Edit: Nevermind, does not show up as part of the Metro JPA.
"The JPA member agencies are the cities of Chula Vista, Coronado, Del Mar, El Cajon, Imperial Beach, La Mesa, National City and Poway; the Lemon Grove Sanitation District; the Padre Dam Municipal and Otay Water Districts; and the County of San Diego (on behalf of the Winter Gardens Sewer Maintenance District, and the Alpine, Lakeside and Spring Valley Sanitation Districts).
Col history of the wastewater problems in the area, If you read more they moved to Point Loma Wastewater Treatment Plant. I assumed that La Jolla continued to send wastewater like the other cities did with pumps and pipelines. The post above has a map of the lines.
“Responding to a growing tourism industry in the 1920s, the City began installing settling tanks along the coast to capture solids in the raw sewage while allowing the liquid to flow into the ocean. Settling tanks were installed in Ocean Beach, Pacific Beach, La Jolla and Downtown. Much of the sewage, however, continued to be discharged into San Diego Bay without any treatment.”
“In 1975, the City completed upgrades at the Point Loma Wastewater Treatment Plant (shown at right, current), expanding capacity to 132 million gallons of sewage per day. By that time, the plant had already reached its maximum capacity of 88 million gallons per day. The upgrades were completed with federal funding secured by the City a few years before. The capacity of the plant was expanded again in 1982, to 176 million gallons per day, and once more in 1987, to 240 million gallons per day. Today, the plant has the capacity to treat up to 240 million gallons of sewage per day to advanced primary levels, and is receiving an average of 175 million gallons per day.”
Source from 07 January 2007: https://www.metrojpa.org/Home/ShowDocument?id=737
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