LA beaches close after 17m gallons of untreated sewage discharged into bay
Seventeen million gallons of untreated sewage were discharged into Californias Santa Monica Bay between Sunday evening and early Monday morning, spurring beach closures, as well as criticism of how health officials notified the public about potential safety risks.
The problems came to a head at Hyperion Water Reclamation Plant, located in the Playa del Rey area of Los Angeles, on Sunday evening. An unusual amount of debris including construction waste and grease, among other refuse entered the plant through its sewer lines, said Elena Stern, a senior public information director for the citys department of public works.
These items, which Hyperion is not designed to process, just inundated and overwhelmed the system, clogging the screens which, in turn, caused flooding at the plant. To avoid having the entire plant shut down, which would have been catastrophic, we had to discharge some of the untreated sewage to alleviate the system, Stern said.
Raw sewage began to be released around 7.30pm and managers notified state officials just after 8.10pm with the Los Angeles county public health department showing up on the scene about two and a half hours later. The raw sewage discharge ended at 4.30am on Monday; in total, the discharge constituted about 6% of Hyperions daily flow.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/la-beaches-close-after-17m-gallons-of-untreated-sewage-discharged-into-bay/ar-AAMagS3