Today, NRDC released Testing the Waters: A Guide to Water Quality at Vacation Beaches, our annual beach water report. The report collects and analyzes the latest water testing results from the EPA and state beach coordinators at nearly 3,500 coastal and Great Lakes beach testing locations nationwide. The 24th annual report card examines the various causes of water pollution that plague America’s beaches and presents crucial, timely opportunities to keep pollution out of America’s beaches, lakes and rivers. The bad news: 10% of all water quality samples collected last year from nearly 3,500 coastal and Great Lakes beaches in the U.S. contained bacteria levels that failed to meet the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s most protective benchmark for swimmer safety. And, our report flagged 17 “repeat offenders” that exhibited chronic water pollution problems. On the plus side, numerous beaches around the country routinely passed the safety test.  And some of them did so for several years running.  Our report identified 35 popular “superstar” beaches with excellent water quality over a five year period. Another piece of good news: to help keep us healthy at the beach and stem the tide of water pollution, our government leaders have a unique opportunity to adopt a critical proposal—the Clean Water Protection Rule—which will restore vital protections for the streams and wetlands that help sustain clean beaches. Below, I’ll get into a few of the details, but I urge you to take a look at the full online report.  It also includes an updated, mobile-friendly map of nearly 3,500 beaches nationwide that is searchable by zip code, making it easier than ever for users to check important water quality information at their local beaches.  And it provides lots of detail about the Clean Water Protection Rule, and a way for you to take action to make sure the rule gets done. The Nation’s 35 “Superstar” BeachesNRDC designated 35 popular beaches across 14 states as “superstars”—popular beaches for consistently meeting water quality safety thresholds. Each of these beaches met national water quality benchmarks 98% of the time over the past five years.

3 Alabama beaches: Gulf Shores Public Beach and Gulf State Park Pavilion in Baldwin County and Dauphin Island Public BeachCalifornia: 38th Street section of Newport Beach in Orange CountyDelaware: Dewey Beach-Swedes in Sussex County3 Florida beaches: Bowman’s Beach in Lee County, Coquina Beach South in Manatee County and Fort Desoto North Beach in Pinellas CountyGeorgia: Tybee Island North in Chatham County3 Hawaiian beaches: Hapuna Beach St. Rec. Area in Big Island, Po’ipu Beach Park in Kauai, and Wailea Beach Park in MauiMassachusetts: Singing Beach in Essex County2 Maryland beaches: Point Lookout State Park in St Mary’s County and Assateague State Park in Worcester County4 North Carolina beaches: Ocean Pier at Main St. and Sunset Blvd. in Brunswick County, Beach at Cape Hatteras Lighthouse in Dare County, Ocean Pier at Salisbury Street in Wrightsville Beach in New Hanover, and Ocean Pier at Ocean Blvd. and Crews Ave. in Topsail Beach in Pender County       3 New Hampshire beaches: Hampton Beach State Park, Wallis Sands Beach at Wallis Rd., and Wallis Sands State Park in Rockingham County7 New Jersey beaches: Washington (Margate) in Atlantic County, Broadway (Pt. Pleasant Beach) in Ocean County, and a handful of Cape May County beaches—40th St. (Avalon), 40th St. (Sea Isle City), Stone Harbor at 96th St., Upper Township at Webster Rd., and Wildwood Crest at OrchidNew York: Long Beach City in Nassau County4 Virginian beaches: Virginia Beach at 28th St.,  Virginia Beach at 45th St, Back Bay Beach, and Virginia Beach - Little Island Beach North – all in Virginia Beach CountyWashington: Westhaven State Park, South Jetty in Grays Harbor   

The Nation’s 17 “Repeat Offenders” Over the last five years of this report, sections of 17 U.S. beaches have stood out as having persistent contamination problems, with water samples failing to meet public health benchmarks more than 25% of the time each year from 2009 to 2013:

