Sewage spill shuts down California beaches
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (AP) — A stretch of Southern California beach was closed on Feb. 21 to swimmers and surfers after up to 50,000 gallons (189,270 liters) of raw sewage spilled into nearby waters, authorities said.
The Orange County Health Care Agency said a blocked sewer line at a restaurant in Newport Bay caused the leak of untreated sewage, the Los Angeles Times reported.
The waters on the west end of the bay will remain closed to swimming, surfing and diving until the results of follow-up water quality monitoring meet acceptable standards, the agency said.
This spill comes less than two months after a sewage main in Carson failed, spewing millions of gallons of waste into the Los Angeles Harbor and fouling beaches in Long Beach and elsewhere in LA and Orange counties.
Related News
From Archive

- Trench collapse kills one construction worker in Houston, Texas
- Kinder Morgan moves forward with $1.7 billion natural gas pipeline project in Katy, Texas
- OSHA cites Florida utility company for safety violations that led to worker’s fatality
- Construction worker killed in trench collapse near Prosperity, S.C.
- $105 million S. Dakota water pipeline project to begin construction spring of 2025
- Final construction phase kicks off for Indianapolis deep rock tunnel
- Texas contractor penalized by OSHA for repeated trench safety violations
- Trench collapse kills one construction worker in Houston, Texas
- Nevada OSHA fines Elon Musk's Boring Company over safety violations in Vegas tunnel project
- WES tunnel boring machine retrieved from Oregon river after seven-month project
Comments