Community Corner

Seal Beach is Top of the Class in Water Quality

The city earns straights A grades in Heal the Bay water quality report card.

Sometimes, like today, it’s ok to revel in it.

Today, locals can revel, swim and surf in Seal Beach’s A+ water quality. Like many Orange County Beach’s, Seal Beach earned top marks in the annual Heal the Bay water quality report card released this week.

The testing at the city’s four projections at 8th Street, 14th Street and the pier earned A+ grades while the 1ST Street projection earned an A.

Find out what's happening in Los Alamitos-Seal Beachwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

However, it wasn’t all good news for Orange County beaches

Two of the nastiest beaches in the state are in San Clemente and Dana Point. Neighboring Long Beach also had a year of good, bad and ugly, according to Heal the Bay.

Find out what's happening in Los Alamitos-Seal Beachwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

According to Heal the Bay, an environmental group that works to clean up the oceans and coasts in California, Poche Beach and Doheny Beach are listed as the fifth and sixth dirtiest beaches in California.

The ranking is based on continuous monitoring of bacteria levels, and the ratings are based on bacteria levels during the dry summer season, when most people use the beach and bacteria levels are highest, according to a release from the organization.

The high levels of bacteria in the ocean can cause flu, ear infections and major skin rashes, among other problems.

Other Orange County beaches with high bacteria levels include North Beach in San Clemente, near the Metrolink platform. It received a "D" grade from Heal the Bay, and the beach north of the San Clemente Pier, near the Marine Safety office, got an "F."

All the other beaches in Orange County received "A" or "B" grades, according to the Heal the Bay report card site. 

In Long Beach, the overall water quality is poor because it sits at the end of the “pollution-choked” Los Angeles River, the report states.

“The city is to be commended for investigating and fixing leaking or disconnected sewage pump lines and improperly working diversions,” the report states.

“But ultimately the city’s water quality is directly tied to the rainfall amounts and enormous runoff volumes from the L.A. River.”

In Long Beach, the projection of 5th Place received an F during wet weather and a C during the beach-bathing months of April to October.

At the west side of Belmont Pier, the marks were F for wet weather and C again during the warm months.

Poche Beach, a county-incorporated beach along Pacific Coast Highway south of Dana Point, in the Capo Beach area, has a storm water purification system, but the Coastal Commission hamstrung its effectiveness when it was first built.

The apparatus was finished in 2009.

George Edwards, a senior water quality engineer for Orange County Watersheds, said that during trials last summer, the purification system was able to achieve a 95 percent reduction in the three types of bacteria measured by regulators and water quality professionals.

The Coastal Commission, however, approved the permit on the condition that the purified water be discharged into a beach pond, rather than in the surf zone.

Edwards said that once the purified runoff was discharged into the warm, shallow pond, bacteria levels jumped right back up to where they were as if the water had never been treated.

The Coastal Commission May 11 approved the Watersheds agency to test the equipment this summer by discharging the cleansed runoff directly into the surf zone where it can be immediately dispersed by the ocean.

(Another board, the San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Board, has to sign off on the testing first, though, Edwards said.)

If the tests prove effective in reducing bacteria to healthy levels, Edwards said the agency would apply to the Coastal Commission and Water Quality Control Board to make the change permanent.

Meaning maybe next year, Poche could make the grade and get off Heal the Bay's top 10 list.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

More from Los Alamitos-Seal Beach