Quiksilver Heat Vest
    LATEST NEWS
 - Clean surf Day Two of Breaka Burleigh Pro 4...
 - Four time Indonesian women's champ re-inks ...
 - Australian season underway with Breaka Burl...
 - Bethany Hamilton re-signs contract with Rip...
 - Live TV: Kai Lenny talks story at the Surfe...
 - Damien Warr nabs biggest wave for Oakley aw...
 - Big Time: Kelly claims his fourth Laureus A...
 - Video: premier épisode de la nouvelle série...
 - Video: Closeup & barreled with Kalani at Pi...
 - Atlantic Surfing Fed names competition dire...
 - BIC Sport & Shopatron partner in eCommerce ...
 - After year of absence Quiksilver Goodwave r...
    WORLDVIEW
Turtle Bay Resort
    CULTURE
    OUTPOSTS
Surf Fanatics
Von Zipper Europe Yallingup Surf Film Festival
    FEATURED VIDEO
    DIRECTORIES
 
Shapers Camps
Schools Jobs
 
    CALENDARS
 
 
 
 
 
Get the Surfersvillage iPhone app
Poll
Will the Vans Triple Crown winner be from?
USA ?
Brazil ?
Hawaii ?
Europe ?
Africa ?
Australia ?
    View Results
    SERVICES
    NEWS SERVICES
Pictures in the News
Surftime PitPilot Magazine
Pacific Longboarder 7sky magazine
   WIN STUFF CORNER
Surf Aid
Surfing Euskadi
Videos       News-Alert        Newswire        Directories                  
Surfersvillage TV Channel
Pleasure Point, Santa Cruz
Clint Kimmins
North Shore Transport
World Surfing Reserve Gold Coast

                    Event Webcasts
 
   Live | : Hang Loose Pro Prime | Video
   Live   : Breaka Burleigh Pro 4* | Video   
    
 
          SVTV videos     Joli / WJSC

                           WSR GC


     

  Africa     Australia     Brazil     Europe     Hawaii     USA     Industry     Int'l     Newswire  
Make a comment Print the news: Sewers (and Surfers) win the great Malibu Sewers War.Printer friendly Send to a friend
Sewers (and Surfers) win the great Malibu Sewers War.
 




SEPTIC TANKS ON THEIR WAY OUT IN MALIBU

The great sewer wars of Malibu have finally drawn to a close. Sewers won.

Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 6 November, 2009 : - - The Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board agreed late Thursday to ban septic systems in central and eastern Malibu, a move that would end years of fierce debate over the wastewater devices still commonly used in one of Southern California's most picturesque and exclusive coastal communities.

New septic systems will not be permitted in Malibu and owners of existing systems will have to halt wastewater discharges within a decade.
While many had come to view the septic systems as a strange but effective check against rapid growth in a community beloved for its thinly populated canyons and wide-open ocean vistas, others saw the devices as Third-World contrivances that have fouled the community's watershed and popular beaches.

Surfer Ken Seino, a member of the Malibu Surfing Assn., pulled open his shirt to show a scar on his upper-left chest, where he had a pacemaker implanted. That was necessary, he said, because of the viral myocarditis he contracted after paddling through raw sewage at Surfrider Beach in the summer of 1997. "I smelled it, I tasted it, and it was ugly," Seino, 53, said. "I regurgitated before I could paddle to the sand." He said he eventually needed a pacemaker. "I will die before my time because of this infection," he said.

Marilyn Dove challenged the water board's technical memos as being flawed by faulty data and incorrect assumptions about the amounts and causes of Malibu's water pollution. "If we don't know where we're going, all directions are wrong," Dove said.

The plan adopted Thursday was hammered out on the fly -- a blend of the water board's own proposal, an alternative pushed by the city and suggestions from the boisterous gathering at the Los Angeles headquarters of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.

The shift to a sewer system comes at a considerable expense. Residents in the affected areas would be required to pay about $500 a month to cover the cost of hooking into a central sewage system, according to the city's projections. And businesses would face payments of up to $20,000 a month.
The compromise, however, shrinks the affected area and gives business owners and residents alike more time to hook into a central wastewater treatment system. Property owners in commercial areas will have to comply by 2015, and residents in Malibu Knolls, Serra Retreat and other residential areas will have until 2019.

In many ways, the septic tanks played a large role in Malibu becoming a city. It incorporated and formed its own government in 1991 to stave off Los Angeles County's efforts to install a sewer system in the area. Residents at the time feared sewers would unleash a wave of development that would turn Malibu into Miami Beach West.

In Malibu, septic tanks, leach pits and the ubiquitous stench known as the "Malibu smell" are familiar topics. After rainstorms, officials often post signs on Surfrider Beach urging swimmers and surfers to steer clear because of health dangers. Surfrider often gets failing grades on Heal the Bay's annual water-quality report cards.

For years, the community has come under increasing pressure from regional, state and federal officials to clean up Malibu Creek, Malibu Lagoon and Santa Monica Bay.

City leaders contend they committed themselves long ago to cleaning up their waters by conducting studies and paying $25 million for a civic center property that will serve as a park and storm-water treatment plant. Construction on that project, called Legacy Park, recently got underway and is expected to cost at least $10 million.

Finding a way to deal with wastewater has proved more difficult. The City Council last year approved the La Paz shopping complex after the developer agreed to donate two acres for a wastewater treatment plant. But Santa Monica Baykeeper, an environmental group, sued the city, saying La Paz would pollute the creek, lagoon and ocean. Separately, Baykeeper sued the city over Legacy Park because it did not have a wastewater treatment component.

"It's pretty tough to get things done when we're getting sued for doing it and not doing it," Mayor Pro Tem Sharon Barovsky said earlier this week.
Mark Gold, president of Heal the Bay, an environmental group that pushed for a septic tank prohibition, said after all these years, he was finally pleased with the resolution.

What's your take on this?
Post your thoughts: SV Forum

New Survey: Map Surfing’s future 

More USA/Cen Amer. surfing news available here
Check the latest West Coast Surf Reports and Forecasts

New! B2B News ASBE-Surf   |  Receive News-Alerts

 Malibu Surfing Association
communications@msasurfing.org

Environment - Surfersvillage




Surfersvillage iPone app download


  VIEW-it: 2011 BEST surfing VIDEOS collection


Turtle Bay Resort


   What?   Tidal Fantasy  |  Stretch A Freak 
 


SV Surf Camps


Preview Surfing Yearbook | Surfers Survey


Surf Fanatics

Podcasts Newsfeeds Galleries
Email SV TV coming soon Mobile
ABOUT US   |    COPYRIGHT   |    DISCLAIMER   |    PRIVACY   |    LINKS   |    SITE MAP
Surfing Euskadi