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Independent Study Finds Leaking Wastewater Infrastructure Largest Source of Human Fecal Pollution in the San Diego River

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Sanitary Sewer Overflows Far Outweigh Unhoused Encampments’ Contribution

San Diego’s degraded wastewater infrastructure is the main culprit when it comes to chronic contamination of the San Diego River.”
— Phillip Musegaas, Executive Director of San Diego Coastkeeper
SAN DIEGO, CA, UNITED STATES, November 13, 2024 /EINPresswire.com/ -- A five-year study conducted by the Southern California Coastal Water

Research Project (“SCCWRP”) to assess sources and volumes of human fecal bacteria in the San
Diego River reveals a disturbing reality – spills, leaks, and subterranean seepage from public sanitary sewer
systems are, by far, the largest contributors to human fecal contamination throughout the entire
urbanized portion of the San Diego River watershed. Sewage spills, known as sanitary sewer
overflows (SSOs), and exfiltration, the leakage of wastewater out of a sanitary sewer system
through cracks, gaps, defective joints or otherwise, account for well over 90% of the total human
fecal contamination loading. The third largest contributor is leaks and spills from septic
systems, referred to in the report as onsite wastewater treatment systems (OWTS).

Overflows from private sewer systems and exfiltration from private laterals (the connections
between private homes and other properties and the public sewer main), contribute only a small
fraction of human fecal contamination. The study also determined that people experiencing
homelessness contribute the smallest relative quantities, less than 0.25%, of human fecal
bacteria in the San Diego River. This determination hopefully puts to rest long-standing
assertions by local municipalities and water agencies that unhoused encampments in the San
Diego River watershed are a potentially significant source of bacterial pollution in the river.

The SCCWRP study (“Summary of Technical Research: Quantifying Sources of Human Fecal
Pollution in the Lower San Diego River Watershed”) was required by the San Diego Regional
Water Quality Control Board’s (Regional Water Board) 2019 Investigative Order (IO), which
instructed all wastewater and stormwater agencies in the San Diego River watershed to assess
the relative contributions of various sources to bacterial pollution of the river. Water quality
monitoring and reporting by these agencies has shown chronically high levels of bacteria during
wet weather, often exceeding state water quality standards designed to protect public health.
San Diego Coastkeeper has participated as a member of the study’s Steering Committee with
SCCWRP since its inception. The results of the study will be presented to the Regional Water
Board on Wednesday, November 13, 2024, at its regular meeting.

“This comprehensive study confirms that San Diego’s degraded wastewater infrastructure is the
main culprit when it comes to chronic contamination of the San Diego River, highlighting the
urgent need for better maintenance and increased investment in this critically important but
often unseen urban system,” said Phillip Musegaas, Executive Director of San Diego
Coastkeeper. “The public expects, and the law requires, that our shared rivers, lakes and coastal
marine waters are clean and safe for swimming, fishing and other public uses – not relied on as
overflow channels for untreated human wastewater and stormwater.”

Background
Municipalities, stormwater departments, researchers, and enforcement agencies have long been
aware that human fecal matter is omnipresent in rivers, streams, lakes, and ocean during rain
events across Southern California. This is why San Diego County officials issue a blanket
advisory not to swim or surf at any beach for at least 72 hours after every rain event.

The San Diego River is one of the waterbodies consistently showing high levels of fecal
indicator bacteria particularly during wet weather. . For decades, municipal agencies blamed
coyotes, birds, other wildlife and people experiencing homelessness as potential sources.
However, a preliminary study from 2016-2017 measuring specific markers revealed that every
single wet weather sample collected at thirteen different stations along the San Diego River
tested positive for human fecal matter. Subsequent studies and sampling have confirmed that
when it rains, human sewage is in fact found in waterbodies through the region.

Looking at the sheer magnitude of the different potential pollution inputs, the findings of the
study should be unsurprising. The estimated population of the studied area is about 506,000.
There are an estimated 1,079 miles of public sanitary sewers, 130,453 parcels connected to
public sewer (i.e., with private lateral), 6,760 parcels with OWTS, and only about 350 people
experiencing homelessness and living along the river corridor.

The SCCWRP report also supports the finding of a 2020 SDSU study which found that “untreated
wastewater was found to be the main source of San Diego River pollution during storm events,”
as opposed to unhoused encampments.

The SCCWRP study quantified human fecal contamination levels using HF183, a genetic marker
found only in human feces. Since its first use 20 years ago, HF183 has become the tool of choice
for tracking human fecal contamination in aquatic environments worldwide. HF183 is also a
marker of “fresh” human fecal inputs because it cannot survive long outside of the human body.
Lab-based decay studies of HF183 in surface water are on the order of a few days, and roughly a
week in groundwater. This ensures that, when detected, HF183 is not from sewage discharged
weeks or months previously.

About Coastkeeper

Founded in 1995, San Diego Coastkeeper protects and restores San Diego County’s bays,
beaches, watersheds, and ocean for the people and wildlife that depend on them. Coastkeeper
balances community outreach, education, science, advocacy, and legal enforcement to promote
clean water stewardship and a healthy coastal ecosystem. For more information, visit
sdcoastkeeper.org.

Spencer HIggs
San Diego Coastkeeper
spencer@sdcoastkeeper.org
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