Monday, September 17, 2007

Kayaking Through Sewage in Northern Baja

 The crazy levels of ocean pollution pouring into the ocean south of the U.S.-Mexico border is no longer the dirty secret it used to  be. Check out what  San Diego Councilmember Ben Hueso wrote today in the VoiceofSandiego.org:

On a recent kayak trip, I traveled south from Imperial Beach to Rosarito, and on my way south I passed the well-known community of San Antonio del Mar, which is located about five miles south of the border.

As I kayaked into the vicinity of San Antonio del Mar, I came across what I consider the most severe example of environmental degradation I have ever witnessed. I was astounded to see a large area of brown water with an unusually large presence of marine birds and dolphins obviously feeding on something. I soon realized that I was paddling through a brown mixture of slimy untreated sewage. After kayaking for a few more minutes, I was further shocked by the concentration of the sewage and the vast span of coastline it covered. I was also surprised that there was not a containment crew trying to clean up the sewage.

When I returned to the site three days later, I was greatly disturbed to see that nothing had changed. All the while, I saw bathers swimming in the water, surfers surfing nearby and, of most concern, fishermen pulling fish out of the surrounding waters. There were no warning signs to inform the beachgoers or fishermen of what was obviously a public health hazard.

I have known for years that Tijuana has been unable to successfully process its sewage for decades and that the result has been frequent discharges into the Tijuana River Valley. Never did I imagine, however, that the problem occurred daily and the outflow drained directly into waters that were regularly frequented by the general public.

As I kayaked, I fought a very strong northerly current that is one of the strongest I have ever experienced in my years of kayaking along the coast. This uniquely strong current brings millions of gallons of this sewage into Playas de Tijuana, Imperial Beach, Silverstrand State Beach, and Coronado, which are frequented by millions of visitors and residents annually.

Sewage plume, San Antonio del Mar he sewage plume can clearly be seen flowing north in an aerial view on Google Earth maps.

With the recent election of Tijuana’s new mayor, Jorge Ramos, and Baja California’s new governor, José Guadalupe Osuna Milln, an opportunity now exists to unite both San Diego and Mexico’s elected officials. Priority needs to be placed on preventing this type of sewage from entering our coastal waters. The hundreds of millions we propose to invest in improving water quality in San Diego by improving our creeks and watersheds and reducing discharge in our bays and beaches is but a mere drop in the bucket in comparison to correcting this immense problem that we seem helpless to address through our legal processes.

If anything, the Mexican government should acknowledge the problem as beyond their immediate control and post signage preventing swimming or fishing within a five mile radius of the outflow zone. Who knows how many people and animals have been affected by the contaminated water and seafood? It’s not too late to begin to correct this problem.

Thanks Ben for calling for action to solve this problem. Those of us who are immersed in this issue and impacted by it are glad that elected officials are taking notice of this terrible problem. Serge

Posted by WiLDCOAST at 16:47:17 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

San Diego: The Twilight Zone

 

We invite you to visit San Diego and experience what is to live in a city that resembles an episode of The Twilight Zone. San Diego is a city that faces an $87.4 million budget deficit in 2007, and spends annually more than eight million dollars to promote tourism and more than 20 million dollars every three years to replenish sand in their beaches. It is also a city that is willing to promote a half-million-dollar project to dredge a 200-foot beach to get rid of federally protected harbor seals. In a city with miles and miles of beaches, this tiny beach is occupied by a colony of about 200 harbor seals. The site, considered by the New York Times as one of the best places to visit in San Diego, attracts more than a million tourists every year who come to enjoy the unique sight of harbor seals giving birth and nursing their young.

Unfortunately, some City Council members are more interested in making happy some time travelers visiting from the 1930s, who don’t realize that the year is 2006, than to do what is good for San Diego. How do I know these individuals have lived in the Twilight Zone for the last few decades? These individuals violate a federal law that has protected marine mammals since 1973; they scream that children do not have places to swim in a city with hundreds of swimming pools; they scream that minorities are not welcomed in a country where segregation laws were abolished in the 1960s; and they scream that sharks are going to eat your children in a city where the only (unconfirmed) shark attacked happened in 1957.

The San Diego City Council members have in their hands the opportunity to stop the madness by protecting year-round harbor seals in Casa Beach, withdrawing the Casa Beach dredging project, and stopping the support for those individuals living in the Twilight Zone.

E-mail San Diego mayor Jerry Sanders and the City Council members and ask them to place year-round the rope that protect the Casa Beach harbor seals, to withdraw the dredging project proposal, and to establish the San Diego Marine Mammal Sanctuary in Casa Beach. Saul

City Mayor Jerry Sanders
JerrySanders@sandiego.gov

Councilmember Scott Peters, District One
scottpeters@sandiego.gov

Councilmember Kevin Faulconer, District Two
councildistrict2@sandiego.gov

Councilmember Toni Atkins, District Three
toniatkins@sandiego.gov

Councilmember Tony Young, District Four
anthonyyoung@sandiego.gov

Councilmember Brian Maienschein, District Five
bmaienschein@sandiego.gov

Councilmember Donna Frye, District Six
donnafrye@sandiego.gov
Councilmember Jim Madaffer, District Seven
jmadaffer@sandiego.gov
Councilmember Ben Hueso, District Eight
benhueso@sandiego.gov
 

 

 

 

Posted by WiLDCOAST at 01:53:55 | Permalink | Comments (1) »