www.theguardian.com
Open in
urlscan Pro
2a04:4e42::367
Public Scan
URL:
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/feb/15/us-mexico-california-tijuana-river-illness-public-health
Submission: On February 22 via manual from US — Scanned from US
Submission: On February 22 via manual from US — Scanned from US
Form analysis
2 forms found in the DOMhttps://www.google.co.uk/search
<form action="https://www.google.co.uk/search" class="dcr-g8v7m4"><label for="src-component-29131" class="dcr-0">
<div class="dcr-16c0nhc">Search input </div>
</label><input type="text" id="src-component-29131" aria-required="true" aria-invalid="false" aria-describedby="" required="" name="q" placeholder="Search" data-link-name="nav2 : search" tabindex="-1" class="selectableMenuItem dcr-11ywa62"><label
class="dcr-0">
<div class="dcr-16c0nhc">google-search </div>
<div class="dcr-190ztmi"><svg width="30" viewBox="-3 -3 30 30" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" aria-hidden="true">
<path fill-rule="evenodd" clip-rule="evenodd"
d="M9.273 2c4.023 0 7.25 3.295 7.25 7.273a7.226 7.226 0 0 1-7.25 7.25C5.25 16.523 2 13.296 2 9.273 2 5.295 5.25 2 9.273 2Zm0 1.84A5.403 5.403 0 0 0 3.84 9.274c0 3 2.409 5.454 5.432 5.454 3 0 5.454-2.454 5.454-5.454 0-3.023-2.454-5.432-5.454-5.432Zm7.295 10.887L22 20.16 20.16 22l-5.433-5.432v-.932l.91-.909h.931Z">
</path>
</svg><span class="dcr-1p0hins">Search</span></div>
</label><button type="submit" aria-live="polite" aria-label="Search with Google" data-link-name="nav2 : search : submit" tabindex="-1" class="dcr-v4dfgf">
<div class="src-button-space"></div><svg width="30" viewBox="-3 -3 30 30" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" aria-hidden="true">
<path fill-rule="evenodd" clip-rule="evenodd" d="M1 12.956h18.274l-7.167 8.575.932.932L23 12.478v-.956l-9.96-9.985-.932.932 7.166 8.575H1v1.912Z"></path>
</svg>
</button><input type="hidden" name="as_sitesearch" value="www.theguardian.com"></form>
<form id="secure-signup-green-light" class="dcr-kfi215"><label for="src-component-29132" class="dcr-0">
<div class="dcr-xdk2ql">Enter your email address </div>
</label><input type="email" id="src-component-29132" aria-required="true" aria-invalid="false" aria-describedby="" required="" name="email" class="dcr-yhicyg"><button type="submit" aria-live="polite" class="dcr-nva4vg">Sign up</button></form>
Text Content
Skip to main contentSkip to navigation Close dialogue1/2Next imagePrevious imageToggle caption Skip to navigation Print subscriptions Sign in Search jobs Search US edition * US edition * UK edition * Australia edition * International edition * Europe edition The Guardian - Back to homeThe Guardian SUPPORT THE GUARDIAN Fund independent journalism with $5 per month Support us Support us * News * Opinion * Sport * Culture * Lifestyle ShowMoreShow More * News * View all News * US news * US elections 2024 * World news * Environment * Ukraine * Soccer * Business * Tech * Science * Newsletters * Wellness * Opinion * View all Opinion * The Guardian view * Columnists * Letters * Opinion videos * Cartoons * Sport * View all Sport * Soccer * NFL * Tennis * MLB * MLS * NBA * NHL * F1 * Golf * Culture * View all Culture * Film * Books * Music * Art & design * TV & radio * Stage * Classical * Games * Lifestyle * View all Lifestyle * Wellness * Fashion * Food * Recipes * Love & sex * Home & garden * Health & fitness * Family * Travel * Money * Search input google-search Search * Support us * Print subscriptions US edition * UK edition * Australia edition * International edition * Europe edition * * Search jobs * Digital Archive * Guardian Puzzles app * Guardian Licensing * About Us * The Guardian app * Video * Podcasts * Pictures * Inside the Guardian * Guardian Weekly * Crosswords * Wordiply * Corrections * Facebook * Twitter * * Search jobs * Digital Archive * Guardian Puzzles app * Guardian Licensing * About Us * Environment * Climate crisis * Wildlife * Energy * Pollution * Green light The Tijuana River in Tijuana, Mexico, on 20 August 2023. Photograph: Cesar Rodriguez/Bloomberg via Getty Images View image in fullscreen The Tijuana River in Tijuana, Mexico, on 20 August 2023. Photograph: Cesar Rodriguez/Bloomberg via Getty Images Pollution HEAVY METALS AND E COLI: RAW SEWAGE AT US-MEXICO BORDER A ‘PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS’ The Tijuana River flows through Mexico and empties off California, carrying pathogens and chemicals and threatening public health Maanvi Singh @maanvissingh Thu 15 Feb 2024 14.17 ESTLast modified on Thu 15 Feb 2024 17.49 EST Copy link Raw sewage and runoff in the Tijuana River is exposing communities at the US-Mexico border to an unusual and noxious brew of pathogens and toxic chemicals, according to a report released this week. Billions of gallons of sewage flow through the river, which winds north from Mexico through California and empties into the Pacific Ocean, containing a mix of carcinogenic chemicals including arsenic, as well as viruses, bacteria and parasites, according to public health researchers at San Diego State University, who published the report. ‘You can taste it’: El Paso residents fear air pollution will worsen after border crossing upgrade Read more The researchers have called the situation “a pressing public health crisis”. Wastewater flowing into the ocean has resulted in more than 700 consecutive days of beach closures in San Diego county, but the contamination isn’t limited to the water. Pollutants and pathogens contained in sewage have also been detected in the local air and soil – exposing even those who live miles away from the water. Communities on both sides of the border have been raising the alarm about this contamination for decades, complaining of the near-constant stench