Southern California beaches from Orange to Los Angeles counties were closed over the holiday weekend after as many as 7 million gallons of un-treated wastewater spilled into the Pacific Ocean, officials said Sunday.
The spill happened after a series of late Decem-ber storms brought heavy rainfall to the area. A section of Los Angeles County-run sewage system “collapsed,” sending untreated wastewater to al-ready overwhelmed storm drains that lead to sea, some blocked by debris, the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts said in a series of statements.
The collapse was reported Friday night in the city of Carson, and an emergency contractor quickly set up pumps to bypass the problem, but sewage continued to make it to sea the next day, according to the districts.
By New Year’s Day additional bypass pumps and the last drops of rain had combined to help end the spill overnight, the sanitation officials said.
The spill prompted coastal closures from Hunt-ington Beach to the south to Rancho Palos Verdes to the north, said officials in the two counties affected by the breach.
The closures included 7 miles of beaches and bayfront areas in Long Beach, health officials there said. Reopening the coastline to recreation would require water testing that shows bacterial levels that are not hazardous, they said.
Some of the same beaches were temporarily closed in early October after a pipeline breach off Huntington Beach released an estimated 25,000 gallons of crude oil into the Pacific.
The 70th annual Polar Bear Swim at Cabrillo Beach in Los Angeles, scheduled for New Year’s Day, was canceled because of the latest spill.
Frigid water temperatures in the mid-50s have generally helped to keep holiday tourists away from the shoreline, but the regularity of storm-related spills concerned some leaders.
“A sewage spill of this magnitude is dangerous and unacceptable, and we need to understand what happened,” Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn said in a statement. “The recent storm un-doubtedly contributed to the spill, but we need in-frastructure that doesn’t fail when it rains.”—Agencies