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The National Healthy Beaches Campaign (NHBC) promotes balance between recreational use of our nation’s beaches and maintaining the environmental quality and safety of this prized resource. The NHBC rating is applicable for both Resort/Urban and Rural/Park beaches. The criteria for the latter is slightly less stringent than for resort and urban beaches, as they frequently have less facilities and little or no commercial development.
I. WATER QUALITY
" Water quality evaluation is one of the most important determining factors for beach certification. Healthy Beaches are required to regularly evaluate their water quality to determine whether the water is safe for bathing purposes. Sampling should be done on a 30-day geometric mean, which is the mean of all individual samples collected during five or more sampling events representatively taken over a 30-day period. Currently, for five plus sampling events, this is 35/100mm for Enterococci (marine) and for E.Coli 126/100mm. A beach shall use these EPA recommended water quality guidelines (or "as protective" per EPA guidelines) obtained from Government reports during the 2003/04 high-use season. Water quality standards define a measurable relationship between the quantity of the bacterial indicator in the water and the potential risk to human health associated with recreational water usage. E. coli and Enterococci show the strongest relationship with swimming-associated gastrointestinal illness.
Bacteriological Indicators* |
Enterococci (marine) /100mm
E. coli (fresh water) /100mm |
*The NHBC will obtain this information from the US EPA. www.epa.gov/waterscience/beaches/local/statrept.pdf
II. SAND QUALITY
III. SAFETY
IV. ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY & MANAGEMENT
Healthy Beaches should promote peaceful and protective coexistance of sensitive plant/wildlife habitats with human recreation (e.g. turtle nesting; marked zones for swimmers, surfers and motorized craft).
| • Can you estimate the number of people in the water at peak period?____________ |
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V. SERVICES
The facilities at a Healthy Beach must be kept clean and safe at all times.
Litter Categories for grading a beach (in no particular order)
|
Category |
Type |
A |
B |
C |
D |
1 |
Sewage Related Debris |
General e.g. condom |
0 |
1-5 |
6-14 |
>15 |
Q tips |
0-9 |
10-49 |
50-99 |
>100 |
2 |
Large Litter |
e.g. grocery cart, chair |
0 |
1-5 |
6-14 |
>15 |
3 |
General Litter |
e.g. cola can, water bottle |
0-49 |
50-499 |
500-999 |
>1000 |
4 |
Harmful Litter |
Broken Glass |
0 |
1-5 |
6-24 |
>25 |
Other e.g. syringe |
0 |
1-4 |
5-9 |
>10 |
5 |
Piles of material |
e.g. debris, seaweed |
0 |
1-4 |
5-9 |
>10 |
6 |
Oil |
|
None |
Trace |
Noticeable |
Objectionable |
7 |
Feces |
|
0 |
1-5 |
6-24 |
>25 |
Reference: EA/NALG, (2000), "Assessment of Aesthetic Quality of Coastal and Bathing Beaches", Monitoring Protocol and Classification Scheme, UK Environmental Agency.
Procedure
- Find an access point - if possible the main one - to the beach.
- Select points fifty yards either side of the access point and stretching from the high tide waterline to the backshore.
- Count the number of litter items within this area for each of the above seven categories.
- For each row (category), circle the box associated with the counted number.
- Take the letter grade of the furthermost (to the right) circled box and enter it into the sand quality sectional box.
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