in the air, and pushing for better wastewater infrastructure. Unprecedented storms in recent years, exacerbated by the climate crisis, have put even more pressure on faltering sewage systems – and increased public health risks. “This is not a trickle of contamination,” said Paula Stigler Granados, associate professor in San Diego State University’s School of Public Health and the paper’s lead author. “This is a large amount of contamination over a long period of time.” For locals in Imperial Beach, a town just north of the Mexican border, the report validates years of frustration and fear about the spiralling sewage crisis. “Imperial Beach is unfortunately the poster child of what an environmental injustice looks like,” said the city’s mayor, Paloma Aguirre. View image in fullscreen Imperial Beach, California, has been on the forefront of the sewage contamination issues. Photograph: Eduardo Contreras/AP A surfer and longtime coastal conservation advocate, Aguirre spent nearly two decades advocating for solutions to the contamination at Imperial Beach before she was elected mayor in 2022. The situation had been complicated, she said, by the fact that the issue straddles the national border, requiring the US and Mexican governments to work together. In January, Mexico broke ground on a new wastewater treatment plant to replace an outdated facility in Punta Bandera, six miles south of the border. Meanwhile, the US government in 2020 approved a $300m fund to expand a wastewater treatment plant in San Ysidro, just north of the border. But a government memo obtained by the San Diego Union Tribune last year revealed the facility had been in such disrepair that half the funds would be needed just to maintain the existing infrastructure. Aguirre and other local officials and advocates have since been pushing for an additional $310m in federal funds to improve wastewater treatment capacity, which Joe Biden included in an October emergency supplemental funding request that has yet to be approved by Congress. California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, and Congressman Scott Peters, whose district borders Imperial Beach, have also urged urgent action. skip past newsletter promotion Sign up to Down to Earth Free weekly newsletter The planet's most important stories. Get all the week's environment news - the good, the bad and the essential Enter your email address Sign up Privacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. after newsletter promotion “In the history of this issue, we have never had as much attention on it as we have had these past 12 months,” said Aguirre. “Is it enough? No.” This week’s report was commissioned in part to help bolster officials’ requests for more resources. To create it, Granados and her colleagues reviewed more than 60 studies and reports to present an overview of the public health and environmental risks of urban runoff and sewage in the region, at the request of Peters and the Conrad Prebys Foundation, a local charitable organisation. The report highlights a range of risks, including the spread of antibiotic resistant strains of E coli and legionella. The overflows may also carry illnesses that have nearly been eradicated in the US, such as tuberculosis, the report found. Mixed into the sewage are also toxic chemicals, including banned pesticides such as DDT and heavy metals, probably from urban runoff of industrial waste that gets incorporated into the river’s flow, researchers said. These contaminants can also become airborne, as droplets flung by crashing waves, spreading pathogens and chemicals across vast swaths of the region. The sewage also poses a grave risk to local ecosystems. The researchers point to a recent case in which bottlenose dolphins stranded in San Diego were found to have died from sepsis caused by a bacteria that is commonly transmitted through exposure to faeces or urine. There is still much that researchers don’t know about the crisis, including the extent to which long-term exposure to the various contaminants, bacteria and other pathogens are affecting people’s health. But the researchers said that urgent investments in infrastructure and public health resources are needed. “Everybody who lives here has been affected by it one way or another,” said Aguirre, who has herself been to urgent care a few times after contracting illnesses, including viral pharyngitis, after spending time near the water. “This has become a normal thing in our lives. But it should never be normal to anybody.” Explore more on these topics * Pollution * Infectious diseases * US-Mexico border * San Diego * California * Mexico * Americas * news Email link Reuse this content MOST VIEWED * THE MOTHERS FIGHTING A SCANDAL BIGGER THAN THALIDOMIDE: ‘WE WERE TOLD THE MEDICATION WAS SAFE’ * LARGE-SCALE CELLULAR PHONE OUTAGE HITS USERS ACROSS THE US * STOP PUTTING YOUR WET IPHONE IN RICE, SAYS APPLE. HERE’S WHAT TO DO INSTEAD * ‘I HOPE HE GOT THE EXTENDED WARRANTY’: US JOKES ABOUT RUSSIAN CAR PUTIN GAVE TO KIM JONG-UN * ‘SOMETHING LURKING BEHIND THE CURTAIN’: THE DARK, VIOLENT DOWNFALL OF DRUMMER JIM GORDON MOST VIEWED MOST VIEWED * Environment * Climate crisis * Wildlife * Energy * Pollution * Green light * News * Opinion * Sport * Culture * Lifestyle Original reporting and incisive analysis, direct from the Guardian every morning Sign up for our email * About us * Help * Complaints & corrections * SecureDrop * Work for us * * Privacy policy * Cookie policy * Terms & conditions * Contact us * All topics * All writers * Digital newspaper archive * Facebook * YouTube * Instagram * LinkedIn * Twitter * Newsletters * Advertise with us * Guardian Labs * Search jobs Back to top © 2024 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. (dcr)