indicator

Public Beach Closures

Focus Question

Are the number of days that beaches are closed decreasing in Long Island Sound due to water quality improvements?

Answer: No. As of 2018, there is an increase in beach closure/advisory days since the 2014 baseline. While beach closures are linked to pathogen presence and abundance, the increasing number of days that beaches are closed may be due to higher heavy precipitation events. A closed beach may not be a direct result of water quality impairments. Many beach managers in Connecticut and New York close beaches preemptively when high rainfall generates stormwater runoff that may contain animal waste, untreated sewage discharge or other contaminants.

What Was Measured

Health departments sample coastal bathing waters to determine whether the water exceeds an acceptable level of 104 CFU (Colony Forming Units)/100mL for the indicator bacteria, Enterococcus.

Enterococcus may indicate the presence of pathogens that can lead to gastrointestinal illnesses (GI) among swimmers. Pathogens are disease-causing organisms, including bacteria and viruses.  More often, beach managers in Connecticut and New York close beaches preemptively when high rainfall generates stormwater runoff that may contain animal waste, untreated sewage discharge or other contaminants. As of 2012, there were 132 monitored beaches along Long Island Sound’s shoreline in New York and 72 monitored beaches in Connecticut. Yearly variations in closures are a product of rainfall patterns and incidents such as sewer-line ruptures. 

This data is collected and reported by EPA’s BEACON 2.0 – Beach Advisory and Closing On-line Notification.

Sources

  • Ramsden D, S Esenther, B Marks, A Lehane, R Chen, R Dubrow, MA Pascucilla. 2023. Bacterial contamination in Long Island Sound: Using preemptive beach closure to protect public health. Journal of Environmental Health, 85(8): 26-29. https://pubs.neha.org/view/509979096/26/

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