Kids & Family

Coronado's Water Quality at the Top Among County Beaches

The community, along with several other area beaches, receive top marks in an environmental group's annual survey.

Water quality at San Diego County beaches continues to improve, with one beach in Oceanside rated as one of the highest in the state, according to a report released Thursday by the environmental group Heal the Bay.

For the second year in a row, no area beaches were on the list of “Beach Bummers,” the 10 with the most polluted water, in the group's 22nd annual Beach Report Card.   

Coronado, along with several other county beaches, received “A+” grades for water quality. Other area beaches that received the highest mark include Ocean Beach, parts of La Jolla, Cardiff, Encinitas, Carlsbad and Oceanside.

Find out what's happening in Coronadowith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Imperial Beach lagged, however, because of its proximity to the border, where pollutants flow after storms. In wet season the beaches received “F's.”

For full report and San Diego County beach grades, see media box.

Find out what's happening in Coronadowith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Heal the Bay's report card assigns A-to-F letter grades to more than 650 beaches up and down the coast, based on water pollution levels during the dry- weather period from April to October 2011. More than 300 areas of shoreline are tested year-round.

The report said 93 percent of the water quality monitoring stations in San Diego County received an A during dry weather in both summer and winter. During wet weather, 77 percent of the locations tested earned A or B grades, compared with a five-year average of 68 percent.

Statewide, 64 percent of the beaches were given As or Bs for water quality when it was rainy.

The lowest-rated beaches in the county were:

  • The San Luis Rey River outlet in Oceanside, which got a D for winter dry weather water quality and an F for wet weather.
  • The foot of Avenida de la Playa in La Jolla, a D for wet weather quality.
  • the mouth of the Tijuana River, a C in dry weather and an F when raining.    
  • All beaches from Imperial Beach south received F grades during wet conditions because of Tijuana River runoff.   

The rest of the beaches in San Diego County received mostly A-pluses and As.   

Despite improvements, Los Angeles County has the highest number of beaches with poor water quality of any county in the state, according to the report.

Eleven beaches in Los Angeles County received F grades, up from nine last year.

–City News Service


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