STUDY FINDS OCEAN QUALITY MONITORING GOOD
SAN DIEGO, May 5 --The testing being conducted by
the City of San Diego for sources of pollution off the coast is
of a high quality, Paul K. Dayton, marine scientist with the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography, told the Metro Wastewater JPA today.
Dr. Dayton reported on the comprehensive study of current monitoring
practices conducted for the City by a team of scientists from Scripps
and other institutions.
Dayton said that ocean-water quality off San Diego
is a regional issue not limited to the area near the Point Loma
Ocean Outfall. He cited emissions from Mexico, the Navy, and the
South Bay Outfall, and pollutants from inside San Diego Bay and
from an offshore dump site known as LA5.
The study team suggested wider regional monitoring,
including coverage of deep offshore canyons. Much particulate matter
drifts into these canyons, which he said aren't currently being
monitored. The report also said that ocean water eddies and circulates
much differently in the San Diego Region than it does off Orange
County and Los Angeles and that those areas do not offer useful
monitoring models for San Diego.
The Metro JPA formed an ad hoc committee to look into
the possibility of a regional body taking over the monitoring. Councilmembers
Frank Tierney of Coronado, Henry Abarbanel of Del Mar, and Mayda
Winter of Imperial Beach comprise the committee.
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