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A massive sewage spill has led to the temporary closure of all swimming areas at beaches in the Southern California city of Long Beach. CNN values your feedback 1.
Beaches in Long Beach are temporarily closed after a sewage spill over the weekend tainted the waters. A power outage Saturday caused a pump station to fail, spilling approximately 50,000 gallons ...
The beaches were closed out of an “abundance of caution” after the spill discharged 30,000 to 40,000 galloons of sewage into the river Tuesday, Long Beach officials said in a news release.
Long Beach temporarily closed its ocean swimming areas west of the Belmont Pier on Wednesday, March 15, because of an approximately 18,000-gallon sewage spill in Paramount.
After a roughly two-week closure prompted by an 8 million-gallon sewage spill, the waters of Long Beach coastal beaches and bays reopened to the public on Friday, Feb. 16.. Inner Cabrillo Beach in ...
Swimming areas at beaches west of Belmont Pier in Long Beach remained closed on Wednesday, Feb. 2, and may not reopen until Friday at the earliest, health officials said. Long Beach’s Health and ...
The spill occurred in Rowland Heights after a grease accumulation led to the overflow of a main sewer line, causing a spill of 10,500 gallons of sewage, according to Long Beach officials.
Coastal swimming areas in Long Beach remained closed Friday due to a sewage spill. The spill occurred in Rowland Heights ...
Long Beach officials said an additional spill in Commerce also occurred Monday, involving another 40,000 gallons of sewage that flowed into the Los Angeles River and ultimately the ocean.