Tijuana River Valley

How is Cross-Border Water Contamination Impacting San Diego County Long Term?

The damaged pipeline is sending millions of gallons of raw sewage per day into the South Bay

NBC Universal, Inc.

NBC 7’s Kelvin Henry spoke to a professor who explains how sewage leaks contaminating water in southern San Diego County can impact the region in the long term.

Raw sewage is flowing into the Tijuana River Valley.

A private developer inadvertently damaged a 60-inch pipe on Feb. 10 which led to the spillage, according to the International Boundary and Water Commission.

Most of the sewage is spilling into Smuggler's Gulch and Goat Canyon.

Imperial Beach mayor says they still need help from federal government to fix the problems, reports NBC 7's Joe Little.

“In the wastewater sewage you have bacteria, it’s basically waste from residential units and industrial units. So, it could be heavy metals, it could be pollutants, bacteria and everything that is most impactful to our environment,” said San Diego State University Professor Hassan Davani, Ph.D.

According to the IBWC, field crews are working 18-hour days to stop the flow of sewage.

The most recent incident isn’t the first-time sewage has spilled across the border.

The flooding has cut off access to one woman's therapy horses and another farmer's crops, NBC 7's Omari Fleming reports.

“This is a very historic issue going back mid-century in the previous century. There are records that this happened and show a lack of infrastructure to treat these volumes of wastewater,” Davani said.

Experts urge a long-term solution that prevents sewage from spilling because of the lasting impact.

“If this problem persists five, 10 or 20 years from now, we are basically talking about part of our community impacted harshly because of all of the pollution, all of the bacteria and all those issues with the raw sewage,” Davani Ph.D. said.

The IBWC expects to stop the transboundary flow of sewage due to the damaged pipeline by Feb. 22.

Exit mobile version