12-03-2012, 07:12 AM
Front page headlines in today's (12/3/2012) Hawaii Tribune Herald:
"Kapoho Sewage Fix Rejected"
This is recommended reading for anyone who visits the Kapoho tide pools and/or Champagne Pond in Kapoho.
9 times since May 2012 the samples taken by the Department of Health from Wai Opea tidepools (aka Kapoho tide pools) have exceeded health guidelines. This is 9 times in the past 6 months. Yikes!
The article goes on to warn "anyone swimming in the area should cover up cuts or wounds and shower afterward. People with immune deficiencies should also be cautious." Yikes plenty!
Edited for my typos
Here is the link to read the entire article:
http://hawaiitribune-herald.com/sections...ected.html
Here are some parts of the article that concern me as a frequent swimmer at Champagne Pond and at Wai Opae tide pools:
"Nearly three years after Hawaii County finished a study outlining potential treatment options, many homes in Kapoho Beach Lots and Kapoho Vacationland Estates remain on cesspools despite being adjacent to the Wai Opae tide pools and Champagne Pond".....
...."Concern over pollution of the popular swimming areas goes at least back to the 1980s, when a state Department of Health study found sewage seeping from porous lava tubes. New cesspools have since been banned, and DOH tests water in the swimming areas almost on a weekly basis.
While individual samples do occasionally exceed health guidelines (there have been nine since May), high concentrations have not been frequent enough for the state to close the areas or take additional action, said Watson Okubo, DOH’s monitoring and analysis section chief.
Still, the concern is there.
“It can be a potential health issue,” Okubo said.
“Some of them are pretty close to the ocean.”
As for the county, Beck said nothing is being done to pursue treatment options"....
......"For now, Watson said anyone swimming in the area should cover up cuts or wounds and shower afterward. People with immune deficiencies should also be cautious.
“Right now our tests indicate it’s not an immediate issue,” he said. “But it should be in the back of everyone’s minds that these houses are on cesspools.”
"Kapoho Sewage Fix Rejected"
This is recommended reading for anyone who visits the Kapoho tide pools and/or Champagne Pond in Kapoho.
9 times since May 2012 the samples taken by the Department of Health from Wai Opea tidepools (aka Kapoho tide pools) have exceeded health guidelines. This is 9 times in the past 6 months. Yikes!
The article goes on to warn "anyone swimming in the area should cover up cuts or wounds and shower afterward. People with immune deficiencies should also be cautious." Yikes plenty!
Edited for my typos
Here is the link to read the entire article:
http://hawaiitribune-herald.com/sections...ected.html
Here are some parts of the article that concern me as a frequent swimmer at Champagne Pond and at Wai Opae tide pools:
"Nearly three years after Hawaii County finished a study outlining potential treatment options, many homes in Kapoho Beach Lots and Kapoho Vacationland Estates remain on cesspools despite being adjacent to the Wai Opae tide pools and Champagne Pond".....
...."Concern over pollution of the popular swimming areas goes at least back to the 1980s, when a state Department of Health study found sewage seeping from porous lava tubes. New cesspools have since been banned, and DOH tests water in the swimming areas almost on a weekly basis.
While individual samples do occasionally exceed health guidelines (there have been nine since May), high concentrations have not been frequent enough for the state to close the areas or take additional action, said Watson Okubo, DOH’s monitoring and analysis section chief.
Still, the concern is there.
“It can be a potential health issue,” Okubo said.
“Some of them are pretty close to the ocean.”
As for the county, Beck said nothing is being done to pursue treatment options"....
......"For now, Watson said anyone swimming in the area should cover up cuts or wounds and shower afterward. People with immune deficiencies should also be cautious.
“Right now our tests indicate it’s not an immediate issue,” he said. “But it should be in the back of everyone’s minds that these houses are on cesspools.”
hawaiideborah