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Three Palos Verdes Peninsula Beaches Top List of Clean Beaches
Heal the Bay released its Beach Report Card and these three beaches were on its Honor Roll for receiving an A+ three years in a roll.

RANCHO PALOS VERDES, CA - Three beaches in the Palos Verdes peninsula made the "Honor Roll" list for ocean water quality, according to a report released Thursday.
According to the 26th annual Beach Report Card prepared by environmental group Heal the Bay, 92 percent of Los Angeles County's 88 beaches scored A or B grades in terms of pollutants during the summer months of April to October of last year. The results were roughly on par with the previous year's results, but a 6 percent boost over the county's average for the past five years.
The report noted that five beaches -- three in Rancho Palos Verdes -- in Los Angeles County were listed on the group's Honor Roll, recognizing beaches that received A+ grades during the three time periods included in the report:
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- Long Point at Rancho Palos Verdes;
- Abalone Cove Shoreline Park in Rancho Palos Verdes; and
- Portuguese Bend Cove, also at Rancho Palos Verdes.
- El Matador State Beach at Encinal Canyon;
- Escondido State Beach east of Escondido Creek;
Orange County had 12 beaches on the Honor Roll, including three in Dana Point and two in San Clemente.
Statewide, 95 percent of the 456 beaches monitored earned A or B grades during the summer months.
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Southern California beaches are continuing to improve, thanks in part to a lack of rain runoff attributable to the continuing drought, however, Los Angeles and Orange counties are still home to four of the 10 most-polluted beaches in the state.
Los Angeles County was home to three spots that landed on the group's annual "Beach Bummers" list of the state's most polluted beaches -- Santa Monica Pier, ranking fifth on the list; Mother's Beach in Marina del Rey, ranking sixth; and Redondo Municipal Pier, ranking seventh. Los Angeles County had the most beaches on the list.
Orange County had one beach on the most-polluted list -- Monarch Beach in the Dana Point area.
"A day at the beach shouldn't make anyone sick," said Leslie Griffin, chief water quality scientist for Heal the Bay. "The reassuring news is that if you swim at an open-ocean beach in the summer away from storm drains, creek mouths and piers you stand very little risk of getting ill."
According to Heal the Bay, swimming at a polluted beach can increase the risk of illness such as stomach flu, ear infections, upper respiratory infections and rashes.
--City News Service contributed to this report, photo via Wiki Commons
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