Sen. Booker visits border, calls Tijuana River pollution ‘environmental justice crisis’

Sen Cory Booker D-N J during his visit to the dividing line Thursday He s flanked by Mayor Paloma Aguirre left and Rep Juan Vargas and Rep Scott Peters right Photo courtesy of Paloma Aguirre Imperial Beach Mayor Paloma Aguirre once served as an environmental fellow in Sen Cory Booker s Washington office She leveraged that contact Thursday as the New Jersey Democrat and former presidential candidate visited her city to see the Tijuana River sewage poisoning situation up close and demand more federal action to address the issue Booker called the situation an environmental justice predicament and explained he will take what I saw here back to Washington to help make sure this locality s fight for clean air and water is heard and answered No one should be forced to breathe toxic air and swim in sewage What I saw and smelled currently in South San Diego County is unconscionable it would never be tolerated in Malibu or Mar-a-Lago and it shouldn t be tolerated here he noted in the latter event referring to President Donald Trump s lavish Florida resort Aguirre invited the senator to visit the edge on his already scheduled California trip which included a speaking engagement Thursday at the San Diego Central Library Rep Juan Vargas D-San Diego joined them The defilement in the Tijuana River isn t just harming our milieu it s threatening our neighbors soundness shutting down businesses and closing beaches Vargas declared This isn t a partisan issue it s a matter of basic human rights and locality safety We will continue to fight for real solutions and lasting protections The -mile Tijuana River flows from Baja California and over the limit into the South Bay carrying millions of gallons of wastewater including sewage industrial waste and runoff that end up in the Pacific Ocean Booker s visit comes the day after a UC San Diego analysis located dangerous chemical compounds are present not only in the water of the Tijuana River and off the coast of Imperial Beach but are also aerosolized by ocean spray and make it into the air It also follows a pledge by the United States International Boundary and Water Commission and the Environmental Protection Agency to fast track a project to increase the South Bay International Wastewater Restoration Plant s threshold to handle the sewage from to million gallons per day I fought tooth and nail to get this funding through Congress and fix a broken plant that was making people sick and closing our beaches Aguirre reported Our relentless fight is showing results but we need a approach because South County families shouldn t have to live with this toxic sewage nightmare any longer Aguirre is a candidate to fill the South Bay s vacant seat on the San Diego County Board of Supervisors She will face Chula Vista Mayor John McCann in a July runoff City News Function contributed to this description