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mfcorey1

(11,001 posts)
Tue Jul 23, 2019, 05:49 AM Jul 2019

There's 'poop in the water' at America's dirtiest beaches. Is yours on the list?

LOS ANGELES — Gerry Klatt gazes across the beach toward a peaceful bay at Cabrillo Beach, seemingly the perfect place for his daily dip. But he won't swim there.

Instead, Klatt braves the pounding waves about 100 yards away on the side of the beach exposed to open ocean where he believes the seawater is cleaner.

As it turns out, on many days he'd be right. The inner side of Cabrillo Beach in Los Angeles' port town of San Pedro leads the list of California beaches that saw the highest percentage of days with a bacteria count deemed potentially dangerous. It's part of a new report released Tuesday that lists the most troubled beaches in 29 coastal and Great Lakes states.

The study looked at the number of days in 2018 that the water had bacteria counts exceeding Environmental Protection Agency standards. The Environment America Research and Policy Center report says the high counts can sicken an estimated 75,000 swimmers a year.

Most days of the year, beaches are considered safe. But researchers found bacteria counts can spike on certain days with fecal matter from people or animals as the chief culprit. It comes when sewers overflow or when fecal waste on streets washes into streams or creeks that flow to lakes or the ocean. A co-author of the study says it shows more work needs to be done to clean up lakes and oceans.

"It's hard to believe that 47 years after we passed the Clean Water Act that we are still concerned with poop in the water when people want to go swimming," said John Rumpler clean water program director for the Environment America Research and Policy Center, which released the report.

In Chicago, 19 of 19 beaches sampled had at least one day last year when beaches were considered potentially unsafe for swimming. One, South Shore Beach, showed contamination on 93 of the 98 days in which samples were taken.

There are plenty of other examples in the report. The Gulfport East beach in Mississippi showed high levels on 44 out of 66 days sampled. Tanner Park in New York's Suffolk County registered high on 48 out of 71 samples. And Cupertino Park near Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was unacceptable on 40 of out 60 samples.

As for the bayside of Cabrillo Beach, it registered unsafe on 85 occasions in one section and 43 in another out of 175 samples last year, the report states. It's not the first time it came in high, having been cited by other groups for issues more than a decade ago.

The city's recreation department, which operates the beach, referred inquiries to the California Coastal Commission, which issued a statement saying curtailing pollution is a high priority: "Our $45 billion a year coastal economy depends on keeping the water and beaches clean."

Cabrillo is challenged because it's a narrow bay near the industrial port where water doesn't circulate as easily as on the ocean side. Its hemmed in by a large marina complex on one side and the port's breakwater on other. All the while, it's within site of large ships and barges making their way into the wharves in one of the nation's busiest ports.

Klatt, 58, of Torrance, California, said that ship traffic figures in his decision to stay out of the blue waters of the bayside.

"The ships that come in — I don't know if it's the freighters or the cruise ships — they dump their waste," he said. He explained, however, that had no direct knowledge of such a practice, which is strictly prohibited, but just that he had "heard" it was the case. Rumor or not, it's enough to keep him out of the bay and on the side facing the ocean for his daily routine, swimming back and forth along the coastline.

Others beachgoers weren't as concerned. On a sunny Sunday in which his daughter Alis frolicked with cousins in the water, Raymond Zuniga, 20, of Los Angeles said he likes Cabrillo more than other local beaches. Some "smells like petroleum," he explained.

And Drew Martin, 31, who lives nearby in San Pedro, said that overall, he thought the beach was pretty clean as he happily chased his 1-year-old son Owen through the sand.

When it comes to water quality, however, beaches aren't always what they seem. In the East, septic systems can sometimes leak into creeks or water can become contaminated by bird droppings, said Mara Dias, water quality manager for the Surfrider Foundation.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/travel/news/theres-poop-in-the-water-at-americas-dirtiest-beaches-is-yours-on-the-list/ar-AAEJyTB?li=BBnb7Kz&ocid=mailsignout

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There's 'poop in the water' at America's dirtiest beaches. Is yours on the list? (Original Post) mfcorey1 Jul 2019 OP
there is more e coli than sand at most beaches rampartc Jul 2019 #1
I never swim in the ocean anymore. BlueTsunami2018 Jul 2019 #2
And Republicans hate the EPA DFW Jul 2019 #3
the timing is coming that beaches will no longer be a tourist destination and that beachbum bob Jul 2019 #4

rampartc

(5,435 posts)
1. there is more e coli than sand at most beaches
Tue Jul 23, 2019, 06:55 AM
Jul 2019

and that is probably the good news compared to medical waste and toxic chemicals.

BlueTsunami2018

(3,503 posts)
2. I never swim in the ocean anymore.
Tue Jul 23, 2019, 07:12 AM
Jul 2019

Haven’t for over twenty years. Maybe if I went to the Caribbean or something I might but that’s unlikely.

DFW

(54,436 posts)
3. And Republicans hate the EPA
Tue Jul 23, 2019, 07:47 AM
Jul 2019

These days, when in the States, though we love the ocean, we only swim at the Cape Cod National Sea Shore, or on the beaches of the Waikoloa-Kohala area of the Big Island, though I would trust Kaua‘i to have stayed clean, too.

Like so many other things, pollution-free coastal areas are one more priority that we should have been focusing on without interruption—could have, too but didn‘t.

 

beachbum bob

(10,437 posts)
4. the timing is coming that beaches will no longer be a tourist destination and that
Tue Jul 23, 2019, 08:46 AM
Jul 2019

will kill many thousands of businesses and millions of jobs. Karma, that the effects in the Gulf Coast will center on Redstates that offer little environmental protections

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