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Filed: Country: Belarus
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Sick at seashore? Beach pollution cited as cause

2007 bad year for beach closings, conservation group reports

MSNBC

updated 12:53 p.m. CT, Tues., July. 29, 2008

U.S. beaches were in poor health last year, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council, which said Tuesday that pollution in 2007 led to the second-highest number of beach closings and advisory days in 18 years.

Human and animal fecal matter were to blame for much of the pollution, the council said in its annual report, leaving many beachgoers vulnerable to illnesses including gastroenteritis, dysentery and hepatitis.

The council also blamed outdated water quality standards and called for more rigorous monitoring of beaches.

Last year there were 22,571 beach closings and advisory days, the group said, citing data from the Environmental Protection Agency. The number was second only to 2006, when there were 25,643 such days.

From 2006 to 2007, the number of beach closings and advisory days due to sewage spills and overflows more than tripled to 4,097, the council said.

The largest known pollution source continues to be stormwater contamination, which caused more than 10,000 closing and advisory days in 2007, the council said. Stormwater dumps street pollution onto beaches and coastal waters without treatment whenever it rains.

Unknown sources of pollution caused more than 8,000 closing and advisory days, the NRDC said.

“Some families can’t enjoy their local beaches because they are polluted and kids are getting sick — largely because of human and animal waste in the water,” Nancy Stoner, director of the council's clean water project, said in a statement released with the report.

"Nationally, 7 percent of beachwater samples violated health standards, showing no improvement from 2006," the NRDC said. "In the Great Lakes, 15 percent of beachwater samples violated those standards — the highest level of contamination of any coastal region in the continental U.S."

Some closing and advisory day findings by region:

Gulf Coast: The region had the biggest increase in closing and advisory days at 38 percent, partly because beaches in Louisiana and Mississippi were reopened and monitored for the first full beach season there since hurricanes Katrina and Rita struck in 2005.

New York/New Jersey coast: Beaches here had the second-highest increase at 33 percent.

Great Lakes: Closing and advisory days were up 1 percent.

Hawaii: The state had the biggest drop in closing and advisory days at 36 percent due to abnormally high rainfall year in 2006.

Closing and advisory days were down 4 percent in the rest of the country between 2006 and 2007.

NRDC cites factors

The Natural Resources Defense Council said pollution factors include inadequate sewage and storm water systems as well as coastal development that removes natural buffers like wetlands, dunes and beach grass that help filter out pollution.

The conservation council said that national "beach water quality standards are more than 20 years old and rely on outdated science and monitoring methods that leave beachgoers vulnerable to a range of waterborne illnesses including gastroenteritis, dysentery, hepatitis, respiratory ailments and other serious health problems. For senior citizens, small children, and people with weak immune systems, the results can be fatal."

The council did not provide numbers on illnesses last year. But it cited a federal health study that tracked 62 waterborne disease outbreaks in 2003 and 2004 and said 2,698 people became ill during that time, resulting in 58 hospitalizations and one death.

"What this report means for families heading to the beach is they need to be careful and do a little homework," said Stoner. "Call your local public health authority and ask them if the beachwater is safe for swimming. If there is any doubt, or if the water smells bad or looks dirty, stay out of it."

The NRDC said beach protection bills pending in Congress would provide money for beachwater sampling and require use of faster testing methods.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25908126/wid=18298287

Edited by peejay

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Filed: Other Country: United Kingdom
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One of my friends back home told me a horrible story from his childhood - where he and his mum and brother went to the beach during a school summer holiday. Got in the water and swam around for a bit - then had a ####### float past his nose.

Needless to say they were all very ill.

It's not just sewage either that's the problem - you can also find trace elements of heavy metals from industry. Nothing like going to the beach and seeing foam in the sand that won't go away...

 

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