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San Diego official demands Gavin Newsom clean up heinous river stench, sewage coming from Tijuana: ‘it feels like hell’

A Southern California official and resident have had it with the heinous stench and sewage crisis from the pollution of the Tijuana River and have called on Gov. Gavin Newsom to do something about it.

San Diego County Board of Supervisor Paloma Aguirre called on the governor to declare a state of emergency and stop the pollution coming from the Tijuana River into the county’s south bay, calling it the worst “worst environmental disaster in the United States,” which she said is “being met with silence” from him.

“We are breathing in toxic gases, and we can’t wait any longer,” Aguirre said in a video posted on Instagram. Please declare a State of Emergency for the Tijuana River crisis.

View this post on Instagram “Hydrogen sulfide—a toxic gas—is fouling our neighborhoods. At 4500 ppb (parts per billion), we aren’t just smelling a rotten egg odor; we are breathing in a gas that causes immediate sickness. “

The SD official added, “Our children are waking up with headaches, our seniors are struggling to breathe, and our families are prisoners in their own homes.”

Aguirre then questioned why the governor had failed to help them after declaring 52 other state emergencies, when “pollution from the Tijuana River south San Diego drives hydrogen sulfide levels 150 times above state standards deemed safe for humans.”

A teacher on TikTok Jessica Figueroa said “it feels like hell,” and invited Newsom to experience the hell she said they’re enduring.

“I can literally taste it and I can feel my body being physically ill from this horrific stench.”

“I’m here to speak for all the people that live in the South Bay because we can no longer take the stench,” the educator said. “The Tijuana River crisis has gotten out of hand this week. Every day I woke up with a headache. I went to sleep to smelling that stench.”

“I closed all my windows and I can’t sleep. The stench is horrific”

“It’s affecting our babies, our students, the elderly. I can’t teach. The smell literally lingers into my classroom, and it’s disgusting. I don’t feel comfortable.”

“The students don’t feel comfortable. It’s, it’s just ridiculous. We’re human. We cannot be taking in this air. We are getting polluted daily because of all the toxic gases that are up in the air from the Tijuana River sewage crisis.”

In a second post, Aguirre said the county had declared the problem an “emergency 22 times” and reached out multiple times to the governor asking him to do the same.

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“We can’t keep passing the buck to another country even if they’re the source. Thank you @aerosol88 for sharing your data and fighting alongside us.”

The data provided in the post showed the amount of exposure to the toxic H2S(Hydrogen Sulfide) gas the South Bay has been dealing with over the last few months, with it skyrocketing to 4,500 ppb. The state standard she said is 30ppb.

View this post on Instagram In 2022, Newsom vetoed a bill that would’ve allocated $50 million to help clean up the Tijuana River, FOX5 San Diego reported at the time.

“That was supposed to stop sewage flows and trash coming across the border,” Imperial Beach Mayor Serge Dedina said. “Unfortunately, Gov. Newsom vetoed that legislation and funding.”

During a recent state of the city address, current Imperial Beach Mayor Mitch McKay said he was looking for help from the feds, CBS8 reported.

“Our community has endured record beach closures, and the consequences are felt by residents, businesses and visitors alike,” McKay said.

The federal government is also aware of the problem, with the EPA recently speaking about the problem and how President Donald Trump’s administration is 100% determined to find a solution.

“The Trump EPA has been working every day at implementing the permanent, urgent 100% solution to the decades old Tijuana River raw sewage emergency,” Zeldin said in a press release.

“The agreement we signed with Mexico last year includes reduced timelines and additional necessary Mexico-side projects at no added US taxpayer cost. As these projects are completed in 2026 and 2027, with one project slated for 2028, Americans will be finally crossing the long-awaited finish line of this crisis and nightmare.”

The Post reached out to the Governor’s office and the EPA for further comment.

Read original at New York Post

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