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Rains flood San Diego shorelines with Tijuana sewage, closing beaches to Coronado

There’s no easy fix for wintertime pollution flooding over the border from Mexico, with river diversion system routinely overwhelmed by rains

The Tijuana River runs through the city of Tijuana heading towards San Diego coast on June 30th, 2020 in Tijuana. The state is investigating as many as 400 companies for water theft and illegal dumping of sewage. Coca-Cola, Samsung, Hyundai and Home Depot are among a growing list of international and American companies the state of Baja California is investigating for alleged water theft and the illegal discharge of water sewage into the city's crumbling drainage systems.
The San Diego Union Tribune
The Tijuana River runs through the city of Tijuana heading towards San Diego coast on June 30th, 2020 in Tijuana. The state is investigating as many as 400 companies for water theft and illegal dumping of sewage. Coca-Cola, Samsung, Hyundai and Home Depot are among a growing list of international and American companies the state of Baja California is investigating for alleged water theft and the illegal discharge of water sewage into the city’s crumbling drainage systems.
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Shorelines from Imperial Beach to Coronado were again shuttered this past week as a result of sewage spilling over the border from Tijuana.

Recent storms flushed urban pollution into the ocean, triggering swimming advisories across San Diego County. But the South Bay region was particularly hard hit as more than 2.8 billion gallons of sewage- and chemical-tainted runoff poured through the Tijuana River and its canyon tributaries, according to federal officials.

Pumps operated by Mexico that suck water out of the river’s main concrete channel were turned off as rains overwhelmed the system’s capacity and debris clogged the intake. It’s not clear when they’ll be back online.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has plans to build a more reliable diversion system north of the border but has yet to secure the funding. The agency currently has $300 million largely slated for an expansion of the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant which services Tijuana.

The agency has cautioned that no amount of spending will completely stop the flood of urban runoff triggered by heavy rains. In fact, these flows, as polluted as they are, help maintain the estuary in Imperial Beach. The wetlands would degrade over time without the infusion of freshwater.

Still, EPA has a roughly $630 million blueprint aimed at reducing cross-border flows by roughly 70 percent. That could significantly curb beach closure days, especially in the summer when sewage pollution floats up the coast from a dilapidated treatment facility about 6 miles south of the border.

Reports of Tijuana sewage leaking over the border into the San Diego region stretch back at least to the 1930s. While significant improvements were made in the 1990s, the city’s plumbing still isn’t keeping pace with population growth.

Real-time conditions are posted at sdbeachinfo.com.

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