Contacts:
Kirsten Macintyre, Department of Fish and Game, 916-804-1714
Sam Delson, Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, 916-764-0955
Fishing Closures Lifted for Most of Alameda Shoreline
Only One Beach Remains Closed to Harvesting
State officials today lifted fishing and shellfish harvesting closures
for most of Alameda County's shoreline. The only restrictions remain
at Crown Memorial State Beach, where mussel and shellfish harvesting
remain closed.
The closures were imposed on Oct. 30, the same day as the Dubai Star
oil spill on San Francisco Bay. The Department of Fish and Game (DFG),
in consultation with the Office of Environmental Health Hazard
Assessment (OEHHA), re-opened all but one of the closed areas after
testing found no ongoing risk of adverse health effects from the oil
spill.
With the exception of Crown Memorial State Beach, today's decision
reopens fishing and shellfish take on the Alameda County shoreline along
San Francisco Bay from Alameda Point (at the northwest corner of Alameda
Naval Air station) to the southern boundary of the Oakland airport.
Tests following the oil spill found that mussels at Ballena Bay Marina
were unfit for consumption due to another source of contamination
unrelated to the Dubai Star oil spill. The public is therefore advised
to avoid harvesting and consuming mussels from the bayside shoreline on
the west and south sides of Ballena Boulevard until further notice.
OEHHA is coordinating with other public health officials to conduct
further investigations at this location.
OEHHA is the science arm of the California Environmental Protection
Agency and works with DFG and other agencies to conduct seafood safety
evaluations.