Regional water board warns Hearthside about runoff
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Hearthside Homes will have to figure out a long-term
method for diverting dry-season runoff from its proposed residential
community on the Bolsa Chica mesa, or its plan may be washed away, a
water board official said.
So far, the developer, formerly known as the Koll Real Estate Group, has
not come up with an adequate proposal, said Jerry Thibeault, executive
officer for the Regional Water Quality Control Board.
The water board has the power to block development by withholding a
permit that allows discharge of untreated waste water from lawns and
streets, which typically flows through storm drains into open waters, he
said.
Runoff is considered at least partly to blame for the beach contamination
over the summer that forced the closure of more than four miles of
shoreline.
Hearthside, which plans to build more than 1,200 homes on the mesa,
initially intended to dispose of the waste water through outfall pipes
that drain into the Outer Bolsa Bay.
That’s fine during the wet season because rain dilutes the concentration
of pollutants in the runoff, which includes fertilizer, motor oil and
animal droppings, he said. But the staff at the water board is concerned
that the more potent discharge during the dry season may upset the
delicate balance of the protected wetlands surrounding the mesa, he said.
“We would not feel comfortable without a commitment for long-term control
of dry-weather flows,” he said.
Hearthside had hoped the Orange County Sanitation District would come to
its rescue by allowing the development’s runoff to be diverted through
its nearby treatment plant, said Bob Ghirelli, the district’s director of
technical services. But the district can’t bail out Hearthside because
its policy is to only accept runoff on a yearly basis, he said.
That doesn’t leave the developer with many options, he said.
“They’re going to have to abandon their project or come up with some type
of treatment program,” he said.
As Ghirelli suggests, Hearthside could build its own treatment plant, but
that would be “very costly,” he said.
Hearthside would not comment.
The board expects Hearthside to make a formal proposal after the Coastal
Commission rules on the planned residential community in April, Thibeault
said.
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