Long Beach, CA
File #: 17-0318    Version: 1 Name: DHHS - Reduce the consumption of contaminated fish
Type: Contract Status: CCIS
File created: 4/3/2017 In control: City Council
On agenda: 5/2/2017 Final action: 5/2/2017
Title: Recommendation to authorize City Manager, or designee, to receive and expend grant funding from the United States Environmental Protection Agency, for education and outreach services to reduce the consumption of contaminated fish in connection with the Palos Verdes Shelf Fish Contamination Project, in the amount of $189,500, for the period of March 1, 2017 through February 28, 2019, with the option of extending the grant to February 29, 2020. (Citywide)
Sponsors: Health and Human Services
Attachments: 1. 050217-C-10sr.pdf
TITLE
Recommendation to authorize City Manager, or designee, to receive and expend grant funding from the United States Environmental Protection Agency, for education and outreach services to reduce the consumption of contaminated fish in connection with the Palos Verdes Shelf Fish Contamination Project, in the amount of $189,500, for the period of March 1, 2017 through February 28, 2019, with the option of extending the grant to February 29, 2020. (Citywide)

DISCUSSION
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) has awarded the City of Long Beach Health and Human Services Department (Health Department) a grant in the amount of $189,500 for the period of March 1, 2017 through February 28, 2019, to conduct inspections of markets and restaurants selling white croaker fish and to provide support to USEPA’s overall program for the Palos Verdes Shelf, including public outreach and education, monitoring, and enforcement.

The Palos Verdes Shelf USEPA Superfund site off the coast of the Palos Verdes Peninsula is among the largest contaminated ocean sediment sites in the United States. Past disposal practices of carcinogenic and toxigenic chemicals, including dichloro-diphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), have resulted in the accumulation of harmful levels of these substances in certain species of fish. In 1990, based on very high levels of contamination, the California Department of Fish and Game created zones off the Palos Verdes Shelf where the commercial catch of white croaker is banned. Subsequently, the USEPA’s Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment issued fish consumption advisories for certain fish, including white croaker, caught within the Palos Verdes Shelf and other Southern California sites because of elevated DDT and PCB levels. In 1996, a study conducted by the Heal the Bay organization showed white croaker fish with elevated levels of DDT and PCBs being sold to the public at markets in Los Ange...

Click here for full text