The
Journal News
Monday,
October 30, 2006
MAMARONECK - A Manhattanville College assistant professor
who studies the water at Mamaroneck Harbor beach expanded her research this
year, and her results again showed that a Gunderboom protection screen shields
bathers from much of the bacteria found in the harbor.
The 800-foot Gunderboom -
a floating boom with a filter screen hanging below - has been in place four
years.
Anna Yeung-Cheung, an
assistant biology professor, and several students tested the harbor's water,
sand, mud and mussels for bacteria.
This time, they also
studied water and mud from
"The mud is
filthy," she said.
Last summer, the
The Manhattanville
group's latest study showed that water inside the Gunderboom had E. coli
counts that were 77.9 percent lower than outside the boom, similar to last
year, when the count inside was 89.1 percent lower. Coliform bacteria was 69.2
percent lower inside the Gunderboom this year; last year it was 51.6 percent
lower.
The harbor itself is
getting cleaner, said Gabe Sganga, beach program director with the Westchester
County Health Department.
Mamaroneck Mayor Philip
Trifiletti is encouraged enough to see the day coming when the village will be
able to remove the boom altogether. That won't likely come next year or 2008,
he said, but soon.
He said the village, with
volunteers and environmental organizations, has attacked the harbor's
pollution problems several ways, by repairing sewer lines and installing a
debris-collection basket on the
"If we continue down
the path we're going, I think we will eventually be able to have the harbor
back the way it was," years ago, he said.
Yeung-Cheung and her
students presented the results of their study to Trifiletti and the village
Board of Trustees last week. After seeing the results, the mayor said he plans
to work with Harrison to clean Guion Creek, which comes to
Yeung-Cheung's study was
conducted with students Nicole Benevento, Donatella Pavel and Pretima Persad,
all 21-year-old seniors. Pavel, of
After doing the work,
they said they look at beaches differently.
"Now when I go to a
beach, I rethink what's in the water," Pavel said. "I don't open the
mouth in the water any more."
She said she and her
boyfriend came to
The boom was reinstalled
four years ago for $135,000, allowing residents to go swimming at the beach
again inside the area surrounded by the filter. Before that, bathing had been
banned since a 1999 oil spill fouled an earlier Gunderboom.
Photo Gallery: http://www.nyjnews.com/photos/index.php?section=daily&date=2006-10-29