The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health told beachgoers to stay out of the water at some of Southern California’s most popular beaches. The March 17 advisory flagged bacteria levels that exceed state health standards, and the timing could not be worse.
Temperatures across parts of the West are running as much as 35 degrees above average. That heat will drive crowds toward the coast just as officials warn the ocean water could make them sick.
As Fox News Digital reported, the advisory spans multiple locations across Los Angeles County. Two beaches face the broadest restrictions:
Additional warnings cover parts of Santa Monica Beach, Venice Beach, the area around the Santa Monica Pier, Topanga Canyon Beach, Surfrider Beach, Escondido State Beach, and several Malibu locations.
The advisory warns residents and visitors to avoid swimming, surfing, or playing in ocean water at affected sites. For now, it remains a warning, not a full beach closure.
The health department said recent water samples showed bacteria levels exceeding state safety thresholds. The department conducts routine testing at beaches throughout the region and issues advisories when levels climb too high.
In a statement cited by Fox News Digital, the department listed multiple possible causes:
“Elevated bacteria levels in the ocean can be caused by several factors, including stormwater runoff after rain events, sewage spills or leaks, and animal waste from birds, pets, or marine mammals. Urban runoff from rivers and creeks can also carry contaminants into coastal waters. In addition, warmer water temperatures and the decomposition of organic material can promote bacterial growth.”
That’s a long list of excuses. Taxpayers might reasonably ask which one applies here, and what the county plans to do about it.
Sewage contamination on Southern California beaches is not new. A broken sewage pipe once closed beaches around Avalon on Santa Catalina Island, with the same Los Angeles County health department warning people to stay out of the water until cleanup was complete. That incident underscored how aging infrastructure and deferred maintenance can turn a day at the beach into a public health hazard.
California collects among the highest taxes in the nation. Its residents pay steep water and sewer fees. Yet the state’s coastal communities keep dealing with contaminated water that drives families off the sand.
The department’s own warning spells out who faces the greatest danger:
“Swimming in water with bacteria can make you sick or cause skin infections. Children, the elderly, and those who have weak immune systems are at higher risk of getting sick or infected.”
Those are the people least able to protect themselves. They depend on government to maintain safe public spaces, a basic function that California’s bureaucracy struggles to deliver.
Key details remain unclear:
The public deserves straight answers, not a vague list of “several factors.”
California’s leaders love to lecture the rest of the country about environmental stewardship. They impose costly regulations on businesses and homeowners in the name of clean water. Yet when their own beaches fail basic safety tests, the response is a polite advisory and a shrug toward “stormwater runoff.”
Residents don’t need more climate pledges. They need water they can swim in.
When a state can’t keep its most iconic public spaces safe for children and families, no amount of progressive branding covers the stench.
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