Fishing Allowed To Resume Along Stretch of OC Coast Near Oil Spill

Fishing on the lake at sunset. Fishing background

Photo: Getty Images

HUNTINGTON BEACH (CNS) - Fishing may resume Tuesday along the Orange County coast where an oil spill forced a shutdown of fisheries since Oct. 3, officials announced today.

The closure of the fisheries will be lifted at noon Tuesday and fishing can resume midday, state officials said.

Fishing was prohibited from Oct. 3 from Huntington Beach to Dana Point following the Oct. 2 oil spill. By Oct. 5, the ban on fishing was expanded to encircle 650 square miles of marine waters and about 45 miles of shoreline, including all bays and harbors from Seal Beach to San Onofre State Beach, officials said.

Seafood was tested for chemicals from oil from Oct. 14 to Nov. 3 with authorities on Monday alerting the California Department of Fish and Wildlife that the seafood was OK to resume eating.

Investigators suspect at least one ship was involved in an incident on Jan. 25 in which an anchor dragged a pipeline, bending it like a bow. At some point the pipeline began leaking, spilling thousands of gallons of oil into the ocean.

Photo: Getty Images


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