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Crown Beach Reopens | December 8, 2009

By mnolan
Created 12/30/2009 - 4:31pm

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Shelly Lewis

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Crown Beach Reopens | December 8, 2009
California Department of Fish and Game News Release

December 8, 2009

Contact: 
Carol Singleton, Department of Fish and Game, 916-539-6124
Sam Delson, Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, 916-764-0955

Final Fishing Closure Lifts for Crown Memorial State Beach

State officials have lifted the mussel and shellfish harvesting closure for Crown Memorial State Beach.

The Department of Fish and Game (DFG), in consultation with the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA), lifted the last closure after testing found no ongoing significant risk of adverse health effects from the Dubai Star oil spill on San Francisco Bay. The closure was first imposed on Oct. 30, along with several others for the Alameda County shoreline, following the spill. No closures remain in place.

OEHHA advises the public to continue to avoid harvesting and consuming mussels from the shoreline on the west and south sides of Ballena Boulevard. There are elevated levels of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in mussels from that area that require continued monitoring. The test results suggest that mussels from the Ballena Bay area have been exposed to an additional contamination source unrelated to the spill.

“We’re pleased that testing has found no significant health risk from consuming mussels and shellfish due to the oil spill,” said OEHHA Director Dr. Joan Denton. “However, due to elevated levels of mercury and other chemicals, we recommend that anglers should include mussels and other shellfish as they follow the existing San Francisco Bay and Delta region fish consumption advisory.”

The advisory is available at http://www.oehha.ca.gov/fish/general/sfbaydelta.html.  It recommends that women of childbearing age and children should not eat more than one meal of Bay fish per month.  Women beyond childbearing age and men should not eat more than two meals of Bay fish per month.

OEHHA is the science arm of the California Environmental Protection Agency and works with DFG and other agencies to conduct seafood safety evaluations.

OEHAA Notice Response (Acrobat PDF, 4MB)

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Source URL:
http://www.ebparks.org/news/120809a