Recent News

11-19-2008

Prospect of sewers strikes horror in rustic Malibu

11-18-2008

Agencies disagree over how to stop spread of invasive species

11-13-2008

Rancho La Paz Center Gets Council OK

11-12-2008

Malibu council approves La Paz mall

11-6-2008

The hunt for mudsnails

10-1-2008

City Manager accuses Regional Water head of bias

09-25-2008

City Council Wants to Add Sewage to La Paz Center

09-25-2008

Malibu undecided on La Paz Development

09-17-2008

Same day water quality alerts on tap

 

Events

1-25-2009

Stone Canyon Creek Restoration

Please join the Santa Monica Baykeeper and UCLA’s Institute of the Environment to help restore the only remaining section of unburied creek on the UCLA campus.

 

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Lawsuit Charges L.A. County with Failing Clean Water Standards

Local Governments Could be Held Accountable for Results for the First Time

LOS ANGELES (March 3, 2008) – The County of Los Angeles and the City of Malibu must stop bacteria and toxins from flowing into coastal waters where they sicken beachgoers and damage marine life, according to two lawsuits filed today in federal court by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and the Santa Monica Baykeeper. In the past, local governments have been required by courts to take steps to reduce urban runoff, which is the top source of coastal water pollution, but today’s lawsuits are the first attempt to hold governments accountable for measurable results.

“Year after year, the county’s own data show that pollutants ranging from cyanide to fecal bacteria are flowing into local waters at levels the law forbids,” said David Beckman, director of the Coastal Water Quality Project at NRDC. “It’s time to stop going through the motions of fighting water pollution, and actually clean up the water.” Read more about the metals and bacteria here.


In addition, the lawsuits seek to enforce a “no discharge” rule meant to protect a coastal preserve in the waters off northern Los Angeles County. The requirements are contained in a Clean Water Act permit issued to the county, Malibu, and other cities in 2001 by the State of California’s Regional Water Quality Control Board. The lawsuits were brought under the federal Clean Water Act.

As part of its Clean Water Act permit duties, Los Angeles County is required to test the quality of runoff flowing into local waters, such as Santa Monica Bay. The county’s own data confirm it is ignoring permit standards that impose specific limits on the amount of pollution it can discharge into Malibu Creek, Santa Clara, Los Angeles, and San Gabriel Rivers. The county also has failed to report high pollution levels and implement corrective action.


“Santa Monica Bay is one of the most extraordinary coastal estuaries on the west coast of North America, and it is high time the county, the agency most responsible for its protection, acted like it was a resource worth protecting,” stated Tom Ford, executive director of Santa Monica Baykeeper. “We need results, not more paper shuffling.”

The Mugu to Latigo coastal preserve, one of 34 Areas of Special Biological Significance in California, stretches from Mugu Lagoon in Ventura County to Latigo Point in the City of Malibu. ASBSs are unique areas afforded special protection by the State of California’s Ocean Plan, which prohibits any pollution discharges into or near these areas. However, Santa Monica Baykeeper’s water quality sampling found that, for example, bacteria levels in discharges from county pipes exceeded those set in the Ocean Plan.

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The Natural Resources Defense Council is a national, nonprofit organization of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists dedicated to protecting public health and the environment. Founded in 1970, NRDC has 1.2 million members and online activists, served from offices in New York, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Beijing.

Santa Monica Baykeeper is a non-profit corporation with 3,000 members who live and/or recreate in and around the Santa Monica Bay area. Baykeeper is dedicated to the preservation, protection, and defense of the environment, the wildlife, and the natural resources of the Santa Monica Bay watershed and San Pedro Bay watershed receiving waters. To further these goals, Baykeeper actively seeks federal and state agency implementation of the CWA and, when necessary, directly initiates enforcement actions on behalf of itself and its members.

 

Click Here to view “Fact Sheet” about the case.

Click Here to View or Download Multi-Media Resources.

 


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