A new report from a national environmental policy group has determined that some of the dirtiest beaches on the east coast of the United States are located in … you guessed it, South Carolina.
The report from Environment America – entitled “Safe for Swimming?” – compiled “bacteria sampling data from beaches in 29 coastal and Great Lakes states.”
The report found that 2,620 beach sites – more than half of all sites tested – were “potentially unsafe for swimming on at least one day in 2018.” Meanwhile, 605 beach sites were potentially unsafe at least 25 percent of the days that sampling took place.
In South Carolina, of the 122 beach sites sampled a total of 55 were determined to be “potentially unsafe for swimming” on at least one day last year. That is better than the national average, but the concentration of dirty beaches along the Grand Strand is cause for concern.
Withers Swash, located along South Ocean Boulevard (corresponding with Fifth Avenue South) featured potentially unsafe swimming conditions on 32 out of 70 sampling days – making it the dirtiest beach in the state, according to this study. At 24th Avenue North, potentially unsafe swimming conditions prevailed on 30 out of 70 sampling days – while at White Point Swash (68th Avenue North) and Cane Patch Swash (located just south of North Myrtle Beach, S.C.) unsafe conditions prevailed on 26 out of 70 sampling days.
Those four beaches are located in the heart of the so-called “Redneck Riviera,” the epicenter of the Palmetto State’s coastal tourism economy.
(Click to view)
(Via: Provided)
“Potentially unsafe” refers to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)’s highest threshold for water quality, i.e. the level at which the agency estimates 32 out of 1,000 swimmers “will get sick from swimming in these waters.”
As regular readers of this news outlet are aware, the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC) frequently issues “no swim advisories” for beaches where excessive bacteria is detected.
According to the agency, such an advisory was issued just last week for 11th Avenue North in Surfside Beach, S.C.
These releases do not always include the specific level of contamination, however. Also, critics allege that local leaders and state officials are withholding complete water quality testing results so as not to “scare off” would-be tourists.
Horry County is clearly ground zero for dirty ocean water in the Palmetto State, according to the latest report. On average, its beaches were listed as “potentially unsafe” on 20 percent of sampling days – ten times the percentage of Beaufort and Georgetown counties.
Our view? The “Dirty Myrtle” desperately needs to be cleaned up … in fact, if local officials had spent tax money retrofitting their antiquated water and sewer infrastructure (instead of blowing it on questionable road projects, crony capitalist misadventures and wasteful tourism marketing promotions), it might not be in its current mess.
-FITSNews
WANNA SOUND OFF?
Got something you’d like to say in response to one of our stories? Please feel free to submit your own letter to the editor (or guest column) via-email HERE. Got a tip for us? CLICK HERE. Got a technical question or a glitch to report? CLICK HERE. Want to support what we’re doing? SUBSCRIBE HERE.
(VIA: GETTY IMAGES)