Health & Fitness
2 NJ Beaches Shut Down After Fecal Bacteria Found At 47 Of Them
One-third of NJ's beaches were on the brink of closing because of bacteria found in animal and human waste. Two were closed. Here's where.

Two New Jersey beaches remained closed Thursday after "unsafe" levels of bacteria found in animal and human waste were found at 47 of them this week, according to the state Department of Environmental Protection. Of the 47 beaches at risk of closing, 44 are at the ocean.
One of those remained closed through Father's Day weekend, the DEP says.
The problems were discovered Monday, with all 47 beaches – one-third of New Jersey's shoreline – exceeding the bacteria concentration limit of 104 colony-forming units (cfu) of Enterococci per 100 milliliters of water, according to the DEP.
Find out what's happening in Brickfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Advisories were issued at 47 beaches which were still open to the public, and they were on the brink of being closed. The beaches were placed under an "advisory" (see complete list below).
Now all the beaches except for two – Windward Beach in Brick and East Beach Station Avenue in Pine Beach – are no longer under an advisory. Those two beaches were closed late Wednesday. Then the Brick beach was reopened.
Find out what's happening in Brickfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Read more: 47 NJ Beaches At Risk Of Closing Due To Fecal Bacteria, DEP Says
Nearly all the beaches exceeded the limit for Enterococci, a bacteria found in animal and human waste, the DEP says. They were tested again by Wednesday; if those beaches continued to exceed the allowable limits, they would be closed.
Some of the harmful effects of Enterococci are infections that cause fever, fatigue, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.
The same problem happened last week, when 10 New Jersey beaches were found to have "unsafe levels," according to Larry Hajna, a DEP spokesman. Those 10 beaches also tested above allowable levels for bacteria found in human and animal feces.
And just like last week, Hajna said the problem is caused largely by the rain from the weekend, which caused a lot of stormwater runoff that carries animal waste into the swimming areas.
"Birds congregate a lot," he said. "When they defecate, it carries into the water."
Here are the beaches that exceeded bacteria limits this week:
Atlantic
- Margate, Clermont Ave
- Margate, Osborne
- Margate, Gladstone Ave
- Ventnor, Washington
- Ventnor, Dorset
- Ventnor, New Haven
- Ventnor, Austin Ave
- Albany Ave, Ocean Front
- Atlantic City, Chelsea
- Atlantic City, Missouri
- Atlantic City, Dover Ave
- Atlantic City, Bartram
- Atlantic City, Illinois
- Atlantic City, Kentucky
- Atlantic City, Michigan
- Atlantic City, Texas
Cape May
- Cape May, Queen North
- Cape May, Philadelphia
- Cape May, Grant
- Lower Township, Richmond Ave
- Wildwood, Montgomery
- Wildwood, Bennett
- Wildwood Crest, Miami
- Wildwood Crest, Lavendar
- Wildwood Crest, Jefferson
- Wildwood Crest, Forgetmenot
- Wildwood Crest, Orchid
- Wildwood Crest, Hollywood
Monmouth
- Deal, Philips Ave
- Deal, Deal Casino
- Deal, Hathaway Avenue Beach
- Loch Arbour, Village Beach Club
- Long Branch, South Bath
- Long Branch, Elberon Bch Clb
- Long Branch, Ocean Beach Club
- Long Branch, Joline
- Long Branch, Atlantic Ave
- Long Branch, North Bath
- Neptune Township, Broadway
- Sea Girt, Neptune Pl
- Spring Lake, York Ave
- Spring Lake, Brown Ave S
Ocean
- Brick Township, Windward Beach
- Pine Beach, East Beach Station Ave
- Point Pleasant Beach, Maryland
- Seaside Park, 5th Ave Bay Front
- Toms River, Shelter Cove
Photo from Patch in New York
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