Community Corner
See How Orange County Ranked On Annual Beach Report Card
A wide swath of California's beaches received high marks for water quality from Heal the Bay. See how Orange County beaches fared.
ORANGE COUNTY, CA — Beaches around the state had excellent water quality last summer, according to an environmental group's annual honor roll of coastline quality grades.
Orange County had the most beaches on Heal the Bay’s Annual Beach Report Card & River Report Card, with 19 locations making the honor roll.
Dana Point and Doheny State Beach had multiple locations that received high marks. Treasure Island Beach made the honor roll for the third straight year and Crystal Cove made the list for a second consecutive appearance.
Find out what's happening in Orange Countyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
A total of 51 beaches around the state landed on Heal the Bay's honor roll, indicating top-rate water quality grades recorded year-round. Orange County led the way with 19 beaches making the cut, up from 10 last year. Los Angeles County had six beaches on the list, down from seven last year.
On the report’s “beach bummers” list were the ten poorest grades that are given during the summer months. In the Golden State, Marlin Park in San Mateo County; Santa Monica Pier in Los Angeles County; Marina del Rey in Los Angeles County; Moonstone County Park in Humboldt County and Mother’s Beach in Los Angeles County all garnered poor marks.
Find out what's happening in Orange Countyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Polluted ocean water can pose major health risks to swimmers and surfers, according to Heal the Bay. Those who enter waters that received a C grade or lower in the report are at risk of illnesses including stomach flu, ear infections, upper respiratory infections and rashes.
Some 94 percent of California beaches tested for water quality received A or B grades during the summer of 2021, which the environmental group called roughly on par with the five-year average, according to Heal the Bay. But only 66% of California beaches had good or excellent grades during wet weather, which is slightly above the annual average, but "still very concerning," according to Heal the Bay.
"It is wonderful news that most beaches in California have good water quality for swimming," Tracy Quinn, president/CEO of Heal the Bay said in a statement.
"But there are areas with poor water quality that need improvement and infrastructure upgrades. We can't forget that our marine ecosystems are still threatened by the climate crisis and other pollution sources, and we need solutions to address these pressing issues as well. We expect people to increasingly seek out ocean shorelines and freshwater swimming holes to cool off as temperatures rise, so safe, clean and healthy water is needed now more than ever."
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