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EPA's BEACH Report:
Texas 2010 Swimming Season
May 2011
Introduction
The BEACH Act of 2000 requires coastal and Great
Lakes states and territories report to EPA on beach
monitoring and notification data for their coastal
recreation waters. The BEACH Act defines coastal
recreation waters as the Great Lakes and coastal
waters (including coastal estuaries) that states,
territories, and authorized tribes officially recognize
or designate for swimming, bathing, surfing, or
similar activities in the water.
This fact sheet summarizes beach monitoring and
notification data submitted to EPA by the State of
Texas for the 2010 swimming season.
The Texas Beach Watch Program continues to
collect water samples at 167 stations along the Texas
coast in Aransas, Brazoria, Cameron, Galveston,
Jefferson, Kleberg, Matagorda, Nueces and San
Patricio counties. The Texas General Land Office
contracts with universities, local governments and
commercial laboratories to collect the samples and
test them for the presence of enterococcus bacteria.
Samples are collected and tested weekly from May
through September (the peak beach season) and
every other week from October through April. In
addition, weekly samples are collected at Gulf of
Mexico beaches during March to coincide with
spring break and the increased number of tourists
visiting the Texas coast.
Texas' website, www.TexasBeachWatch.com.
provides current water quality advisories and
water quality conditions that are available through
email and RSS subscriptions as well. Texas also
posts public notification signage at its beaches in
English and Spanish to indicate whether contact
with beach water is recommended based on the
most recent water testing. The distribution of
Texas Beach Watch brochures, in English and
Spanish, and promotional items at various public
events continues to be instrumental in promoting
awareness of the Texas Beach Watch website and
the water quality of our Texas beaches.
To further promote traffic to the website, Texas
initiated a Beach Conditions Pilot Project in
Nueces County in 2010 that reports current beach
conditions at five Gulf of Mexico beaches on a daily
basis or as conditions change.
Figure 1. Texas coastal counties.
Harris
Brazoria
Jefferson
veston
Refugio
San Patricio
Nueces
Matag
alhoun
ransas
Kleberg
Willac
Cameron
Table 1. Breakdown of monitored and
unmonitored coastal beaches by
county for 2010.
County
Total
Beaches
Monitored
Not
Monitored
ARANSAS
9
1
8
BRAZORIA
10
4
6
CALHOUN
18
0
18
CAMERON
12
9
3
CHAMBERS
2
0
2
GALVESTON
36
23
13
HARRIS
8
0
8
JEFFERSON
2
2
0
KLEBERG
7
4
3
MATAGORDA
12
3
9
NUECES
43
18
25
REFUGIO
1
0
1
SAN PATRICIO
6
1
5
WILLACY
3
0
3
TOTALS
169
65
104

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o 90
2	3-7 8-30 > 30
Duration of Actions (Days)
Table 2. Beach notification actions, 2008-2010.
2010 Summary Results	Figure 2: Beach notification actions by duration.
149
How many notification actions were reported and
how long were they?
When water quality standards are exceeded at a
particular beach, Texas issues a beach advisory that
warns people to avoid contact with the water. A total of
56 monitored beaches had at least one advisory issued
during the 2010 swimming season. About 88 percent
of Texas' 207 notification actions lasted one day. Figure	-LL. 9
2 presents a full breakdown of notification action
durations.
What percentage of days were beaches under a
notification action?	Figure 3:
For Texas' 2010 swimming season, actions were
reported about one and one-half percent of the time
(Figure 3).
How do 2010 results compare to previous years?
Table 2 compares 2010 notification action data with
monitored beach data from previous years.
What pollution sources possibly affect investigated
monitored beaches?
In 2010, no sources of pollution were found at
investigated monitored beaches.
For More Information
For general information about beaches:
www.epa.gov/beaches/
For more information about water quality conditions go
to: www.TexasBeachWatch.com.
Additional information regarding the Texas Beach
Watch Program is available by contacting the Beach
Watch Coordinator at beachwatch@glo.state.tx.us. or
by calling the Texas General Land Office
at 1-(800)998-4GLO	Figure 4: Percent of investigated monitored beaches affected by
possible pollution sources (65 beaches).
Percent of beaches
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
100
Investigated / no sources found
Non-storm related runoff	o
Storm-related runoff	o
Agricultural runoff	o
Boat discharge	o
Cone, animal feeding operation	o
Combined sewer overflow	o
Sanitary sewer overflow	o
Publicly-owned treatment works	o
Sewer line leak or break	o
Septic system leakage	o
Wildlife	o
Other (identified) source(s)	o
Unidentified source(s)	o

2008
2009
2010
Number of monitored
beaches
65
65
65
Number of beaches
affected by notification
actions
48
50
56
Percentage of beaches
affected by notification
actions
74%
77%
86%
Percentage of beach
days affected by
notification actions
2%
1%
1.5%
Note: A single beach may
have multiple sources.
Beach days
with no action
— 23,111
(98.5%)
Beach days with
and without
notification
actions.
Beach days
with an action:
354
(1.5%)

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