli, Vibrio and salmonella.

“When you have high increase of sewage in your sample, often the culture method might miss those, whereas the DNA test is not missing those,” said Jeremy Corrigan, director of operations at the San Diego County Public Health Laboratory.

For years, environmen­tal regulators thought sewage pouring over the border from Mexico was largely the result of heavy winter rains that flushed polluted runoff and wastewater through the Tijuana River channel into the estuary in Imperial Beach.

However, recent studies out of UC San Diego’s Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy and Stanford University have identified a defunct wastewater facility in Tijuana as a major source of the pollution. San Antonio de los Buenos sewage treatment plant at Punta Bandera is estimated to be dumping as much as 35 million gallons of raw sewage a day into the Pacific Ocean.

When ocean currents move northward, referred to as a “south swell,” they can carry plumes of feces and other pollution as far north as Coronado. Such conditions are prevalent in the spring and summer, according to health officials.

The EPA has released a $630 million blueprint, nearly half of which has funding, to stem the crossborde­r pollution. A major part of the plan is an effort to reroute much of the wastewater currently pumped to Punta Bandera, which relies on a system of outdated lagoons. Instead, that sewage would be sent to the South Bay Internatio­nal Wastewater Treatment Plant along the border in San Diego.

 ?? K.C. ALFRED U-T ?? Signs warn beachgoers in Imperial Beach of high bacteria levels in the water because of sewage.
K.C. ALFRED U-T Signs warn beachgoers in Imperial Beach of high bacteria levels in the water because of sewage.

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