Timesofsandiego

Local Members of Congress Say ‘Real-Time Data’ Needed in Fight Against Border Pollution

B.Martinez37 min ago

San Diego's Congressional delegation on Friday called on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to support a local agency in its task of monitoring air quality near the border.

Reps. Juan Vargas, Scott Peters and Sara Jacobs, all D-San Diego, and Mike Levin, a Democrat whose district straddles North County and parts of Orange County, urged the EPA to offer assistance to the San Diego County Air Pollution Control District 's efforts in the Tijuana River Valley.

"In the past year, researchers discovered that toxins and bacteria from the Tijuana River can be aerosolized and become airborne – unveiling an apparent threat not only to our water ecosystems, but the air in our communities," they wrote in a letter to the EPA. "A recent heat wave in the region intensified the odors, and led constituents to report that the fumes have caused them to wake up in the middle of the night.

"The [Air Pollution Control District] needs additional resources to ensure that they can properly measure and respond to the reported increase of noxious fumes," the letter continued. "That is why we are requesting that the EPA deploy whatever available federal resources to assist the San Diego County APCD with establishing a network of reference-grade monitoring equipment that can provide precise and real-time data."

In early September, high levels of noxious gases such as hydrogen sulfide and hydrogen cyanide were measured by scientific teams in the river valley and noticed by residents due to the rotten egg smell that carried miles from the border.

Ultimately, crews from San Diego County determined there was no immediate health risk, but many residents believed the crisis had reached a turning point.

The local Congressional delegation has secured $400 million in federal funding to improve and expand the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant.

Pleas to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control from the lawmakers and county officials succeeded in drawing in the CDC to begin a health assessment to determine the impact of the sewage crisis. The CDC team arrived this week.

The county and CDC are working together on a Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response. A total of 210 households were selected from a larger 30-block section of homes near the border to participate in the survey .

Teams will arrive in small groups and carry identification to assure residents of their official government role. They will be wearing reflective vests, and are bilingual in English and Spanish. Interviews will be anonymous and take around 15 minutes.

Visits will run between 2-7 p.m. on Friday and 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Saturday.

"It is important to hear directly from people who live near the Tijuana River Valley," said Dr. Ankita Kadakia, the county's interim public health officer. "If you get a knock on your door in the next couple of days from a CASPER interview team, please speak with interviewers and provide your honest answers."

Responses will be used to guide decisions regarding the river valley and the people who live near it.

The San Diego City Council recently approved a resolution asking for a national emergency regarding the sewage outflow at the border. The council had approved 31 years of consecutive extensions of a local state of emergency on the situation.

The council first declared a state of emergency because of the pollution – ranging from raw sewage to industrial runoff – in 1993. Imperial Beach put out a similar declaration in 2017, followed by the county in 2023.

Since October 2018, the U.S. section of the International Boundary and Water Commission has catalogued more than 200 billion gallons of toxic waste coming into the country through the Tijuana River Valley.

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