Council seeks views on water quality and beach standards
The Christchurch City Council is launching a citywide campaign in mid-January seeking residents’ views on water quality
and beach standards near the Ocean Outfall.
Council senior projects coordinator, City Water and Waste, John Moore, says recent concerns expressed about Christchurch
beaches was the sort of feedback Council hoped to capture after people read the necessary background information.
This information, launched on www.ccc.govt.nz/HaveYourSay/OceanOutfall/ today, is part of a campaign aimed to educate
the wider Christchurch population about the Ocean Outfall in order to get feedback on their preferred option for Outfall
construction. An information booklet on the new Water Quality and Beach Standards is available for downloading from the
website. It explains the Ocean Outfall and how water quality and beach standards are assessed as very good, good, fair,
poor or very poor. Hard copies of the same booklet, with submission forms attached, are available from Council Service
Centres and libraries after 19 January, 2004.
Mr Moore says that while some beaches have signs on them notifying of possible health risks for swimmers, the water
quality on Christchurch beaches has not actually changed. What has changed is the way these beaches are graded
nationally for recreational contact with water, he says.
These new standards, developed jointly by the ministries of Environment and Health use some testing for indicator bugs
as before, but also take account of other factors in the environment likely to produce contamination, such as bird-life
or stormwater run-off going into nearby rivers and streams.
For this reason, Christchurch beaches are unlikely to be graded as very good until suitable ways of reducing
contamination from these sources are found
The Council is confident, however, that Sumner and Scarborough beaches will be re-graded “good” once the upgrade of the
Christchurch Wastewater Treatment Plant oxidation ponds, is completed later this year, Mr Moore says.