California: Malibu Pier, 50 yards east of the pier, in Los Angeles CountyIndiana: both monitored sections of Jeorse Park Beach in Lake CountyMassachusetts: Cockle Cove Creek in Barnstable CountyMaine: Goodies Beach in Knox CountyNew Jersey: Beachwood Beach in Ocean County3 New York beaches: Main Street Beach in Chautauqua County, Wright Park—East in Chautauqua County and Ontario Beach in Monroe County7 Ohio beaches: Lakeshore Park in Ashtabula County, Arcadia Beach, Euclid State Park, Noble Beach, Sims Beach, and Villa Angela State Park in Cuyahoga County, and Edson Creek in Erie CountyWisconsin: South Shore Beach in Milwaukee County

Important note: some of these beaches have multiple sections that are tested for water quality, and in some instances only certain sections of a beach qualified for the repeat offender list. National Findings—2013:This year’s report found that 10% of beach water samples taken nationwide in 2013 failed to meet the most protective federal public health standard used to assess water quality at American beaches—EPA’s newly-created “Beach Action Value” (BAV). Based on EPA’s safety threshold, the BAV, the Great Lakes region had the highest failure rate of beach water quality samples, with 13% of samples failing to pass the safety test in 2013. The Delmarva region had the lowest failure rate, with 4% of samples failing the safety test. In between were the Gulf Coast (12%), New England (11%), the Western Coast (9%), the New York and New Jersey coasts (7%), and the Southeast (7%). Individual states with the highest failure rates of reported water samples in 2013 were Ohio (35%), Alaska (24%) and Mississippi (21%). Those with the lowest failure rates last year were Delaware (3%), New Hampshire (3%) and New Jersey (3%). The national results in this year’s report show an uptick in failure rates for beach water quality safety due to the report’s reliance on the Beach Action Value, which is a more protective health benchmark used for the first time in 2013 in lieu of a now defunct and less-protective beach water quality standard.This lack of progress can be changed. NRDC’s report focuses on two evergreen solutions for making that change happen. Solutions—Protecting All Small Streams and Wetlands and Boosting Green InfrastructureEvery year, more than 10 trillion gallons of untreated stormwater, as well as hundreds of billions of gallons of untreated sewage overflows, make their way into America’s waterways, according to the EPA. Contaminated runoff has historically been the largest known source of beach water pollution. Therefore, the most immediate and high-priority action to address water pollution at the nation’s beaches is to finalize and adopt the Clean Water Protection Rule proposed by the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers. This federal rule would ensure tributary streams and wetlands are protected from pollution under the Clean Water Act. The proposed rule is critical to virtually all communities and beachgoers, impacting the hundreds of billions of dollars spent annually on outdoor recreation. The proposed rule, officially known as the “Waters of the U.S. Rule,” is open for public comment until October 20 and demands a strong showing of public support to become final. This infographic tells the tale of how our water systems are connected. And, of course, the best way to keep this pollution out of America’s beach water is to prevent it from the start—by investing in smarter, greener infrastructure on land, like porous pavement, green roofs, parks, roadside plantings and rain barrels. Green infrastructure addresses stormwater pollution by stopping rain where it falls, enabling it to evaporate or filter into the ground naturally instead of carrying runoff from dirty streets to our beaches. Sensible green infrastructure solutions keep stormwater from becoming wastewater and prevent sewage systems from overflowing. These techniques turn rainwater from a huge pollution liability into a plentiful, local water supply resource.  They also beautify neighborhoods, cool and cleanse the air, reduce asthma and heat-related illnesses, save on heating and cooling energy costs, boost economies, and support American jobs. One Last Word As You Head To The BeachBe sure to use our Guide to Finding a Clean Beach, which has a bunch of handy tips for staying healthy and that also provides links to state websites providing more recent information about testing. If you forget to look before heading out, we also have a handy mobile site: m.beachquality.org, from which you can search for individual beaches and learn about their reported test results. Have a great summer, and enjoy the beach. MORE: 11 Moves To Swim Yourself Slim Jon is a senior water attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council and works to keep our waters clean. He resides in Arlington, Virginia with his wife and their two sons.