Summer is here, which
means that our region’s water quality testing programs are in full effect.
Already we see that when
it rains, pollution pours off the land, and water quality suffers. To date,
results from water testing exceeds safe standards for swimming.
Results from water
samples taken Monday morning have been released, and 13 beaches in Ocean and Monmouth
County exceeded safe swimming standards. Due to these results the NJDEP
issued a swimming advisory for 8 beaches in
Ocean and Monmouth Counties. An additional 5 beaches exceeded
the standard, but were not issued an advisory by NJDEP. The reason for this may
be that, at this time of the year, these beaches are “technically closed” due
to no lifeguards on duty. COA has criticized this situation in the past…
The 8 beaches issued a
swimming advisory are:
Beach_Name
|
Municipality
|
County_Name
|
5th Ave Bay Front
|
Seaside Park Borough
|
Ocean
|
Hancock
|
Seaside Heights Borough
|
Ocean
|
West Beach Avon Rd
|
Pine Beach Borough
|
Ocean
|
East Beach Station Ave
|
Pine Beach Borough
|
Ocean
|
Windward Beach
|
Brick Township
|
Ocean
|
Imperial House
|
Long Branch City
|
Monmouth
|
Elberon Bch Clb
|
Long Branch City
|
Monmouth
|
25th St Bay Front
|
Barnegat Light Borough
|
Ocean
|
These beaches have been
re-sampled today, with results returning tomorrow. Depending on the results, the
advisory may be lifted, or an official beach closure may be issued.
The 5 beaches that have
exceeded safe swimming standards but not issued an advisory are:
Beach_Name
|
Municipality
|
County_Name
|
River
|
Point Pleasant Borough
|
Ocean
|
Reese Ave
|
Lavallette Borough
|
Ocean
|
Anglesea
|
Ocean Gate Borough
|
Ocean
|
Miller Beach
|
Highlands Borough
|
Monmouth
|
Wildwood
|
Ocean Gate Borough
|
Ocean
|
This has been the second
week in a row of testing returning with several exceedances of safe standards
for swimming. What this makes clear, and what COA has been stating for many
years, is that water quality in our coastal waters is heavily dependent on the
weather; when we have a rainy summer, with rain events occurring the day before
or day of water sampling, we are likely to see more exceedances than if
sampling occurred during a dry weather window. Both last week, and this week we
saw rain events on Sunday and Monday.
For many years now, COA
has been a leading voice working to make swimming in coastal waters an “any
weather” activity, and advocating for more protective structuring, methods,
funding and oversight for these beach monitoring programs. We believe that
public awareness is the first and most important step both in ensuring safe
swimming conditions for millions of beach goers each summer, and for getting at
the underlying reasons for these exceedances. To learn more, and to stay up to
date on weekly beach sampling results, visit our website and social media, and
be sure to check NJBeaches.org or our social media before any beach day.
A Short Intro to Water
Quality Testing in New Jersey
In New Jersey, water
quality sampling occurs at bathing beaches (lifeguarded beaches) every
Monday morning (unless there is a holiday that closes State offices).
The results take 24 hours to get back from the lab, and are released and posted
to the NJDEP website NJbeaches.org around noon the day after the
sample was taken (normally Tuesday). If a result comes back that exceeds
the standard for safe swimming, a “swimming advisory” is issued. This
exceedance also requires authorities to conduct additional sampling on a daily
basis until water quality results meet the standard.
To make this clear, we
can look at the way this program has unfolded this week: Samples were taken at
bathing beaches from Highlands to Cape May on Monday Morning, the results came
back Tuesday and were posted to the website and made public around noon, some
of these beaches exceeded the safe swimming standard, these beaches were issued
a swimming advisory, and resampling began on Tuesday. Resampling will continue
until results come back below the standard. Remember, it takes 24 hours to get
results back; this is a blind spot in the monitoring program.
If two consecutive
samples collected at a bathing beach exceed the standard, the beach is
officially closed until subsequent sampling indicates that bacteria levels are
again at a safe number.
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