Friday, November 22, 2024

Water Quality Testing Reform Needed

Letters to the Editor submitted to The Coronado Times are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the publisher, editors or writers of this publication. Submit letters to [email protected].

Submitted by Citizens Against Sewage


The January 9, 2018 lab results from Coronado’s North Beach storm drain outfall reflect dramatic exceedances – Total Coliforms were 3 times the daily limit, Fecal Coliforms were 20 times the daily limit, and Entrococcus nearly 8 times the daily limit in one test and 17 times the daily limit in the Idexx test. Idexx is a manufacturer of quick testing supplies. The point of using Idexx would be 24 hour results, otherwise it is a waste to do.

Downstream from the storm drain outfall is the entrance to dog beach: an off-leash dog park on Coronado’s North Beach. A relevant health & safety concern is sand contamination. A Hawaii study (https://www.cbsnews.com/news/worst-place-for-bacteria-beach-sand-water/) shows that pathogens live in sand 10 – 100 times longer than in water. If there is ponded water on the sand in front of the outfall pipe and/or if that ponded water has flowed to the ocean with rain, that contaminated water and sand it comes into contact with is extremely dangerous at these levels. Children, adults and pets having contact in or around this area is a recipe for illness.

North Beach Outfall jan 9 2018
Single Sample Baseline standards are: Total Coliforms – 10,000, Fecal Coliforms – 400, Enteroccoci – 104. Image: City of Coronado website

The lab Coronado uses (Environmatrix) takes on average 10 days to get their results back to Coronado… this makes Coronado’s Water Quality Monitoring and Testing Program completely worthless as a public safety measure. It appears Coronado only tests to minimally satisfy their NPDES permit and does not intend to provide timely results to the public nor notify the public of any hazards related to contamination reflected in their independent test results. Citizens Against Sewage (CAS) advocated to get the City’s test results online – they had previously been testing without releasing results to the public.

The testing protocol and water quality monitoring system requires reform on a multi-agency level including City of Coronado, San Diego Wastewater Division and SD County Department of Environmental Health. Citizens Against Sewage encourages the City of Coronado to use the City of San Diego lab or County lab to do this testing. They are the agencies that test all the other sites listed on www.sdbeachinfo.com. This would provide faster results and the addition of the City of Coronado’s lab results for North Beach to the County website.

Additional studies of pathogens in beach sand and whether using fecal indicator bacteria testing as done now is sufficient for public health:  https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3109870/

Citizens Against Sewage (CAS)

 



Managing Editor
Managing Editor
Originally from upstate New York, Dani Schwartz has lived in Coronado since 1996. She is happy to call Coronado home and to have raised her children here. In her free time she enjoys reading, exercising, trying new restaurants, and just walking her dog around the "island." Have news to share? Send tips or story ideas to: [email protected]

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